According to theloadstar.com, on 1 July 2026, the European Union abolished its long-standing €150 de minimis customs duty exemption for low-value parcels—and replaced it with a flat €3 charge per tariff classification line, meaning each distinct product category within a single parcel incurs a separate fee.
Strategic inventory relocation neutralizes tariff impact
Rather than absorb or pass through the new cost, Shein and Temu executed a pre-emptive operational pivot: they moved substantial inventory into the EU prior to the 1 July 2026 implementation date. This involved scaling warehousing infrastructure across multiple EU member states—including Germany, the Netherlands, and Poland—enabling order fulfillment from within EU customs territory. As a result, parcels shipped to end consumers no longer cross external EU borders as imports, thereby avoiding the €3 per-line charge entirely. According to the report, this shift transformed what Brussels intended as a regulatory curb into a catalyst for accelerated local logistics investment by Chinese e-commerce platforms.
Logistics partners adapt amid structural change
Major global carriers responded with urgent advocacy. DHL, FedEx, and UPS jointly wrote to European Union finance ministers in May 2026, warning that the new tariff structure risked border disruption due to classification complexity and processing delays. Their letter urged a phased rollout and clarified guidance on tariff line determination—a procedural bottleneck that could stall hundreds of thousands of daily parcels. Meanwhile, Lufthansa Cargo advanced its commercial alignment with Shein by finalizing a sustainable aviation fuel (SAF) agreement in August 2025, supporting air freight capacity dedicated to intra-EU replenishment flows.
Regulatory pressure intensifies alongside infrastructure buildout
The move did not quell political scrutiny. In November 2025, the French government grounded a shipment of Shein imports at Paris Charles de Gaulle Airport and formally urged EU-wide sanctions, citing unfair competition and environmental non-compliance. Yet concurrently, Temu expanded its European footprint—reportedly operating at least five fulfillment hubs across the EU by mid-2026. Industry data cited in related coverage shows that US warehouse vacancy rates reached their highest level in over a decade in July 2025, underscoring divergent inventory strategies: while US-based retailers consolidated distribution, Shein and Temu pursued aggressive nearshoring of stock.
Broader implications for cross-border e-commerce logistics
This recalibration reflects a broader industry trend toward regulatory arbitrage via physical infrastructure. Unlike traditional importers subject to customs valuation and classification rules, ultra-fast e-commerce platforms leveraged speed-to-market advantages to convert policy risk into competitive advantage. Analysts note that Shein’s and Temu’s ability to deploy capital rapidly—evidenced by their collective investment in over €1 billion worth of EU logistics real estate since 2024—has redefined expectations for time-to-shelf performance in cross-border retail. As one practitioner observed, “When your lead time drops from 14 days to 48 hours because you hold stock inside the customs union, the €3 fee becomes irrelevant—you’ve already won the velocity battle.”
Source: The Loadstar
Compiled from international media by the SCI.AI editorial team.










