From 1 July 2026, low-value non-EU parcels lose the €150 customs-duty exemption. A temporary €3 charge per declaration line will apply until 2028. Small cross-border orders will carry more cost, more customs data, and more reconciliation work.
Why this matters
For a small webshop, the charge looks small. In the file, it is not. A €3 line fee can wipe out margin on cheap items and mixed baskets. The checkout price, customs file, courier invoice, VAT record, returns, and customer message all need to match.
Example
A Dutch customer orders two low-value items from a supplier outside the EU. Public guidance shows a basket with two product types can add €6. The seller can absorb it, reprice the goods, or show it at checkout. If the courier reveals it at the door, the order often becomes a service problem.
XTROVERSO tips
- Map the exposed SKUs. List products under €150 that ship directly from outside the EU. Add supplier country, margin, return rate, basket mix, and sales volume.
- Trace one order. Follow one parcel from checkout to supplier invoice, customs data, VAT record, courier invoice, payment receipt, delivery proof, and refund path. Check where the cost first appears.
- Keep the ledger separate. Separate customs duty, import VAT, VAT under the Import scheme, courier charges, customer receipts, refunds, and platform settlements. Small parcels still need clean records.
- Check the customer promise. Review product pages, checkout text, delivery messages, and return terms. Customers should see import-related costs before they pay.
- Reprice cheap add-ons. A fixed charge hits cheap accessories hardest. Consider a new price, a bundle, EU stock, bulk import, or dropping the item.
Want to check which parcel flows, prices, and records need attention before July 2026?
The data, sourcing, and analysis behind this article were conducted by Linda Pavan. AI was not used to identify sources, build the factual basis, or produce the analytical judgment contained here. AI was used only as a drafting aid. The final English text was personally reviewed, edited, and approved by Linda Pavan before publication.
References
- Ministerie van Financiën / Rijksoverheid - Abolition of the €150 de-minimis customs exemption
- Rijksoverheid - Consumer-facing change from 2026-07-01
- Ministerie van Financiën / Rijksoverheid - National handling-fee decision deferred
- Belastingdienst / Douane - DECO and e-commerce customs declarations
- Belastingdienst / Douane - DECO data and physical-control readiness
- Belastingdienst - VAT Import scheme for distance sales from outside the EU
- Wettenbank / Overheid.nl - Official legal framework for the General Customs Regulation


