WASHINGTON: The US tariff exemption for package shipments valued under US$800 ends permanently on Friday (Aug 29), with a six-month transition period under which postal service shippers can opt to pay a flat duty of US$80 to US$200 per package depending on the country of origin, Trump administration officials said.

The US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) agency will begin collecting normal duty rates on all global parcel imports, regardless of value after 12.01am EDT (4.01am GMT) on Friday.

The move broadens the Trump administration’s cancellation of the de minimis exemption for shipments from China and Hong Kong earlier this year.

“President Trump’s ending of the deadly de minimis loophole will save thousands of American lives by restricting the flow of narcotics and other dangerous prohibited items, and add up to US$10 billion a year in tariff revenues to our Treasury,” White House trade adviser Peter Navarro told reporters.

“This is a permanent change,” said a senior administration official, adding that any push to restore the exemptions for trusted trading partner countries was “dead on arrival”.

The de minimis exemption has been in place since 1938 and was raised from US$200 to US$800 in 2015 as a means to foster small business growth on e-commerce marketplaces.

But direct shipments from China exploded after President Donald Trump raised tariffs on Chinese goods during his first term, creating a new direct-to-consumer business model for e-commerce firms Shein and Temu.

Many of these packages entered without screening, and the Trump administration has also blamed the exemption for allowing fentanyl and its precursors to flow into the US.

CBP has estimated that the number of packages claiming the de minimis exemption jumped nearly 10-fold from 139 million in fiscal 2015 to 1.36 billion in fiscal 2024.

A second senior Trump administration official said that CBP has collected more than US$492 million in additional duties on packages shipped from China and Hong Kong since their exemptions were eliminated on May 2.

The official said that full tariff rates will apply to all packages shipped by express carriers such as FedEx, United Parcel Service and DHL, with the firms collecting the duties and processing the paperwork.

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