Shipping to Canada.

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  • ezcreation
    ezcreation.ca
    • May 2008
    • 1013

    #16
    Originally posted by Lohman446
    Saying it is used = accurate and no problem

    Saying it is a gift when it isn't = fraud. How do you possibly consider it not lieing?
    wow this world must be insane then if that is a lie...
    Worse case you dont mark it as a gift

    To me you ship a weapon and mark it as an ice-cream then it s a lie (a melting one), to ship drugs and mark it as candies is a lie, but shipping a sporting good and adding it is a gift is technically adding a dimension extra as it could or could not be a gift but come on...If that is the worse our world has to face then we are fine...

    That said we are still looking for weapons of massive destruction...Now that was a real lie

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    • Lohman446
      Useful posts: 7
      • Jun 2003
      • 9315

      #17
      Originally posted by ezcreation
      wow this world must be insane then if that is a lie...
      Worse case you dont mark it as a gift

      To me you ship a weapon and mark it as an ice-cream then it s a lie (a melting one), to ship drugs and mark it as candies is a lie, but shipping a sporting good and adding it is a gift is technically adding a dimension extra as it could or could not be a gift but come on...If that is the worse our world has to face then we are fine...

      That said we are still looking for weapons of massive destruction...Now that was a real lie

      I'm all for calling it sporting goods, and used.

      The gift part confuses me. What do you consider a gift? I mean... umm, if they paid for it its not a gift... What do you mean could or could not be? There is no ambiguity to hide in. They paid for it, it is very clearly NOT a gift.

      /Keep in mind its been years since shipping to Canada, and the last form I filled in you had to write in what it was
      Last edited by Lohman446; 04-16-2009, 03:13 PM.
      "Unless someone like you cares a whole awful lot, nothing is going to get better. Its not" - Dr Suess

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      • Reiner
        Registered User
        • Apr 2009
        • 39

        #18
        I've had many shipments to Canada using USPS and have never been charged duty. Applicable taxes and brokerage fees, yes. With USPS, the "brokerage fee" is only $5 or $8. Taxes (PST and GST) always have to be paid, regardless of who you send it with. If you send it as a "gift" with no value, then you may not have to pay taxes, but you are also committing fraud, which if you should happen to be caught, can be much more severe.

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        • WARHEAD
          Registered User
          • Mar 2006
          • 171

          #19
          Originally posted by Ebbed
          So after a lot of grief the last time i ordered some stuff from the states i decided the next time i ordered anything i was going to find a more cost effective way of transporting it across the border. with most big Currier company's charging brokerage fees I was wondering how my fellow Canadians go about shipping there expensive American paintball stuff (lets face it its an American sport) across the border without getting royally screwed?

          Like they have said above, ship with USPS.

          I was just sent a replacement part from Q-Loader under warranty, it was a part from one of their $30 mounting kits. UPS was asking for $42 in brokerage fees.... I refused, called them, and they said sorry we'll ship USPS.

          Yesterday, my J&J Edge Elite kit arrived, straight from J&J, shipped USPS, and I didn't have to do anything except sign to pick it up. The value of this kit is something like $150 Canadian, much more than what a warrantied replacement part is worth (probably something like $5, and can even be claimed to have no value as it is a replacement part)

          Generally, USPS costs a little more than UPS etc. but I am personally never charged any extra other than occasionally taxes. When buying used stuff (which if you're a canadian gettiing mag stuff like me, you are) there shouldn't be ANY extra charges, because it's all private, and as far as anyone in the "system" is concerned, the package was not an indication of any financial exchange, so long as it is not a used product being sold by a business on a business account.

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