Check how to pay duties and VAT on imports
If you’re a business importing goods from outside the UK, you can pay Customs Duty, excise duties and VAT in a number of ways
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If you’re a business importing goods from outside the UK, you can pay Customs Duty, excise duties and VAT in a number of ways
Check if VAT is due when you sell, supply or transfer goods from Northern Ireland to the EU.
Additional steps you or someone acting on your behalf may need to take to tell HMRC that your goods have arrived in the UK at a location using the Goods Vehicle Movement Service.
Find out which food and animal feed goods qualify for unfettered access and can move from Northern Ireland to Great Britain without sanitary and phytosanitary (SPS) controls.
Matt Reeve, Director of Genie Insights, explains how the business researches export markets.
Use this service if you're an authorised loader arriving or departing goods from the UK.
Learn about the available research support for exporters.
Learn more about the in-market support schemes available to exporters.
Advice and support available to companies considering exporting.
Find out how to claim a preferential rate of duty from a preference agreement when your goods are put into a customs warehouse
How the Economic Operator Registration and Identification Scheme will work and who can apply.
An overview of your responsibilities to report trade conducted with EU member states through the Intrastat return.
An introduction to International Commercial Terms (Incoterms).
What you need to know about exporting to New Zealand, and how you can get help targeting this market.
What you need to know about exporting to Great Britain, and how you can get help targeting this market.
Licences, certificates and special rules.
How to import or move fish for human consumption to the UK.
Grainne Kelly, CEO and Founder of BubbleBum explains how they enter new markets.
Controlling the risks of importing while capitalising on the opportunities.
Protection against changing exchange rates.
Import payment methods and financial planning.
Controlling the risk of damaged, delayed or incomplete deliveries.
Ensuring imports meet UK legal requirements and customer demand.
Managing supplier risk for imports.
Different cultures, regulations, languages and other country risks for importers.