Preparing for Your
Trip
Customs
What You Can Bring In
Every visitor more than 21 years of age may bring
in, free of duty, the following: (1) 1 liter of wine or hard liquor; (2)
200 cigarettes, 100 cigars (but not from Cuba), or 3 pounds of smoking
tobacco; and (3) $100 worth of gifts. These exemptions are offered to
travelers who spend at least 72 hours in the United States and who have
not claimed them within the preceding 6 months. It is altogether forbidden
to bring into the country foodstuffs (particularly fruit, cooked meats,
and canned goods) and plants (vegetables, seeds, tropical plants, and
the like). Foreign tourists may bring in or take out up to $10,000 in
U.S. or foreign currency with no formalities; larger sums must be declared
to U.S. Customs on entering or leaving, which includes filing form CM
4790. For more specific information regarding U.S. Customs and Border
Protection, contact your nearest U.S. embassy or consulate, or the U.S.
Customs office (tel. 202/927-1770; www.customs.ustreas.gov).
What You Can Take Home
U.K. citizens returning from a non-E.U. country
have a customs allowance of: 200 cigarettes; 50 cigars; 250 grams of smoking
tobacco; 2 liters of still table wine; 1 liter of spirits or strong liqueurs
(over 22% volume); 2 liters of fortified wine, sparkling wine or other
liqueurs; 60cc (ml) perfume; 250cc (ml) of toilet water; and £145
worth of all other goods, including gifts and souvenirs. People under
17 cannot have the tobacco or alcohol allowance. For more information,
contact HM Customs & Excise at tel. 0845/010-9000 (from outside
the U.K., 020/8929-0152), or consult their website at www.hmce.gov.uk.
For a clear summary of Canadian rules, request
the booklet I Declare, issued by the Canada Customs and Revenue
Agency (tel. 800/461-9999 in Canada, or 204/983-3500; www.ccra-adrc.gc.ca).
Canada allows its citizens a C$750 exemption, and you're allowed to bring
back duty-free 1 carton of cigarettes, 1 can of tobacco, 40 imperial ounces
of liquor, and 50 cigars. In addition, you're allowed to mail gifts to
Canada valued at less than C$60 a day, provided they're unsolicited and
don't contain alcohol or tobacco (write on the package "Unsolicited gift,
under $60 value"). All valuables should be declared on the Y-38 form before
departure from Canada, including serial numbers of valuables you already
own, such as expensive foreign cameras. Note: The $750 exemption
can only be used once a year and only after an absence of 7 days.
The duty-free allowance in Australia is A$400
or, for those under 18, A$200. Citizens age 18 and over can bring in 250
cigarettes or 250 grams of loose tobacco, and 1,125 milliliters of alcohol.
If you're returning with valuables you already own, such as foreign-made
cameras, you should file form B263. A helpful brochure available from
Australian consulates or Customs offices is Know Before You Go.
For more information, call the Australian Customs Service at tel.
1300/363-263, or log on to www.customs.gov.au.
The duty-free allowance for New Zealand is
NZ$700. Citizens over 17 can bring in 200 cigarettes, 50 cigars, or 250
grams of tobacco (or a mixture of all three if their combined weight doesn't
exceed 250g); plus 4.5 liters of wine and beer, or 1.125 liters of liquor.
New Zealand currency does not carry import or export restrictions. Fill
out a certificate of export, listing the valuables you are taking out
of the country; that way, you can bring them back without paying duty.
Most questions are answered in a free pamphlet available at New Zealand
consulates and Customs offices: New Zealand Customs Guide for Travellers,
Notice no. 4. For more information, contact New Zealand Customs,
The Customhouse, 17-21 Whitmore St., Box 2218, Wellington (tel. 0800/428-786
or 04/473-6099; www.customs.govt.nz).
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