Regulatory Compliance

The UK Importer's Complete Guide to Customs Duty & the 2026 LVI Reforms

May 1, 2026

Let's have a frank conversation about customs duty — because if you're importing products into the UK from China, Vietnam, or anywhere else outside Great Britain, this is the one area where ignorance genuinely costs money. Not a little money. Significant money.

UK customs duty is not a flat fee, a rounding error, or something you can leave to your freight forwarder to sort out. It's a structured system of tariff codes, valuation rules, and compliance obligations that, if managed correctly, can be minimised legally. If managed badly — or ignored — it creates surprise bills at the port, potential HMRC penalties, and deals that looked profitable on a spreadsheet but aren't in practice.

And 2026 is not a quiet year for UK customs. The Low Value Import (LVI) reforms are reshaping how low-value parcels enter the UK, the Border Target Operating Model (BTOM) continues to roll out new data requirements, and HMRC's enforcement of overseas seller obligations is tightening considerably. This guide covers everything you need to know — from the absolute basics of how duty is calculated, through to the specific reforms affecting the market this year and the legitimate strategies for reducing your duty bill.

This guide is for: UK business owners, brand founders, Amazon sellers, and buyers who source products from China, Vietnam, or other manufacturing hubs and import them into Great Britain. Whether you're planning your first container or managing your fiftieth, this will clarify the rules, highlight where savings are available, and explain exactly what the 2026 LVI reforms mean for your business.

What is Customs Duty?

Customs duty (also called import duty or import tariff) is a tax levied by the UK government on goods imported from countries outside Great Britain. It is separate from VAT and is calculated as a percentage of the declared customs value of the goods, with the rate determined by the product's commodity code under the UK Global Tariff (UKGT).

Why UK Importers Can't Afford to Get This Wrong

Customs duty is one of the most underestimated costs in importing. It's not hidden — HMRC publishes every duty rate publicly on the UK Trade Tariff — but many new importers either don't know to look, or underestimate how quickly duty accumulates across a shipment of any real scale.

Consider a UK retailer importing £50,000 of wooden furniture from China. A typical wooden furniture commodity code carries a 5.5% duty rate. That's £2,750 in duty alone, before you've added 20% import VAT on the dutiable value (the customs value plus the duty). Do that calculation wrong and you're not just off on your landed cost — you've potentially submitted an inaccurate import declaration to HMRC, which carries its own penalties.

Now multiply that across a business doing six to twelve container imports a year, and the financial impact of correct tariff classification and legitimate duty relief strategies becomes very substantial indeed. At Epic Sourcing, we've helped UK businesses recover thousands of pounds annually simply by ensuring their commodity codes were correct and their UKVFTA origin eligibility was actually being claimed.

Beyond cost, the compliance dimension matters more than ever. HMRC has significantly increased scrutiny of import declarations in recent years, particularly for goods arriving from China. Under-declaration of value, incorrect origin claims, and misclassified commodity codes are all active enforcement priorities. The question isn't whether HMRC might check — it's whether your declarations will hold up when they do.

The honest answer is that most UK importers could be doing this better. This guide is designed to close that gap.

How UK Customs Duty Works — The Fundamentals

The UK Global Tariff and Commodity Codes

Since leaving the EU Customs Union, the UK operates its own tariff schedule: the UK Global Tariff (UKGT). Every product that enters Great Britain must be classified under a 10-digit commodity code that determines the applicable duty rate. You can look up any commodity code using the UK Trade Tariff tool at trade.gov.uk — HMRC's official classification reference.

Commodity codes are structured hierarchically: the first 6 digits are internationally standardised under the World Customs Organisation's Harmonised System (HS), used by customs authorities worldwide. The remaining 4 digits are UK-specific. Getting the code right matters enormously — different codes on what appear to be similar products can carry wildly different duty rates. Certain synthetic textiles attract zero duty, whilst cotton-based equivalents can carry rates of 12% or more. The difference between two adjacent commodity codes can be thousands of pounds on a single container.

Commodity classification is both a science and, at times, an art. For complex products — especially anything that could fall into multiple categories — it's worth consulting a licensed customs broker or applying directly to HMRC for a Binding Tariff Information (BTI) ruling. A BTI gives you legal certainty: HMRC must accept the classification you've been given, removing all classification risk.

Pro Tip:

Never simply use the commodity code your supplier puts on their export invoice. Chinese suppliers operate under China's customs tariff schedule, which shares the first 6 digits with the UK system but diverges significantly after that. Their classification reflects their export obligations — not the correct UK import classification. Always verify commodity codes yourself against the UKGT, or instruct a UK customs broker to do so.

How Duty is Calculated — CIF Value, Duty Rate, and the Full Formula

UK customs duty is calculated on the customs value of the goods — and the customs value is not simply what you paid for them. Under the WTO Customs Valuation Agreement (which HMRC follows), the primary method of customs valuation is the transaction value: the price actually paid or payable for the goods, adjusted to a CIF (Cost, Insurance, and Freight) basis for UK imports.

This means your customs value includes the supplier invoice price (FOB value), plus the cost of international freight to the UK port of entry, plus marine insurance (if applicable). The full calculation works as follows:

Cost Element Example (£50,000 order, 5.5% duty) Notes
FOB Value (goods) £50,000 Price paid to supplier
+ Sea Freight (China → Felixstowe) £2,800 Approx. cost of a 20ft container
+ Insurance £150 Typically ~0.3% of cargo value
= Customs Value (CIF) £52,950 Duty is calculated on this figure
× Duty Rate (5.5%) £2,912 Import duty payable — not reclaimable
× 20% VAT (on CIF + Duty) £11,172 Reclaimable via PVA if VAT-registered
Total border charges £14,084 Of which £2,912 is a real cost

The Difference Between Import Duty and Import VAT

These are two entirely distinct charges and it's important not to conflate them. Import duty is a customs tariff — a trade tax — and it is not reclaimable under any circumstances. It is a real, permanent cost to your business. Import VAT is the UK's standard 20% VAT applied at the point of importation, and for VAT-registered businesses it is reclaimable through Postponed VAT Accounting (PVA) on your quarterly VAT return. No cash changes hands at the border; you simply include it on your VAT return and it nets out.

Non-VAT-registered businesses cannot reclaim import VAT, which significantly increases their effective landed cost per unit. For businesses approaching the £90,000 VAT registration threshold, the ability to reclaim import VAT through PVA is often a compelling reason to voluntarily register before the threshold is reached.

Your Essential Compliance Toolkit

EORI Numbers — What They Are and Why You Need One

An Economic Operators Registration and Identification (EORI) number is your unique identifier for all customs interactions with HMRC. If you're importing goods into Great Britain from outside the UK — even on a one-off basis — you need an EORI number. Without one, your goods will be held at the port and cannot be cleared through customs.

Applying for a UK EORI number (which begins with "GB") is free and done through the HMRC website. Most applications are processed within five business days, though online applications often receive an immediate decision. If you're also importing into Northern Ireland (which remains within the UK-EU Single Market for goods under the Windsor Framework), you'll additionally need an XI EORI number — a frequently overlooked complication for UK businesses with Northern Ireland-side operations or distribution.

⚠️ Watch Out:

Some freight forwarders will use their own EORI number on your import declaration if you haven't provided yours. This means the formal import record is registered in their name, not yours — creating potential compliance issues if HMRC subsequently queries the declaration. As the buyer and actual importer, HMRC may still hold you responsible for the accuracy of the declaration regardless of whose EORI was used. Always obtain your own EORI number before importing.

The Customs Declaration Service (CDS)

The Customs Declaration Service (CDS) is HMRC's current customs IT platform, which fully replaced the legacy CHIEF system. All UK import and export declarations must now be submitted through CDS. If you're working with a customs broker or freight forwarder, they will typically handle CDS submissions on your behalf — but as the importer of record, you are legally responsible for the accuracy and completeness of every declaration.

CDS requires more detailed data than the old CHIEF system, including additional commodity-level information, supporting document references, and enhanced consignment data. This increased data requirement is deliberate: HMRC uses the richer dataset to enable more targeted risk profiling and compliance checking. The practical implication for importers is that your paperwork needs to be thorough and consistent — commercial invoices, packing lists, certificates of origin, and any applicable product compliance certificates all need to be available and to match the declaration.

One critical feature of CDS is support for Postponed VAT Accounting (PVA), which allows VAT-registered importers to account for import VAT on their VAT return rather than paying it upfront at the border. If you're importing regularly and not yet using PVA, speak to your customs broker immediately — it's a significant cash flow advantage that every VAT-registered importer should be using.

Incoterms — Who Actually Pays the Duty?

The Incoterms (International Commercial Terms) specified in your purchase contract determine who is responsible for freight, insurance, and customs clearance. This matters significantly for duty liability and for understanding your true all-in landed cost.

  • FOB (Free On Board) — The most common term for UK importers buying from China and Vietnam. The supplier is responsible up to the port of export; you arrange and pay for international freight, insurance, and UK import customs clearance including all duties and VAT. You have full control over the UK customs process.
  • CIF (Cost, Insurance, Freight) — The supplier arranges and pays for freight and insurance to the UK destination port. You still handle and pay for UK customs clearance, duty, and VAT at the port. Note: because freight is now included in the supplier's price, your CIF customs value will be higher than under FOB terms.
  • DDP (Delivered Duty Paid) — The supplier takes responsibility for everything including UK customs clearance, duty payment, and final delivery. This sounds attractive but creates serious compliance risks: the supplier becomes the importer of record and you have no visibility into how goods were declared to HMRC. Avoid DDP for commercial volume importing.
  • DAP (Delivered At Place) — The supplier delivers to a named UK location (often your warehouse or a freight hub), but you remain responsible for customs clearance and duty payment at the border. Common in e-commerce supplier arrangements.

Most experienced UK importers use FOB or DAP terms and manage UK customs clearance through a trusted UK-based customs broker. This keeps you in control of the compliance process and ensures the import records are in your name.

The 2026 LVI Reforms — What's Changing and Why It Matters for UK Importers

What Are Low Value Imports?

"Low Value Imports" (LVI) refers to individual parcels and consignments of goods entering the UK at relatively low declared values — primarily individual B2C parcels shipped directly from overseas manufacturers or sellers to UK consumers. The explosive growth of platforms such as Temu, Shein, and AliExpress has driven an enormous increase in the volume of these small parcels entering the UK, creating customs enforcement challenges, competitive distortions for UK-compliant retailers, and increasing pressure on the Border Force's parcel processing capacity at hubs including Heathrow and East Midlands Airport.

The Current £135 Threshold — How It Works Today

Since January 2021, the UK has operated a two-tier system for VAT on imported goods arriving in low-value B2C consignments:

  • Goods valued at £135 or less (B2C sales): VAT is collected at the point of sale by the overseas seller or the online marketplace facilitating the sale, rather than at the UK border. Overseas sellers and marketplaces selling into the UK must register for UK VAT and remit the VAT collected directly to HMRC.
  • Goods valued above £135: Standard customs clearance applies — a full import declaration is required, customs duty is payable at the applicable commodity code rate, and import VAT is collected at the border (or deferred via PVA for VAT-registered businesses).

The problem, as HMRC and UK retailers have consistently highlighted, is compliance. A significant proportion of overseas sellers shipping parcels valued under £135 directly to UK consumers have either failed to register for UK VAT, or have structured their shipments — sometimes artificially splitting orders, sometimes under-declaring values — to avoid the requirements. The result has been a two-tier market where compliant UK retailers collect and remit VAT on every sale, whilst non-compliant overseas sellers compete at prices that effectively exclude VAT. This is both legally wrong and commercially damaging to legitimate UK businesses.

What the 2026 Reforms Are Targeting

The 2026 LVI reform programme represents the UK government's and HMRC's most significant tightening of low-value import enforcement and marketplace obligations to date. The reforms build on the existing framework whilst adding meaningful new enforcement teeth. Key elements include:

  • Strengthened marketplace liability: Online marketplaces facilitating sales of low-value goods from overseas sellers are increasingly treated as the deemed supplier — legally responsible for UK VAT collection and remittance regardless of where the actual seller is based. HMRC's compliance focus has decisively shifted toward platforms as the point of enforcement, rather than attempting to chase individual overseas sellers across jurisdictions.
  • Enhanced customs data requirements: Platforms and logistics operators handling significant volumes of low-value imported parcels face new data-sharing obligations with HMRC, giving the authority better visibility into transaction volumes, declared values, and seller-level patterns. This makes systemic value under-declaration increasingly detectable.
  • Border Target Operating Model (BTOM) data standards: The BTOM's continued rollout introduces pre-arrival declaration data requirements that capture goods-level detail earlier in the logistics chain. Combined with risk-profiling systems, this makes parcel-level enforcement increasingly viable at scale.
  • De minimis threshold review: The UK government has been actively reviewing whether to formally adjust or abolish effective duty-free treatment for low-value commercial parcels, aligning the UK's approach more closely with international moves. Notably, the United States faced significant political pressure over its high-value ($800) de minimis exemption and introduced restrictions on its use for goods of certain origins — the UK is watching these developments closely.

Important Compliance Warning

If you're importing goods commercially in volume: the LVI reforms primarily target B2C parcel flows and marketplace seller obligations for individual consumer orders. The reforms do not change the fundamental customs duty framework for commercial bulk imports — container loads, pallet shipments, and wholesale consignments have always required full declarations and duty payment. What the reforms signal is a clear regulatory direction: HMRC's customs enforcement is becoming substantially more data-driven, more automated, and more proactive.

Under no circumstances under-declare the value of goods on import declarations. This constitutes customs fraud. HMRC actively investigates it, particularly where declared values are implausibly low relative to known market pricing. Penalties include recovery of unpaid duty plus interest, civil penalties of up to 100% of the unpaid amount, and in serious cases criminal prosecution under the Customs and Excise Management Act.

What This Means for Commercial Importers — And Why Compliance Is Now a Competitive Advantage

If you're importing commercial volumes of goods — full or part container loads — for resale in the UK, the LVI reforms do not directly change your existing obligations. You already submit full customs declarations, pay duty at the correct commodity code rates, and account for import VAT. What the reforms do affect is the competitive landscape around you.

As overseas low-value parcel sellers and non-compliant marketplace participants are brought into compliance, the effective price advantage they've enjoyed over UK-compliant importers and retailers will erode. UK businesses who source smartly from Asia — using verified suppliers, accurate documentation, and legitimate duty savings through UKVFTA or HMRC duty relief schemes — are increasingly well-positioned relative to the competition. This is one of those moments where doing things properly actually pays off commercially, not just legally.

Cutting Your Duty Bill Legally — Tariff Reliefs and Trade Agreements

UKVFTA — The Most Valuable Tool for UK Importers Sourcing from Vietnam

The UK-Vietnam Free Trade Agreement (UKVFTA) came into force in January 2021 and offers substantial duty savings for goods with sufficient Vietnamese origin. Under the agreement, 65% of UK tariff lines on Vietnamese goods were eliminated immediately, with the remainder phasing down over time — the agreement ultimately covers 99.2% of tariff lines at full implementation. For the right product categories, switching sourcing from China to Vietnam can eliminate customs duty entirely.

To claim UKVFTA preferential rates, your Vietnamese supplier must provide a valid EUR.1 movement certificate (issued by Vietnamese customs authorities) or a statement of origin from a REX-registered (Registered Exporter) Vietnamese supplier. The goods must also meet the UKVFTA rules of origin — typically sufficient processing or transformation within Vietnam, with the specific rule varying by HS chapter.

Product Category China → UK (Standard Rate) Vietnam → UK (UKVFTA Rate) Annual Saving (£200k order)
Clothing & Apparel (cotton) 12% 0–4% (phasing to 0%) Up to £24,000
Footwear (leather) 8% 0% £16,000
Furniture (wooden) 5.5% 0% £11,000
Bags & Luggage (textile) 3.7% 0% £7,400
Consumer Electronics 0–3.7% 0% Up to £7,400
Gym & Sports Equipment (metal) 2.7% 0% £5,400

Note: Rates depend on specific commodity codes and rules of origin qualification. Verify against the UK Trade Tariff before using these figures for commercial decisions. The "annual saving" column assumes a £200,000 CIF import value for illustrative purposes only.

The UKVFTA advantage is real and substantial — but it requires your Vietnamese supplier to actually be set up to provide compliant origin documentation. Not all Vietnamese suppliers are REX-registered. At Epic Sourcing, this is something we specifically verify when sourcing from Vietnam on clients' behalf.

CPTPP — The UK's Expanding Trade Agreement Network

The UK formally acceded to the Comprehensive and Progressive Agreement for Trans-Pacific Partnership (CPTPP) in December 2024. This agreement covers 11 economies including Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, Japan, Australia, Canada, and New Zealand. For UK importers, CPTPP creates additional preferential tariff routes — particularly relevant for goods from Malaysia and Singapore — though origin rules and phase-in schedules vary by country and commodity code. Where both UKVFTA and CPTPP rates are available for Vietnamese-origin goods, the more favourable rate applies.

Duty Relief Schemes — Inward Processing Relief and Customs Warehousing

For UK businesses that import goods for further processing or re-export, HMRC offers several duty relief schemes that can significantly reduce or entirely eliminate duty liability:

  • Inward Processing Relief (IPR): Allows you to import goods, process or manufacture them, and re-export the finished goods without paying duty on the original imports — or with a duty calculation based on the inputs rather than the finished product. Requires HMRC authorisation and detailed records of goods processed. Particularly relevant for UK manufacturers using imported components.
  • Customs Warehousing: Allows goods to be stored in an HMRC-approved customs warehouse without paying duty until they are released for free circulation in the UK. Useful for managing cash flow on large stock positions, or for goods that may be partially re-exported rather than all entering the UK market.
  • Returned Goods Relief: For UK-origin goods that were exported and subsequently returned to the UK, allowing duty-free re-import subject to conditions. Relevant for returned stock, samples sent for review, and exhibition goods.
  • Temporary Admission: For goods imported temporarily — such as professional equipment, trade show exhibits, or goods for testing — with the intention of re-export. Can completely suspend duty during the period of temporary use.

These schemes require HMRC authorisation and carry specific record-keeping obligations, but for the right business models they represent entirely legal and substantial duty savings. A specialist customs broker can advise on eligibility and the application process.

Common Mistakes UK Importers Make with Customs Duty

Using the Wrong Commodity Code — and the Risks It Creates

This is the single most common error, and it cuts in both directions. Some importers accidentally use commodity codes with lower duty rates than the correct one — creating an underpayment liability and HMRC exposure. Others use codes with unnecessarily high rates and overpay for years without realising. The fix is to take classification seriously: use the UK Trade Tariff, consult your customs broker, and consider a BTI ruling for complex products. HMRC accepts BTI rulings as legally binding on classification.

Not Claiming UKVFTA Entitlements When Sourcing from Vietnam

This is arguably the most expensive oversight for businesses sourcing from Vietnam. If your Vietnamese supplier is REX-registered and can demonstrate that your goods meet the UKVFTA rules of origin, you may be legally entitled to a zero or reduced duty rate — but you have to actively claim it on your import declaration, supported by origin documentation from the supplier. Many importers don't know to ask for this. Over a year of shipments, the unclaimed saving can easily run to tens of thousands of pounds.

Declaring FOB Value Instead of CIF Value

HMRC requires customs duty to be calculated on the CIF value — the landed cost of goods at the UK port of entry, including international freight and insurance. Many importers, particularly those new to the process, base their customs value on the supplier invoice price alone, omitting freight and insurance costs. This results in an understatement of customs value and an underpayment of duty. HMRC's compliance checks cross-reference declared customs values against freight costs, making this a common trigger for queries.

Not Using Postponed VAT Accounting

Paying import VAT at the border rather than through Postponed VAT Accounting is an unnecessary cash flow burden for VAT-registered businesses. With PVA enabled, your customs broker simply indicates it on the import entry, you receive a monthly PVA statement from HMRC, and you include the figures on your VAT return. No money changes hands at the border. If you're not already using PVA, ask your customs broker to enable it on your next shipment — there is no downside for VAT-registered importers.

Relying on Your Supplier for UK Customs Decisions

Your Chinese or Vietnamese supplier knows their country's export customs procedures. They do not know, and should not be expected to know, UK import commodity code classification, HMRC valuation rules, or UK compliance requirements. As the importer of record in the UK, you — not your supplier — are legally responsible for the accuracy of your UK import declarations. Decisions about commodity codes, declared values, and origin claims must be made by you or your appointed UK customs broker, not delegated to a supplier overseas.

How Epic Sourcing Helps UK Businesses Navigate Customs and Source More Profitably

At Epic Sourcing, we work with UK businesses every day who are building supply chains from China and Vietnam. Helping you think through the customs and compliance picture is part of what we do from the very first conversation — not a conversation you have after your first shipment arrives at Southampton with an unexpected duty bill.

Here's how our services support your customs and cost strategy:

White Label Package

from £699

We find you a verified, compliant supplier with an established track record of exporting to UK and European customers — someone who understands documentation requirements, export packaging standards, and their obligations around origin certification. Ideal for businesses placing their first orders from Asia and wanting to get the compliance basics right from day one.

Learn more about White Label →

Private Label Package

from £1,899

Full product development with a manufacturer capable of providing complete compliance documentation — test reports, product safety certificates, UKCA marking where required, and origin documentation for UKVFTA claims. We help you structure the commercial relationship so that duty-saving opportunities are identified and captured from the outset, rather than discovered after several shipments.

Learn more about Private Label →

Secret Label Package

from £3,299

For established UK businesses looking to build exclusive, direct supplier relationships with full commercial and compliance infrastructure. We negotiate commercial terms, validate all compliance documentation, and evaluate Vietnam sourcing options specifically to maximise UKVFTA preferential duty rates. If there's a legal route to reduce your duty bill, we'll find it.

Learn more about Secret Label →

Supplier Verification

Standalone service

Before you commit commercial volumes to a supplier, we verify their business legitimacy, export track record, and documentation capabilities. A supplier who can't produce accurate commercial invoices, correct packing lists, and origin certificates when you need them will cause you customs headaches down the line. We check this upfront, so you're not finding out at Felixstowe.

Learn more about Supplier Verification →

Not Sure What Duty Rate You're Paying — or Whether You Could Be Paying Less?

Book a free consultation with the Epic Sourcing UK team. We'll look at your current product categories, identify any duty saving opportunities through UKVFTA or HMRC relief schemes, and make sure your supply chain is set up for compliance from the start. No pressure, no obligation.

Book Your Free Consultation

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to pay customs duty on all goods I import into the UK?

In principle, yes — customs duty applies to all goods imported into Great Britain from outside the UK, with rates determined by the commodity code under the UK Global Tariff. In practice, many goods carry a 0% duty rate (particularly consumer electronics, certain raw materials, and goods covered by preferential trade agreements such as UKVFTA), so the effective duty bill varies significantly by product category. There is no general de minimis threshold that exempts commercial shipments from duty based on consignment value alone, though the 2026 LVI reforms are specifically addressing the practical enforcement gap that has allowed low-value B2C parcels to arrive without duty payment. For commercial importers shipping container loads or pallet quantities, duty has always been payable and declarations have always been required.

What is the difference between the £135 VAT threshold and customs duty?

These are separate taxes addressing separate obligations. The £135 threshold applies specifically to how VAT is collected on low-value B2C (business-to-consumer) imports — for goods sold at or below £135 directly to UK consumers, VAT is collected at the point of sale by the seller or online marketplace rather than at the border. Customs duty is an entirely separate charge based on commodity codes and is technically payable on all commercial imports regardless of value. The distinction matters because duty and VAT are calculated differently, collected by different mechanisms, and have different recoverability rules. For business-to-business importing — which covers the vast majority of Epic Sourcing's clients — both duty and import VAT apply and must be declared accurately on every import entry.

How do I know if my goods from Vietnam qualify for preferential duty rates under UKVFTA?

There are two conditions to satisfy. First, the goods must genuinely originate in Vietnam under the UKVFTA rules of origin — generally meaning they were either wholly produced in Vietnam, or underwent sufficient manufacturing process or transformation there. The specific rule of origin varies by HS chapter and is set out in the annexes to the agreement. Second, you need valid proof of that origin: either an EUR.1 movement certificate issued by Vietnamese customs authorities, or a statement of origin provided by a REX-registered Vietnamese exporter. Ask your Vietnamese supplier directly whether they are REX-registered and whether your specific product qualifies under the origin rules. A supplier with genuine experience exporting to the UK should know this. If they don't, treat that as a warning sign worth investigating before placing large orders.

Can I use Postponed VAT Accounting if I'm not VAT-registered?

No. Postponed VAT Accounting is available exclusively to businesses that are registered for UK VAT. If your business is below the £90,000 registration threshold and is not voluntarily registered, import VAT must be paid at the border as part of the customs clearance process and cannot be recovered. For businesses approaching the threshold, or those importing regularly in any volume, the ability to use PVA — which eliminates import VAT as a cash flow cost — is one of the practical financial reasons why voluntary VAT registration makes sense even before the compulsory threshold is reached. For VAT-registered businesses, using PVA is straightforward and should be the default: instruct your customs broker to apply it on your import entries as standard.

If I get my customs duty wrong, how far back can HMRC go?

HMRC has a statutory power to raise assessments for underpaid customs duty for up to three years from the date of the relevant import entry, and up to 20 years in cases where HMRC can demonstrate deliberate non-compliance. This means errors made years ago can still result in significant retrospective duty demands, plus interest calculated from the original import date. In practice, HMRC focuses compliance activity on higher-risk importers identified through its risk profiling systems — but any importer can receive a Customs Compliance Check. If you discover that you've been making a systematic error (such as using the wrong commodity code for multiple shipments), voluntary disclosure to HMRC before they identify the issue themselves typically results in substantially reduced penalties. Accurate record-keeping — commercial invoices, freight invoices, packing lists, origin certificates — for a minimum of four years from the import date is strongly recommended.

Ready to Import Smarter in 2026?

Customs duty doesn't have to be a cost you simply absorb. With the right sourcing strategy — verified suppliers, accurate documentation, and a genuine understanding of the relief schemes and trade agreements available to you — it's a manageable and often reducible part of your landed cost. The Epic Sourcing UK team works with British businesses on exactly this every day, from first-time importers to established brands doing millions in annual product orders.

Epic Supply Chains UK Ltd · 71-75 Shelton St, London WC2H 9JQ · epicsourcing.co.uk

07551 136406