Author Topic: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax  (Read 3039 times)

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Online c64Topic starter

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Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« on: March 28, 2024, 10:07:43 pm »
For shipping to Australia, Aliexpress must charge 10% GST. However, for most cheap items, it's usually more than 10%.
For example, I've seen something on special for less than $1 delivered, and they want to charge more than $1 just for GST.

Is it even legal?
 

Offline Kim Christensen

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #1 on: March 29, 2024, 12:41:56 am »
Probably because the concept of "free" or "cheap" shipping is BS.
In other words, the full/partial cost of shipping is built into the price and Aliexpress takes your country's tax rules into account.

 

Offline brucehoult

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #2 on: March 29, 2024, 01:02:01 am »
Probably because the concept of "free" or "cheap" shipping is BS.
In other words, the full/partial cost of shipping is built into the price and Aliexpress takes your country's tax rules into account.

A few months ago I bought a car media player / AirPlay / Android Auto device from Ali. Some stores had it for $30 plus $20 shipping to NZ. Some had it for $50 with free shipping.

Makes no difference, and GST is charged on the shipping-inclusive cost anyway.
 
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Offline wilfred

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #3 on: March 29, 2024, 03:16:38 am »
It is all to do with the psychology of buyers and having your item seen. If people sort on cheapest first it is better to lower the price and add shipping. I haven't had to test it but I imagine shipping is not refunded otherwise I can't fully understand unreasonably high shipping costs. I dislike paying shipping and will try to find a way to get to the $15 free shipping point which seems common. I won't buy something just to avoid shipping which I know is built in to prices anyway.

It takes more time analysing it even for pretty cheap stuff I typically buy than I like spending. I end up with a vacuous sort of vibe built from various factors including feedback and quantity sold to help me just stop and commit.

At least shipping is faster than it was 4 years ago when I had a spurt of buying on Aliexpress. Some things arrive in a week here in Australia.
 

Offline brucehoult

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #4 on: March 29, 2024, 03:31:59 am »
At least shipping is faster than it was 4 years ago when I had a spurt of buying on Aliexpress. Some things arrive in a week here in Australia.

I believe Aliexpress has a warehouse in Australia with, presumably, some of the more popular stuff, as they do also in the USA and EU.
 

Online retiredfeline

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #5 on: March 29, 2024, 05:59:55 am »
Where do you see that you are charged at least $1 GST? I've always paid 10% no matter what the total (price + shipping). AliExpress is registered in Australia and is obliged to collect GST.

Shipping charges are a different matter, it's up to the seller and some sellers tempt buyers with cheap prices but the shipping is expensive. I look for companies that will sell multiples units or items with minimal increase in shipping cost.

PCB orders fly under the GST radar because the firms are not registered in Australia and the GST is too small to collect.
 

Offline pcprogrammer

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #6 on: March 29, 2024, 07:46:19 am »
PCB orders fly under the GST radar because the firms are not registered in Australia and the GST is too small to collect.

Don't know how it works down under, but when I order from JLCPCB they add VAT (GST) to my bill.

On a side note global sales tax sounds more honest than value added tax. The tax does not add real value to an item, it just makes it more expensive.  |O

Semantics I know, but I'm a bit of a nerd on that.  :-DD

Offline brucehoult

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #7 on: March 29, 2024, 07:54:11 am »
On a side note global sales tax sounds more honest than value added tax. The tax does not add real value to an item,

That is not what it means.

VAT means a tax on the value an entity adds to goods.  E.g. if you pay $10 for some parts, pay someone $2 to assemble them into some novel thing, and sell it for $20 then you have added $8 of value and you'll be taxed on $8.
 
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Online retiredfeline

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #8 on: March 29, 2024, 08:00:50 am »
Don't know how it works down under, but when I order from JLCPCB they add VAT (GST) to my bill.

Imports of any amount are liable for GST but enforcement varies. Probably if I ran a company and ordered hundreds or thousands of dollars worth of PCBs, customs would withhold delivery until I paid it. Or some other arrangement has to be made to streamline delivery. For ten or twenty dollars orders, it would eat up more of their time than the tax collected so they waive it.

BTW GST is not Global Sales Tax, it's Goods and Services Tax.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2024, 08:02:27 am by retiredfeline »
 
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Offline pcprogrammer

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #9 on: March 29, 2024, 08:22:06 am »
On a side note global sales tax sounds more honest than value added tax. The tax does not add real value to an item,

That is not what it means.

VAT means a tax on the value an entity adds to goods.  E.g. if you pay $10 for some parts, pay someone $2 to assemble them into some novel thing, and sell it for $20 then you have added $8 of value and you'll be taxed on $8.

That may have been the initial idea behind it and sounds better than how it seems to be used. Because when I look at a bill from something I buy, I see the price without tax and the percentage of tax, which varies from 0 to 20%, at least over here in France, and the total I have to pay. In NL the max is 21% for as far as I'm up to date.

Some foods are taxed at lower rates, and I recently found that for anything concerning renewable energy is taxed at 5.5%

When I ran my own business I had an hourly rate and on top of that I charged at that time 20% of VAT (BTW in NL), which at the end of a quarter I had to fork over to the state. On the other hand any VAT I paid on goods or service for the business I could subtract from the amount I had to fork over, or even receive back if it was more than what I collected.

Has been subject for fraud, and probably still is, with the moving around of money in some way.

We live in a world where total tax has never been as high as it is now. And it still ain't enough for their needs.  :palm:

Offline tszaboo

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #10 on: March 29, 2024, 08:41:38 am »
Where do you see that you are charged at least $1 GST? I've always paid 10% no matter what the total (price + shipping). AliExpress is registered in Australia and is obliged to collect GST.

Shipping charges are a different matter, it's up to the seller and some sellers tempt buyers with cheap prices but the shipping is expensive. I look for companies that will sell multiples units or items with minimal increase in shipping cost.

PCB orders fly under the GST radar because the firms are not registered in Australia and the GST is too small to collect.
In the EU, they will just slap a ~20 EUR import tax + VAT administration fee to your item. And then VAT to the administration fee. So your 1 EUR item would be ~26 once it gets here.
 

Offline wraper

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #11 on: March 29, 2024, 09:08:48 am »
Where do you see that you are charged at least $1 GST? I've always paid 10% no matter what the total (price + shipping). AliExpress is registered in Australia and is obliged to collect GST.

Shipping charges are a different matter, it's up to the seller and some sellers tempt buyers with cheap prices but the shipping is expensive. I look for companies that will sell multiples units or items with minimal increase in shipping cost.

PCB orders fly under the GST radar because the firms are not registered in Australia and the GST is too small to collect.
In the EU, they will just slap a ~20 EUR import tax + VAT administration fee to your item. And then VAT to the administration fee. So your 1 EUR item would be ~26 once it gets here.
It's just VAT collected at sale through IOSS if it's <EUR150. Otherwise it depends. In Latvia, as individual I can do simplified customs clearance myself with zero additional fees for <EUR1000 shipments. As a company, I do full blown much more complicated clearance myself too, no additional fees for post, fedex and ups. DHL bastards want to collect "document processing fee" if you don't delegate them doing clearance (was EUR 14 last time I used them) so I didn't use them for years.
 

Offline pcprogrammer

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #12 on: March 29, 2024, 09:46:32 am »
In the EU, they will just slap a ~20 EUR import tax + VAT administration fee to your item. And then VAT to the administration fee. So your 1 EUR item would be ~26 once it gets here.

Only when the shop you are buying from does not handle the VAT themselves. Then the postperson will knock on your door and collect the VAT + administration fee from you.

Aliexpress handles the VAT for you, so no problem there. But that said, the shipping cost are increasing making it less and less interesting to buy stuff from them.

Offline brucehoult

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #13 on: March 29, 2024, 09:47:05 am »
On a side note global sales tax sounds more honest than value added tax. The tax does not add real value to an item,

That is not what it means.

VAT means a tax on the value an entity adds to goods.  E.g. if you pay $10 for some parts, pay someone $2 to assemble them into some novel thing, and sell it for $20 then you have added $8 of value and you'll be taxed on $8.

That may have been the initial idea behind it and sounds better than how it seems to be used.

But as you yourself describe later, you pay VAT on the difference between your inputs and your outputs. And get a refund if your outputs are worth less than your costs.

Quote
Because when I look at a bill from something I buy, I see the price without tax and the percentage of tax, which varies from 0 to 20%, at least over here in France, and the total I have to pay. In NL the max is 21% for as far as I'm up to date.

And that's pretty stupid and adds huge costs, both to dealing with different rates on different things, but also paying people to decide which rate is for which thing. e.g. basic food such as cookies is 0%, but luxury food such as chocolate is 20%. So which is biscuits coated with a layer of chocolate? Does it depend on the thickness of the layer? etc etc, on a million different goods.

Here in New Zealand everything is 15%, no variations, no exceptions. If poor people can't afford basic food, given them money directly, don't muck about with the tax rate on the food.

Quote
Some foods are taxed at lower rates, and I recently found that for anything concerning renewable energy is taxed at 5.5%

I recall somewhere in the USA there being different tax rates on a coffee drunk in the shop, and a take-out coffee from the same shop. As I recall, take-out had the higher rate. I could say I'd drink the coffee in the shop, and then actually walk out with it and THEY COULDN'T STOP ME BWAHAHAHA
 

Offline tszaboo

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #14 on: March 29, 2024, 09:52:59 am »
In the EU, they will just slap a ~20 EUR import tax + VAT administration fee to your item. And then VAT to the administration fee. So your 1 EUR item would be ~26 once it gets here.

Only when the shop you are buying from does not handle the VAT themselves. Then the postperson will knock on your door and collect the VAT + administration fee from you.

Aliexpress handles the VAT for you, so no problem there. But that said, the shipping cost are increasing making it less and less interesting to buy stuff from them.
Of course. Only if your seller doesn't handle import tax and VAT. You want DDP incoterms, because somehow doing the same VAT handling is practically free, while in Europe some automated process to send you a link to pay VAT in an email or phone message is 25 EUR.
 

Offline wraper

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #15 on: March 29, 2024, 09:56:37 am »
In the EU, they will just slap a ~20 EUR import tax + VAT administration fee to your item. And then VAT to the administration fee. So your 1 EUR item would be ~26 once it gets here.

Only when the shop you are buying from does not handle the VAT themselves. Then the postperson will knock on your door and collect the VAT + administration fee from you.

Aliexpress handles the VAT for you, so no problem there. But that said, the shipping cost are increasing making it less and less interesting to buy stuff from them.
Of course. Only if your seller doesn't handle import tax and VAT. You want DDP incoterms, because somehow doing the same VAT handling is practically free, while in Europe some automated process to send you a link to pay VAT in an email or phone message is 25 EUR.
Don't mix IOSS with DDP, very different things. Not to say you assume clearance process and cost is the same across the EU, and it's absolutely not.
 

Offline pcprogrammer

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #16 on: March 29, 2024, 10:03:34 am »
But as you yourself describe later, you pay VAT on the difference between your inputs and your outputs. And get a refund if your outputs are worth less than your costs.

True, but that is only when you run a business. If now, I have someone come and do some work for me I have to pay the tax and can't claim it back.

The whole VAT system brings a boatload of work on all ends. You have to fill in the tax forms for it, they have to process them, money has to be transferred, etc.

And that's pretty stupid and adds huge costs, both to dealing with different rates on different things, but also paying people to decide which rate is for which thing. e.g. basic food such as cookies is 0%, but luxury food such as chocolate is 20%. So which is biscuits coated with a layer of chocolate? Does it depend on the thickness of the layer? etc etc, on a million different goods.

Here in New Zealand everything is 15%, no variations, no exceptions. If poor people can't afford basic food, given them money directly, don't muck about with the tax rate on the food.

Yep it sure is in a way. The idea in the NL (EU?) is to make healthy food cheaper, but it fails at that too. Because what is healthy? Potato is a vegetable and somewhat healthy, but now what if it is turned into crisps? Kind of the same as your cookies and chocolate, although I would not consider cookies as basic food.  :palm:
« Last Edit: March 29, 2024, 10:06:03 am by pcprogrammer »
 

Offline wraper

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #17 on: March 29, 2024, 10:09:43 am »
But as you yourself describe later, you pay VAT on the difference between your inputs and your outputs. And get a refund if your outputs are worth less than your costs.

True, but that is only when you run a business. If I have someone come and do some work for me I have to pay the tax and can't claim it back.
The thing with VAT is that business claim the VAT paid back in nearly all cases with some rare exceptions. So VAT is actually tax for individual or small non VAT registered business. So only the final (usually individual) buyer actually pays the tax.
 

Offline wilfred

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #18 on: March 29, 2024, 10:39:06 am »
I believe Aliexpress has a warehouse in Australia with, presumably, some of the more popular stuff, as they do also in the USA and EU.

I did not know that. But still I have to wonder just what is "more popular stuff". Recently stuff I bought are nickel strip, a spot welding pen  and a folding "leather" case for a Moto G14 which is hardly a popular phone. They all had Chinese writing on the labels.

I'd be surprised if I accidentally drifted into popular items. No idea what they might be.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2024, 10:40:54 am by wilfred »
 

Offline pcprogrammer

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #19 on: March 29, 2024, 10:41:32 am »
But as you yourself describe later, you pay VAT on the difference between your inputs and your outputs. And get a refund if your outputs are worth less than your costs.

True, but that is only when you run a business. If I have someone come and do some work for me I have to pay the tax and can't claim it back.
The thing with VAT is that business claim the VAT paid back in nearly all cases with some rare exceptions. So VAT is actually tax for individual or small non VAT registered business. So only the final (usually individual) buyer actually pays the tax.

Yes that is what I'm saying. I edited my post to reflect that when I now hire someone, I have to pay the tax. I'm retired and have not had a business since 2012.

Here in France there are also reductions when being a pensioner to stimulate hiring a gardener or so. 20% on top of a workers hourly rate makes it very expensive nowadays.

Offline jonpaul

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #20 on: March 29, 2024, 11:16:01 am »
 GST/VATsales tax is   very unfailr an perhaps illegal scheme for governments to steal.

All tax is thieft. Its OUR money not the Governmants!

See Murray Rothbart, Lugwig VonMises, the Federalist Papers, Claudio Grass, Ron Paul

This happens by your  electing socialist/commies to your governmants.

Jon
Jean-Paul  the Internet Dinosaur
 

Offline tszaboo

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #21 on: March 29, 2024, 12:52:42 pm »
In the EU, they will just slap a ~20 EUR import tax + VAT administration fee to your item. And then VAT to the administration fee. So your 1 EUR item would be ~26 once it gets here.

Only when the shop you are buying from does not handle the VAT themselves. Then the postperson will knock on your door and collect the VAT + administration fee from you.

Aliexpress handles the VAT for you, so no problem there. But that said, the shipping cost are increasing making it less and less interesting to buy stuff from them.
Of course. Only if your seller doesn't handle import tax and VAT. You want DDP incoterms, because somehow doing the same VAT handling is practically free, while in Europe some automated process to send you a link to pay VAT in an email or phone message is 25 EUR.
Don't mix IOSS with DDP, very different things. Not to say you assume clearance process and cost is the same across the EU, and it's absolutely not.

"The most important consideration for DDP terms is that the seller is responsible for clearing the goods through customs in the buyer's country, including both paying the duties and taxes, and obtaining the necessary authorizations and registrations from the authorities in that country."
There is a slight difference in what IOSS is, it's a procedure for the seller to pay the import duty and VAT. DDP is a delivery term that might include IOSS and whatever else to get the product to your door without extra additional cost later. IOSS is not an incoterm.
DDP is an agreement between the seller and buyer on who does what, IOSS is one of the procedure the seller can do.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2024, 12:58:38 pm by tszaboo »
 

Offline wraper

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #22 on: March 29, 2024, 01:03:39 pm »
"The most important consideration for DDP terms is that the seller is responsible for clearing the goods through customs in the buyer's country, including both paying the duties and taxes, and obtaining the necessary authorizations and registrations from the authorities in that country."
DDP is seller paying for particular delivery service that involves customs clearance of the goods. IOSS (EU only but there are similar things in some other countries) means platform or seller collecting VAT for low value items sold to individuals only and paying total collected tax through IOSS once in taxation period. No clearance service involved. Shipped through usual service. DDP from Mouser or Digikey is even more complicated, they basically sell items to their European subsidiaries which then resell them to you. So you don't even get an invoice from US company.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2024, 01:16:14 pm by wraper »
 

Offline Siwastaja

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #23 on: March 29, 2024, 01:26:11 pm »
The whole VAT system brings a boatload of work on all ends. You have to fill in the tax forms for it, they have to process them, money has to be transferred, etc.

VAT is one of the simplest and most obvious forms of taxation, and it's pretty similar all over the world (maybe with small implementation detail differences), so I'm quite surprised to see you struggle with the concept!

Of course businesses need to "fill in forms". Bookkeeping is basic requirement for running any kind of business, everywhere, and so is paying taxes. Even I as a small business, and someone who hates paperwork, am totally fine with VAT; VAT is simple. When you sell, you add VAT to the price. Then you deduct the VAT of whatever you had to buy to be able to deliver the product. End result is, you (or more appropriately, your customer) is paying tax for the value increase only. Pretty simple.
 
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Offline wraper

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #24 on: March 29, 2024, 01:41:51 pm »
When you sell, you add VAT to the price. Then you deduct the VAT of whatever you had to buy to be able to deliver the product. End result is, you (or more appropriately, your customer) is paying tax for the value increase only. Pretty simple.
VAT is just a sales tax with a lot of back and forth happening in intermediate stages. You as individual just pay tax on full value that sort of compounds in intermediate stages, but actually does not really. Naming it VAT makes no sense for final customer as it's anything but, its name only makes sense in the context of back and forth going in between of businesses and TAX agency. It could be just removed in all intermediate stages (it actually is in cross country sales within EU between VAT registered entities) with the same end result. It's just stupid when I have to pay VAT when clearing customs for shipments for my business to just get it reimbursed by tax agency a month later since I almost never sell within Latvia and to individuals.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2024, 01:47:49 pm by wraper »
 

Offline tszaboo

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #25 on: March 29, 2024, 01:54:20 pm »
When you sell, you add VAT to the price. Then you deduct the VAT of whatever you had to buy to be able to deliver the product. End result is, you (or more appropriately, your customer) is paying tax for the value increase only. Pretty simple.
VAT is just a sales tax with a lot of back and forth happening in intermediate stages. You as individual just pay tax on full value that sort of compounds in intermediate stages, but actually does not really. Naming it VAT makes no sense for final customer as it's anything but, its name only makes sense in the context of back and forth going in between of businesses and TAX agency. It could be just removed in all intermediate stages (it actually is in cross country sales within EU between VAT registered entities) with the same end result. It's just stupid when I have to pay VAT when clearing customs for shipments for my business to just get it reimbursed by tax agency a month later since I almost never sell within Latvia and to individuals.
But it wouldn't be the same. You buy two things for 1 EUR each, put it together, sell it for 3 EUR, pay after 1 EUR as tax. Your government gets tax after 1 EUR "Value added". Someone else stocks it, puts it in a store sells it for 5 EUR, they pay for 2 EUR value added.  It's the same for the end customer, but it's very different for countries that don't make end product. Besides, what is an end product anyway? A fridge might be an end product for a consumer, or a tool without VAT for a bakery.
 

Offline wraper

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #26 on: March 29, 2024, 02:40:57 pm »
When you sell, you add VAT to the price. Then you deduct the VAT of whatever you had to buy to be able to deliver the product. End result is, you (or more appropriately, your customer) is paying tax for the value increase only. Pretty simple.
VAT is just a sales tax with a lot of back and forth happening in intermediate stages. You as individual just pay tax on full value that sort of compounds in intermediate stages, but actually does not really. Naming it VAT makes no sense for final customer as it's anything but, its name only makes sense in the context of back and forth going in between of businesses and TAX agency. It could be just removed in all intermediate stages (it actually is in cross country sales within EU between VAT registered entities) with the same end result. It's just stupid when I have to pay VAT when clearing customs for shipments for my business to just get it reimbursed by tax agency a month later since I almost never sell within Latvia and to individuals.
But it wouldn't be the same. You buy two things for 1 EUR each, put it together, sell it for 3 EUR, pay after 1 EUR as tax. Your government gets tax after 1 EUR "Value added". Someone else stocks it, puts it in a store sells it for 5 EUR, they pay for 2 EUR value added.  It's the same for the end customer, but it's very different for countries that don't make end product. Besides, what is an end product anyway? A fridge might be an end product for a consumer, or a tool without VAT for a bakery.
Buy two things, get credit on VAT paid for those, then sell with VAT on a full value. It's the same as if you did not pay VAT to your suppliers to begin with.
It's like arguing what's more expensive, $120 thing with $20 rebate or $100 thing with no rebate. It's only consumer that does not get the rebate at the end of the chain.
« Last Edit: March 29, 2024, 03:00:16 pm by wraper »
 

Offline pcprogrammer

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #27 on: March 29, 2024, 04:33:36 pm »
VAT is one of the simplest and most obvious forms of taxation, and it's pretty similar all over the world (maybe with small implementation detail differences), so I'm quite surprised to see you struggle with the concept!

I don't struggle with the concept, I just hate having to pay it.

Did my books myself and in the beginning the VAT was only once every quarter. At some point my income and work load grew and the tax office decided I had to do the VAT declaration every month. Sure earned a lot of money, but it also increased the work load, both client and tax work. Reaped the benefits of it too though. Could not have afforded the very expensive oscilloscope I have otherwise. No VAT and tax deductions based on investments.  >:D

Also VAT is kind of double taxing but for sure a big income for the government. You hire someone, pay the VAT and the worker. The worker then pays income tax over what you payed him, and VAT for all his non business purchases, etc.

The whole thought behind the VAT on foreign webshops was to equalize the playing field for local sellers, but the only one gaining from it are the governments. They take yet again a piece of the pie.

The boatload of work has more to do with what brucehoult mentioned about the different VAT rates that we have now.  :-DD

Online c64Topic starter

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #28 on: March 30, 2024, 07:31:04 am »
Where do you see that you are charged at least $1 GST? I've always paid 10% no matter what the total (price + shipping). AliExpress is registered in Australia and is obliged to collect GST.
Pretty much all the promotional items sold for under couple of bucks (including shipping). Look for example at this store, they have few items under $1 for first time buyer
https://www.aliexpress.com/store/1102126606

I'm pretty sure, if I try this kind of shit (charging more than 10% GST) as a business here, I will get a visit from ATO (ato.gov.au) pretty soon
 

Online retiredfeline

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #29 on: March 30, 2024, 07:51:32 am »
Pretty much all the promotional items sold for under couple of bucks (including shipping). Look for example at this store, they have few items under $1 for first time buyer
https://www.aliexpress.com/store/1102126606

I can't replicate your problem but I'm not a first time buyer so those < $1 don't appear for me. But I did find a cheap item < $10 (including shipping) and the GST was correctly calculated. You'll need to show us a summary panel to prove your experience.

 
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Offline soldar

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #30 on: March 30, 2024, 01:23:18 pm »
For shipping to Australia, Aliexpress must charge 10% GST. However, for most cheap items, it's usually more than 10%.
For example, I've seen something on special for less than $1 delivered, and they want to charge more than $1 just for GST.

Is it even legal?
My guess is that it is not only not legal but not even happening and that you are misinterpreting the information you have.
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Online c64Topic starter

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #31 on: March 31, 2024, 07:27:30 am »
For shipping to Australia, Aliexpress must charge 10% GST. However, for most cheap items, it's usually more than 10%.
For example, I've seen something on special for less than $1 delivered, and they want to charge more than $1 just for GST.

Is it even legal?
My guess is that it is not only not legal but not even happening and that you are misinterpreting the information you have.
Why don't you find something under $1 with free shipping, change your country to Australia, and send us your screenshot? Every item under $1 I've seen so far has tax incorrect
 

Online c64Topic starter

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #32 on: March 31, 2024, 07:30:47 am »
Pretty much all the promotional items sold for under couple of bucks (including shipping). Look for example at this store, they have few items under $1 for first time buyer
https://www.aliexpress.com/store/1102126606
This shop doesn't have anything under $1 any more, here is another random find
 

Offline Psi

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #33 on: March 31, 2024, 07:40:15 am »
I buy stuff from aliexpress through my business often and clam back the GST  (NZ)

If I pay in USD the GST on the invoices is always correct (15% of what I pay for item) except for currency conversions rounding errors, because they charge the GST as 15% on the USD price then give you an estimate for what that might be in NZD. (Since the exchange rate isn't locked in until the transaction is processed it can move a little).

If I pay in NZD sometimes the invoice total is out by $0.01 vs what I'm charged. but I've not seen that issue in a while so it might be fixed.

But yeah, other than tiny rounting/conversion errors I've never had any oddness with GST on Aliexpress.
« Last Edit: March 31, 2024, 07:43:02 am by Psi »
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Online retiredfeline

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #34 on: March 31, 2024, 08:05:56 am »
This shop doesn't have anything under $1 any more, here is another random find

Give us the link and I'll try to reproduce it. What does it tell you when you click on the ? for info on the tax?
 

Offline brucehoult

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #35 on: March 31, 2024, 08:48:19 am »
This shop doesn't have anything under $1 any more, here is another random find

Give us the link and I'll try to reproduce it. What does it tell you when you click on the ? for info on the tax?

Note that in additional to GST (which is on everything) Australia imposes import duty on pretty much everything. The GST is calculated on the total of the goods, the value of the shipping (whether you actually pay that or not), and the duty, which I believe (I'm in NZ not Aus) is a minimum of 5% but can be a lot more.
 

Offline Psi

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #36 on: March 31, 2024, 11:33:50 am »
This shop doesn't have anything under $1 any more, here is another random find

Give us the link and I'll try to reproduce it. What does it tell you when you click on the ? for info on the tax?

Note that in additional to GST (which is on everything) Australia imposes import duty on pretty much everything. The GST is calculated on the total of the goods, the value of the shipping (whether you actually pay that or not), and the duty, which I believe (I'm in NZ not Aus) is a minimum of 5% but can be a lot more.

Aliexpress pre-pay the GST. Duty is applied/charged by local customs clearance when your item passes through customs and is totally separate invoice you pay.
Duty only gets charged if your orders is large enough for customs to bother with it.
Some items have zero duty
At least in NZ
« Last Edit: March 31, 2024, 11:38:04 am by Psi »
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Offline brucehoult

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #37 on: March 31, 2024, 10:18:18 pm »
This shop doesn't have anything under $1 any more, here is another random find

Give us the link and I'll try to reproduce it. What does it tell you when you click on the ? for info on the tax?

Note that in additional to GST (which is on everything) Australia imposes import duty on pretty much everything. The GST is calculated on the total of the goods, the value of the shipping (whether you actually pay that or not), and the duty, which I believe (I'm in NZ not Aus) is a minimum of 5% but can be a lot more.

Aliexpress pre-pay the GST. Duty is applied/charged by local customs clearance when your item passes through customs and is totally separate invoice you pay.
Duty only gets charged if your orders is large enough for customs to bother with it.
Some items have zero duty
At least in NZ

I'm familiar with how things work in NZ as I live there. In NZ we are now fortunate to not pay GST or duty or customs processing fees on anything under $1000, if the original vendor is not in the overseas GST adding system. And very little has duty outside of booze and tobacco and some clothing and footwear.

But the conversation is about Australia, which is quite different. They, as I said, add duty to EVERYTHING imported (over some base value), they have rather large duty on a lot of things such as for example I think motor vehicles which NZ doesn't have (and they don't even make tham in Australia any more!)

As I understand it, Canadians are unfortunate to have to pay tax and processing fees on anything over $30.  Ouch!
 

Online c64Topic starter

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #38 on: March 31, 2024, 10:55:04 pm »
This shop doesn't have anything under $1 any more, here is another random find

Give us the link and I'll try to reproduce it. What does it tell you when you click on the ? for info on the tax?

Try these, only works for first time buyer
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005005977505151.html
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005006336964908.html
https://www.aliexpress.com/item/1005005956297621.html

Can you give me link to any item (under $1 free shipping) which have tax correct? Every one I click are incorrect.

(?) info on the tax is exactly the same as for all other items
 

Online David_AVD

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #39 on: March 31, 2024, 11:02:28 pm »
When you say "first time buyer" do you mean first time buying from that store, or first time buying anything from AliExpress?
 

Online c64Topic starter

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #40 on: March 31, 2024, 11:06:03 pm »
I suppose "from that store". Or who never used "shipped by aliexpress" - all of these specials are shipped by aliexpress

What kind of price you see for those links?
« Last Edit: April 01, 2024, 12:07:08 am by c64 »
 

Online retiredfeline

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #41 on: April 01, 2024, 12:15:31 am »
I'm not a first time buyer, I think it means for all of AliExpress, so I don't get any special prices or free shipping. Here are my results, all calculated correctly AFAICT:





It is possible that with the compilcations of being first time buyer and free shipping, there is a bug in their calculations. Have you contacted AliExpress?
 

Online SiliconWizard

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #42 on: April 01, 2024, 01:45:39 am »
As I understand it, Canadians are unfortunate to have to pay tax and processing fees on anything over $30.  Ouch!

Well, over here, it went, if I'm not mistaken, from 100 eur to 20 eur to now the first euro. Yay. Of course, a lot of small items manage to get through, but you never know.
 

Online SiliconWizard

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #43 on: April 01, 2024, 01:55:22 am »
Buy two things, get credit on VAT paid for those, then sell with VAT on a full value. It's the same as if you did not pay VAT to your suppliers to begin with.
It's like arguing what's more expensive, $120 thing with $20 rebate or $100 thing with no rebate. It's only consumer that does not get the rebate at the end of the chain.

Yes. Normally, only the customer at the end of the chain really pays the VAT.

One more dubious use of VAT, though, is when selling second-hand products. What's the value added in this case, and in effect VAT will have been paid several times on the same goods. Ah, the beauty of taxes.
 
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Online David_AVD

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #44 on: April 01, 2024, 02:51:31 am »
I suppose "from that store". Or who never used "shipped by aliexpress" - all of these specials are shipped by aliexpress

What kind of price you see for those links?

Same pricing and correct GST as retiredfeline has above.
 

Offline brucehoult

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #45 on: April 01, 2024, 05:02:46 am »
One more dubious use of VAT, though, is when selling second-hand products. What's the value added in this case, and in effect VAT will have been paid several times on the same goods. Ah, the beauty of taxes.

If the person selling those second-hand products is GST-registered then they get to claim back the GST on any decrease in value between when they bought them and sold them.

If the entity buying the used goods is GST-registered then they also can claim back the GST component (i.e. 13.04% here in NZ where GST is 15%)m whether the used-seller is GST registered or not.

And the non GST-registered seller effectively (but unofficially) also gets back the GST component of the used goods they sell, as the price implicitly includes GST, but they don't have to tell the government they sold it. i.e. people who are not GST-registered effectively get back the GST on things they bought i/when they later sell them, rather than in their next GST tax return.
 

Offline pcprogrammer

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #46 on: April 01, 2024, 06:33:17 am »
Buy two things, get credit on VAT paid for those, then sell with VAT on a full value. It's the same as if you did not pay VAT to your suppliers to begin with.
It's like arguing what's more expensive, $120 thing with $20 rebate or $100 thing with no rebate. It's only consumer that does not get the rebate at the end of the chain.

Yes. Normally, only the customer at the end of the chain really pays the VAT.

One more dubious use of VAT, though, is when selling second-hand products. What's the value added in this case, and in effect VAT will have been paid several times on the same goods. Ah, the beauty of taxes.

What about sending something from the UK to the EU. Even if it is a gift they slap on import duties that make your head spin.

Offline pcprogrammer

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #47 on: April 01, 2024, 06:37:43 am »
First time buyer will also show up when you are not logged in.

As soon as you log into Aliexpress and have an order history the price will jump up to it's normal value. The only way to profit from it would be registering as a new customer every time, but maybe they also check on shipping address or payment account. I never tried it.

Offline Brian of Romsey

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #48 on: April 01, 2024, 07:52:02 am »
I've experienced vendors where the shipping goes up a small amount for the second unit but outrageously for subsequent units.  I've sometimes found it cost effective to make several purchases of smaller quantities of the same thing.  I believe the expression is "play stupid games, win stupid prizes" so I'm happy to game them.

 

Offline pcprogrammer

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #49 on: April 01, 2024, 08:57:26 am »
I've experienced vendors where the shipping goes up a small amount for the second unit but outrageously for subsequent units.  I've sometimes found it cost effective to make several purchases of smaller quantities of the same thing.  I believe the expression is "play stupid games, win stupid prizes" so I'm happy to game them.

Yep, it makes shopping more of a task.  :-DD

I have seen this with resistors where adding different values up to 5 did not raise the shipping cost and then adding a 6th one doubled the shipping. Up to number ten the same cost, to triple it on number eleven. So there the economizing was to add just the right amount to benefit from the lowest average shipping costs.

Your type I have also seen for things like the bluepill or Arduino nano. In that case indeed, order the minimum amount per order. At times when I did this, they stuck them in the same envelope anyway.  :-DD

Online c64Topic starter

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #50 on: April 01, 2024, 09:09:57 am »
I have purchases in my account, so it's not my first. But I've never used "shipped by aliexpress" before, I guess this is the reason I see these offers.
 

Online c64Topic starter

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #51 on: April 01, 2024, 09:17:42 am »
It is possible that with the compilcations of being first time buyer and free shipping, there is a bug in their calculations. Have you contacted AliExpress?
Nah, too much work for couple of bucks. Even if they bother to reply.

Some items have incorrect amount of GST to equal exactly the price of the standard shipping. For example, item $0.76, shipping normally $3, shipping discount $3. Total price $0.76 but GST is $0.37 (as if it is applied to the full $3.76 price).

But some have completely random number, like in my screenshot before
 

Online retiredfeline

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #52 on: April 01, 2024, 09:23:06 am »
It could be that evil accountants have worked out a legal way to charge GST on a higher price. What they do is award you points on the spot equal to the discount and the postage. Just a theory. Good thing for the world I didn't go into accountancy instead taking up some other evil profession. :-DD
« Last Edit: April 01, 2024, 09:24:38 am by retiredfeline »
 

Offline Kim Christensen

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #53 on: April 01, 2024, 03:39:58 pm »
Some items have incorrect amount of GST to equal exactly the price of the standard shipping. For example, item $0.76, shipping normally $3, shipping discount $3. Total price $0.76 but GST is $0.37 (as if it is applied to the full $3.76 price).

In Canada, that's how they do the GST. They calculate it before discounts are applied.
My ISP gives me several discounts, but the taxes are on the subtotal before discounts.
 

Offline thm_w

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #54 on: April 01, 2024, 09:41:29 pm »
But some have completely random number, like in my screenshot before

You haven't included the original price of the item, so there is no way to know if it is "totally random" which is unlikely, or if its simply based off the cost of the item.

edit: yes Australia rules seem like they are on the post-discounted price, but as above many other countries might use the pre-discounted price to calculate the tax. If this bug only applies to first time buyer, I wouldn't care.
https://www.reddit.com/r/Aliexpress/comments/126onop/aliexpress_has_overcharged_me_tax_on_virtually/

I only see one recent order where I was charged tax, and it was slightly below the official tax rate (11.4 vs 12%), and was calculated post-discount.
« Last Edit: April 01, 2024, 09:51:10 pm by thm_w »
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Offline thm_w

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #55 on: April 01, 2024, 09:54:35 pm »
Some items have incorrect amount of GST to equal exactly the price of the standard shipping. For example, item $0.76, shipping normally $3, shipping discount $3. Total price $0.76 but GST is $0.37 (as if it is applied to the full $3.76 price).

In Canada, that's how they do the GST. They calculate it before discounts are applied.
My ISP gives me several discounts, but the taxes are on the subtotal before discounts.

Thats probably just Telus/Shaw reaming you, they are able to not charge tax post-discount if they decided to.
I'm sure its done on purpose there, unlike Ali, where its just as likely to be a programming bug.

https://www.canada.ca/en/revenue-agency/services/tax/businesses/topics/gst-hst-businesses/charge-collect-special-cases.html
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Offline DaneLaw

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Re: Aliexpress dodgy GST tax
« Reply #56 on: April 01, 2024, 10:18:01 pm »
Where do you see that you are charged at least $1 GST? I've always paid 10% no matter what the total (price + shipping). AliExpress is registered in Australia and is obliged to collect GST.

Shipping charges are a different matter, it's up to the seller and some sellers tempt buyers with cheap prices but the shipping is expensive. I look for companies that will sell multiples units or items with minimal increase in shipping cost.

PCB orders fly under the GST radar because the firms are not registered in Australia and the GST is too small to collect.
In the EU, they will just slap a ~20 EUR import tax + VAT administration fee to your item. And then VAT to the administration fee. So your 1 EUR item would be ~26 once it gets here.
Exactly, and that administration VAT fee would make low-value purchases extremely difficult.
So its a big plus that sources like Aliexpress, Banggood, and also eBay handle the VAT on the fly when you purchase items outside EU that are below a certain value, so you're not getting choked by that ludicrously high VAT administration fee, that here in Denmark is 160DKK (22€) +25%VAT of the shipping cost. and item value.

Items from Aliexpress that are over the limit (around 200US) will not be VAT handled at checkout, so on those we will get that 22€ handling fee + 25% VAT of item value and shippingcost when the item arrives and you have to transfer the relevant amount before it will be delivered.
 


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