DHL
Suspends US Shipments as Confusion Reigns on $800 de minimis Tariff, Postal
Shipments also Affected
The halt by one of the
world’s largest couriers comes after President Trump eliminated an exemption on
tariffs levied on imported goods valued under $800.
Key Points
·        
DHL
Suspension:
DHL’s German parcel and Deutsche Post services halted U.S.-bound commercial
shipments.
·        
Exemptions: Private “gift” packages under $100
still allowed; larger shipments possible only via DHL Express.
·        
Reason: Uncertainty around new U.S. customs
rules—duty collection, paperwork, and data requirements.
·        
Other
Carriers:
Austria, Belgium, Denmark, Norway, Sweden, and Asian shippers also suspended
U.S. shipments.
·        
Scale
of Impact:
European shippers less affected than Asia, where companies like Shein and Temu send millions of low-value packages daily.
Cause
·        
Trump’s
Executive Order:
Removed de minimis exemption (duty-free imports under $800).
·        
Target: Loophole used mainly by Chinese
retailers to ship goods directly to U.S. consumers.
·        
Background: De minimis raised to $800 in 2016
(from $200) to simplify enforcement.
Effects
·        
Logistics
Disruption:
Suspension of shipments to the U.S. from multiple countries.
·        
Cost
Risks: Potential
storage, returns, and customs rejections.
·        
Consumer
Impact: Fewer
low-cost goods from abroad; higher shipping costs.
·        
Package
Buildup: Risk of
massive backlogs at borders (seen earlier this year with China/HK).
·        
Temporary
Nature: Expected
to last months until customs processes are clarified.
[ABS News Service/30.08.2025]
The international courier DHL on Friday joined other
European mail carriers that have put temporary restrictions on sending packages
to the United States because of President Trump’s executive order that
eliminates an exemption on duties on cheap imported goods.
The temporary halt by DHL’s German parcel service and its
domestic mail service, Deutsche Post, covers commercial shipments originating
in Germany to consumers in the United States. The company will continue to send
private packages as long as the content is worth no more than $100 and labeled a gift. More valuable items can be sent through DHL
Express, a more expensive option that includes commercial customs services.
“The suspension was implemented because there is simply so
much uncertainty and companies are afraid that we will incur very high
follow-up costs,” said Sebastian Kummer, the head of the Institute for
Transport and Logistics Management at Vienna University of Economics and
Business. Such costs could include storage or return shipments if U.S. Customs
does not accept the packages.
The move by one of the world’s largest courier companies
followed similar suspensions by national postal services in Austria, Belgium,
Denmark, Norway and Sweden as well as shippers in Asia. For many of the
European shippers, the number of commercial packages that are affected is much
lower than for their Asian counterparts.
The halt is the direct result of one of the battles in the
trade war, specifically the attempt to curb the use of a loophole that allowed
predominantly Chinese retailers to sell their wares directly to consumers in
the United States without incurring extra costs.
Under the current rules, which will end next Friday,
packages valued at $800 or less can be sent to the United States without facing
customs dues under a system called the de minimis exemption, which has been in
place since 2016, when it was raised from $200, to essentially prevent
enforcement from costing more than the duties it brought in.
The Trump administration initially targeted mainland China
and Hong Kong when it closed the loophole in the spring, only to suspend
enforcement to let U.S. Customs and Border Protection figure out systems to
deal with the change. With large e-commerce retailers like Shein and Temu selling to American customers, China was the origin of
many of the more than four million small packages that were imported daily to
the United States tax-free. The value of the packages typically averages just
over $50, and use of the loophole grew after Mr. Trump increased tariffs on
Chinese goods during his first administration.
In a statement about the halt, DHL blamed “key questions”
that remain unresolved since Mr. Trump signed his executive order last month.
Among those questions are “how and by whom customs duties will be collected in
the future, what additional data will be required, and how the data
transmission to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection will be carried out,”
DHL said in its statement.
Besides costing nothing to import, the packages are
convenient because they can be sent without any customs paperwork, something
that will change under the new rules.
The postal suspensions could lead to an enormous buildup of
packages similar to the ones seen when the Trump administration briefly closed
the loophole for packages coming from mainland China and Hong Kong earlier this
year.
Like other couriers, DHL insisted that the halt was
temporary, and experts like Professor Kummer believe it is a matter of months
before rules governing paperwork and fees are clear enough for companies to
resume their services.