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Small parcels in limbo as Trump moves to end US tariff exemption

David Peterson by David Peterson
August 28, 2025
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US President Donald Trump's move to close a duty-free exemption for small parcels has sparked confusion among postal service providers. ©AFP

Washington (AFP) – An approaching US deadline to end tariff exemptions on small parcels has tripped up global deliveries to the world’s biggest economy, with businesses halting shipments to American consumers and mulling price hikes. Come Friday, US President Donald Trump’s administration is abolishing a rule that allows packages valued at $800 or below to enter the country duty-free. But the monthlong lead time he provided to implement the change has sparked a frenzy. Postal services, including in France, Germany, Italy, India, Australia, and Japan, earlier announced that most US-bound packages would no longer be accepted. The UK’s Royal Mail, which took a similar step, announced Thursday new services for customers to continue sending goods to the United States.

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On Tuesday, the United Nations’ Universal Postal Union said 25 member countries’ postal operators had suspended outbound postal services to the country. UK retailer Liz Nieburg told AFP she had stopped shipping products to US customers while the Royal Mail worked out a system to honor the changes. She told AFP that some American customers of her online business SocksFox — which sells socks, underwear, and sleepwear — tried to place orders ahead of time to avoid additional costs. But this is risky, given a likely rush of goods entering the United States as other buyers do the same, meaning that products might come up against tariffs anyway.

US buyers form about 20 percent of her sales, and she sees little choice but to hike prices if new duties are here to stay: “Our margins are too tight to be able to absorb that.” The Trump administration has imposed tariffs in rapid succession this year. But Cornell Professor Li Chen warned that it takes time for postal services to establish systems for duty collection to close the so-called “de minimis” exemption for small parcels. “It’s not like there’s a switch you can turn on and turn off,” he said.

On the consumer side, there will be potential delays, because now all the parcels have to clear customs, Chen added. Prices may also rise if businesses pass on the tariffs. “The impact on small businesses probably will be much greater,” he said. Larger companies tend to be more diversified and can absorb the shock. These include businesses like Chinese-founded consumer platforms Shein and Temu, for example, which were hit when Washington ended the exemption for Chinese products this year. They might have to raise costs, Chen said, but they are not fully dependent on US consumers.

Online marketplaces like Etsy, where small businesses sell products, could also be impacted. Elsewhere, Ken Huening, whose California-based business CoverSeal manufactures outdoor protective covers in China and Mexico, has had to eliminate free shipping for customers. While he had benefited from the duty-free exemption, the hit to China and now Mexico are posing challenges. “Textile and manufacturing is not available in the US currently,” Huening told AFP. “It might be in the future, but by that time, we’re all out of business,” he said.

The changes have fueled uncertainty, with Deutsche Post and DHL Parcel Germany saying last week they would stop accepting certain US-bound parcels, citing lingering questions over customs duties collection. “It’s a super confusing time for our customers,” said Haley Massicotte, who runs Canada-based cleaning products company Oak & Willow. She said US consumers do not always understand how tariffs work, and how they might have to bear added costs. “We are going to do everything in our power to not raise prices,” she stressed.

Similarly, ceramics retailer Sarah Louise Jour in Bangkok, Thailand, has been striving to keep shipping costs down after facing issues with the Thai postal service. This forced her to tap more expensive services to send products to US buyers, constituting some 90 percent of her business. “I don’t have time to worry, because I have to think about my team. I do employ people here,” she said. “I have rent I need to pay for the office.” While she expects sales to hold up in the holiday season, the outlook is murkier afterwards. Massicotte said: “This tariff war is just going to hurt the American and the Canadian consumer, especially small business owners.”

© 2024 AFP

Tags: e-commercetariffstrade tensions
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