Customs declaration when traveling to Germany










8















I'm a German citizen currently living in the USA. When I now visit Germany for a vacation, what items I bought in the USA do I have to declare at the customs?



These items however are not staying in Germany and are worth > $1000.



Do I have to declare what I bring with me or are they under the travellers’ allowances?



I couldn't find any specific official resources for this.










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    There are plenty of official resources but, provided they are not remaining in the EU and will leave again with you, you probably don't need to declare them.

    – CMaster
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:06






  • 1





    @CMaster I thought so too. The only resource I found was that link but this didn't specifically said if there are restrictions

    – empiric
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:09












  • @empiric The page you are linking to in your last comment contains a list of restrictions, which you have to consider as a visitor in Germany. What exactly confuses you about this list and why do you think that any of the items you are intending to bring fall into any of the restricted categories?

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:30






  • 1





    @empiric The page you are linking to clearly states that the item values must be within the traveller's allowance only if you intend to leave them in Germany and that you may be required to lodge a written declaration for more valuable items if German custom authorities tell you to do so, in which case you most likely will have to present the items to the customs again when leaving to prove that they are not staying in Germany. Why is that not possible?

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Oct 11 '16 at 16:21






  • 2





    As an additional note, if the items are not staying in Germany but still staying within the EU, I believe the restrictions remain the same.

    – downhand
    Oct 17 '16 at 7:49















8















I'm a German citizen currently living in the USA. When I now visit Germany for a vacation, what items I bought in the USA do I have to declare at the customs?



These items however are not staying in Germany and are worth > $1000.



Do I have to declare what I bring with me or are they under the travellers’ allowances?



I couldn't find any specific official resources for this.










share|improve this question



















  • 2





    There are plenty of official resources but, provided they are not remaining in the EU and will leave again with you, you probably don't need to declare them.

    – CMaster
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:06






  • 1





    @CMaster I thought so too. The only resource I found was that link but this didn't specifically said if there are restrictions

    – empiric
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:09












  • @empiric The page you are linking to in your last comment contains a list of restrictions, which you have to consider as a visitor in Germany. What exactly confuses you about this list and why do you think that any of the items you are intending to bring fall into any of the restricted categories?

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:30






  • 1





    @empiric The page you are linking to clearly states that the item values must be within the traveller's allowance only if you intend to leave them in Germany and that you may be required to lodge a written declaration for more valuable items if German custom authorities tell you to do so, in which case you most likely will have to present the items to the customs again when leaving to prove that they are not staying in Germany. Why is that not possible?

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Oct 11 '16 at 16:21






  • 2





    As an additional note, if the items are not staying in Germany but still staying within the EU, I believe the restrictions remain the same.

    – downhand
    Oct 17 '16 at 7:49













8












8








8








I'm a German citizen currently living in the USA. When I now visit Germany for a vacation, what items I bought in the USA do I have to declare at the customs?



These items however are not staying in Germany and are worth > $1000.



Do I have to declare what I bring with me or are they under the travellers’ allowances?



I couldn't find any specific official resources for this.










share|improve this question
















I'm a German citizen currently living in the USA. When I now visit Germany for a vacation, what items I bought in the USA do I have to declare at the customs?



These items however are not staying in Germany and are worth > $1000.



Do I have to declare what I bring with me or are they under the travellers’ allowances?



I couldn't find any specific official resources for this.







customs-and-immigration eu german-citizens






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Oct 17 '16 at 6:10









Relaxed

76.3k10153286




76.3k10153286










asked Oct 11 '16 at 15:05









empiricempiric

1464




1464







  • 2





    There are plenty of official resources but, provided they are not remaining in the EU and will leave again with you, you probably don't need to declare them.

    – CMaster
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:06






  • 1





    @CMaster I thought so too. The only resource I found was that link but this didn't specifically said if there are restrictions

    – empiric
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:09












  • @empiric The page you are linking to in your last comment contains a list of restrictions, which you have to consider as a visitor in Germany. What exactly confuses you about this list and why do you think that any of the items you are intending to bring fall into any of the restricted categories?

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:30






  • 1





    @empiric The page you are linking to clearly states that the item values must be within the traveller's allowance only if you intend to leave them in Germany and that you may be required to lodge a written declaration for more valuable items if German custom authorities tell you to do so, in which case you most likely will have to present the items to the customs again when leaving to prove that they are not staying in Germany. Why is that not possible?

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Oct 11 '16 at 16:21






  • 2





    As an additional note, if the items are not staying in Germany but still staying within the EU, I believe the restrictions remain the same.

    – downhand
    Oct 17 '16 at 7:49












  • 2





    There are plenty of official resources but, provided they are not remaining in the EU and will leave again with you, you probably don't need to declare them.

    – CMaster
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:06






  • 1





    @CMaster I thought so too. The only resource I found was that link but this didn't specifically said if there are restrictions

    – empiric
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:09












  • @empiric The page you are linking to in your last comment contains a list of restrictions, which you have to consider as a visitor in Germany. What exactly confuses you about this list and why do you think that any of the items you are intending to bring fall into any of the restricted categories?

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Oct 11 '16 at 15:30






  • 1





    @empiric The page you are linking to clearly states that the item values must be within the traveller's allowance only if you intend to leave them in Germany and that you may be required to lodge a written declaration for more valuable items if German custom authorities tell you to do so, in which case you most likely will have to present the items to the customs again when leaving to prove that they are not staying in Germany. Why is that not possible?

    – Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
    Oct 11 '16 at 16:21






  • 2





    As an additional note, if the items are not staying in Germany but still staying within the EU, I believe the restrictions remain the same.

    – downhand
    Oct 17 '16 at 7:49







2




2





There are plenty of official resources but, provided they are not remaining in the EU and will leave again with you, you probably don't need to declare them.

– CMaster
Oct 11 '16 at 15:06





There are plenty of official resources but, provided they are not remaining in the EU and will leave again with you, you probably don't need to declare them.

– CMaster
Oct 11 '16 at 15:06




1




1





@CMaster I thought so too. The only resource I found was that link but this didn't specifically said if there are restrictions

– empiric
Oct 11 '16 at 15:09






@CMaster I thought so too. The only resource I found was that link but this didn't specifically said if there are restrictions

– empiric
Oct 11 '16 at 15:09














@empiric The page you are linking to in your last comment contains a list of restrictions, which you have to consider as a visitor in Germany. What exactly confuses you about this list and why do you think that any of the items you are intending to bring fall into any of the restricted categories?

– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
Oct 11 '16 at 15:30





@empiric The page you are linking to in your last comment contains a list of restrictions, which you have to consider as a visitor in Germany. What exactly confuses you about this list and why do you think that any of the items you are intending to bring fall into any of the restricted categories?

– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
Oct 11 '16 at 15:30




1




1





@empiric The page you are linking to clearly states that the item values must be within the traveller's allowance only if you intend to leave them in Germany and that you may be required to lodge a written declaration for more valuable items if German custom authorities tell you to do so, in which case you most likely will have to present the items to the customs again when leaving to prove that they are not staying in Germany. Why is that not possible?

– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
Oct 11 '16 at 16:21





@empiric The page you are linking to clearly states that the item values must be within the traveller's allowance only if you intend to leave them in Germany and that you may be required to lodge a written declaration for more valuable items if German custom authorities tell you to do so, in which case you most likely will have to present the items to the customs again when leaving to prove that they are not staying in Germany. Why is that not possible?

– Tor-Einar Jarnbjo
Oct 11 '16 at 16:21




2




2





As an additional note, if the items are not staying in Germany but still staying within the EU, I believe the restrictions remain the same.

– downhand
Oct 17 '16 at 7:49





As an additional note, if the items are not staying in Germany but still staying within the EU, I believe the restrictions remain the same.

– downhand
Oct 17 '16 at 7:49










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















6





+100









The official German customs website referenced in Noldor130884's answer summarizes the legal stuff as follows:




If you are staying in Germany you can usually bring properties in your baggage into Germany at zero import duty and without customs formalities.




The most important restriction to this is




Goods that you bring to Germany and that you intend to leave (such as visitor’s gifts) may only be imported duty-free within the traveller’s allowances.




In my opinion, being a German citizen shouldn't pose a problem here. If you were a German resident, there might be a problem if you tried to claim (without proof) that you were actually planning to take all the fancy stuff you brought with you, again.






share|improve this answer























  • This sentence is actually very confusing, it should probably read "if you are staying temporarily" or "if you are visiting Germany". Being a German citizen might be a problem to the extent that border guards could be tempted to assume that you are a resident as well. Making clear that you aren't and maybe having something concret to buttress this claim (return ticket, US driving license) can be useful.

    – Relaxed
    Oct 17 '16 at 11:16












  • @Relaxed I don't really know how one would actually prove non-residency. Residency, on the other hand, should be fairly easy to prove, as Germany has compulsory resident registration and possession of a national ID is mandatory for Germans subject to compulsory registration. - Not having this could be a start...

    – Alexander Kosubek
    Oct 17 '16 at 15:25












  • Yes, I carefully avoided the word "prove". But what the OP should focus on IMO is documenting his or her situation the US, so driving license, residence document, insurance cards (if such a thing exists there) should go a long way. If you have several of these and it builds a coherent picture, it would add to your credibility in the unlikely event that you are questioned. That's how these things work in countries that don't have a German-style mandatory registration system.

    – Relaxed
    Oct 17 '16 at 15:38











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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









6





+100









The official German customs website referenced in Noldor130884's answer summarizes the legal stuff as follows:




If you are staying in Germany you can usually bring properties in your baggage into Germany at zero import duty and without customs formalities.




The most important restriction to this is




Goods that you bring to Germany and that you intend to leave (such as visitor’s gifts) may only be imported duty-free within the traveller’s allowances.




In my opinion, being a German citizen shouldn't pose a problem here. If you were a German resident, there might be a problem if you tried to claim (without proof) that you were actually planning to take all the fancy stuff you brought with you, again.






share|improve this answer























  • This sentence is actually very confusing, it should probably read "if you are staying temporarily" or "if you are visiting Germany". Being a German citizen might be a problem to the extent that border guards could be tempted to assume that you are a resident as well. Making clear that you aren't and maybe having something concret to buttress this claim (return ticket, US driving license) can be useful.

    – Relaxed
    Oct 17 '16 at 11:16












  • @Relaxed I don't really know how one would actually prove non-residency. Residency, on the other hand, should be fairly easy to prove, as Germany has compulsory resident registration and possession of a national ID is mandatory for Germans subject to compulsory registration. - Not having this could be a start...

    – Alexander Kosubek
    Oct 17 '16 at 15:25












  • Yes, I carefully avoided the word "prove". But what the OP should focus on IMO is documenting his or her situation the US, so driving license, residence document, insurance cards (if such a thing exists there) should go a long way. If you have several of these and it builds a coherent picture, it would add to your credibility in the unlikely event that you are questioned. That's how these things work in countries that don't have a German-style mandatory registration system.

    – Relaxed
    Oct 17 '16 at 15:38
















6





+100









The official German customs website referenced in Noldor130884's answer summarizes the legal stuff as follows:




If you are staying in Germany you can usually bring properties in your baggage into Germany at zero import duty and without customs formalities.




The most important restriction to this is




Goods that you bring to Germany and that you intend to leave (such as visitor’s gifts) may only be imported duty-free within the traveller’s allowances.




In my opinion, being a German citizen shouldn't pose a problem here. If you were a German resident, there might be a problem if you tried to claim (without proof) that you were actually planning to take all the fancy stuff you brought with you, again.






share|improve this answer























  • This sentence is actually very confusing, it should probably read "if you are staying temporarily" or "if you are visiting Germany". Being a German citizen might be a problem to the extent that border guards could be tempted to assume that you are a resident as well. Making clear that you aren't and maybe having something concret to buttress this claim (return ticket, US driving license) can be useful.

    – Relaxed
    Oct 17 '16 at 11:16












  • @Relaxed I don't really know how one would actually prove non-residency. Residency, on the other hand, should be fairly easy to prove, as Germany has compulsory resident registration and possession of a national ID is mandatory for Germans subject to compulsory registration. - Not having this could be a start...

    – Alexander Kosubek
    Oct 17 '16 at 15:25












  • Yes, I carefully avoided the word "prove". But what the OP should focus on IMO is documenting his or her situation the US, so driving license, residence document, insurance cards (if such a thing exists there) should go a long way. If you have several of these and it builds a coherent picture, it would add to your credibility in the unlikely event that you are questioned. That's how these things work in countries that don't have a German-style mandatory registration system.

    – Relaxed
    Oct 17 '16 at 15:38














6





+100







6





+100



6




+100





The official German customs website referenced in Noldor130884's answer summarizes the legal stuff as follows:




If you are staying in Germany you can usually bring properties in your baggage into Germany at zero import duty and without customs formalities.




The most important restriction to this is




Goods that you bring to Germany and that you intend to leave (such as visitor’s gifts) may only be imported duty-free within the traveller’s allowances.




In my opinion, being a German citizen shouldn't pose a problem here. If you were a German resident, there might be a problem if you tried to claim (without proof) that you were actually planning to take all the fancy stuff you brought with you, again.






share|improve this answer













The official German customs website referenced in Noldor130884's answer summarizes the legal stuff as follows:




If you are staying in Germany you can usually bring properties in your baggage into Germany at zero import duty and without customs formalities.




The most important restriction to this is




Goods that you bring to Germany and that you intend to leave (such as visitor’s gifts) may only be imported duty-free within the traveller’s allowances.




In my opinion, being a German citizen shouldn't pose a problem here. If you were a German resident, there might be a problem if you tried to claim (without proof) that you were actually planning to take all the fancy stuff you brought with you, again.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Oct 17 '16 at 10:30









Alexander KosubekAlexander Kosubek

400210




400210












  • This sentence is actually very confusing, it should probably read "if you are staying temporarily" or "if you are visiting Germany". Being a German citizen might be a problem to the extent that border guards could be tempted to assume that you are a resident as well. Making clear that you aren't and maybe having something concret to buttress this claim (return ticket, US driving license) can be useful.

    – Relaxed
    Oct 17 '16 at 11:16












  • @Relaxed I don't really know how one would actually prove non-residency. Residency, on the other hand, should be fairly easy to prove, as Germany has compulsory resident registration and possession of a national ID is mandatory for Germans subject to compulsory registration. - Not having this could be a start...

    – Alexander Kosubek
    Oct 17 '16 at 15:25












  • Yes, I carefully avoided the word "prove". But what the OP should focus on IMO is documenting his or her situation the US, so driving license, residence document, insurance cards (if such a thing exists there) should go a long way. If you have several of these and it builds a coherent picture, it would add to your credibility in the unlikely event that you are questioned. That's how these things work in countries that don't have a German-style mandatory registration system.

    – Relaxed
    Oct 17 '16 at 15:38


















  • This sentence is actually very confusing, it should probably read "if you are staying temporarily" or "if you are visiting Germany". Being a German citizen might be a problem to the extent that border guards could be tempted to assume that you are a resident as well. Making clear that you aren't and maybe having something concret to buttress this claim (return ticket, US driving license) can be useful.

    – Relaxed
    Oct 17 '16 at 11:16












  • @Relaxed I don't really know how one would actually prove non-residency. Residency, on the other hand, should be fairly easy to prove, as Germany has compulsory resident registration and possession of a national ID is mandatory for Germans subject to compulsory registration. - Not having this could be a start...

    – Alexander Kosubek
    Oct 17 '16 at 15:25












  • Yes, I carefully avoided the word "prove". But what the OP should focus on IMO is documenting his or her situation the US, so driving license, residence document, insurance cards (if such a thing exists there) should go a long way. If you have several of these and it builds a coherent picture, it would add to your credibility in the unlikely event that you are questioned. That's how these things work in countries that don't have a German-style mandatory registration system.

    – Relaxed
    Oct 17 '16 at 15:38

















This sentence is actually very confusing, it should probably read "if you are staying temporarily" or "if you are visiting Germany". Being a German citizen might be a problem to the extent that border guards could be tempted to assume that you are a resident as well. Making clear that you aren't and maybe having something concret to buttress this claim (return ticket, US driving license) can be useful.

– Relaxed
Oct 17 '16 at 11:16






This sentence is actually very confusing, it should probably read "if you are staying temporarily" or "if you are visiting Germany". Being a German citizen might be a problem to the extent that border guards could be tempted to assume that you are a resident as well. Making clear that you aren't and maybe having something concret to buttress this claim (return ticket, US driving license) can be useful.

– Relaxed
Oct 17 '16 at 11:16














@Relaxed I don't really know how one would actually prove non-residency. Residency, on the other hand, should be fairly easy to prove, as Germany has compulsory resident registration and possession of a national ID is mandatory for Germans subject to compulsory registration. - Not having this could be a start...

– Alexander Kosubek
Oct 17 '16 at 15:25






@Relaxed I don't really know how one would actually prove non-residency. Residency, on the other hand, should be fairly easy to prove, as Germany has compulsory resident registration and possession of a national ID is mandatory for Germans subject to compulsory registration. - Not having this could be a start...

– Alexander Kosubek
Oct 17 '16 at 15:25














Yes, I carefully avoided the word "prove". But what the OP should focus on IMO is documenting his or her situation the US, so driving license, residence document, insurance cards (if such a thing exists there) should go a long way. If you have several of these and it builds a coherent picture, it would add to your credibility in the unlikely event that you are questioned. That's how these things work in countries that don't have a German-style mandatory registration system.

– Relaxed
Oct 17 '16 at 15:38






Yes, I carefully avoided the word "prove". But what the OP should focus on IMO is documenting his or her situation the US, so driving license, residence document, insurance cards (if such a thing exists there) should go a long way. If you have several of these and it builds a coherent picture, it would add to your credibility in the unlikely event that you are questioned. That's how these things work in countries that don't have a German-style mandatory registration system.

– Relaxed
Oct 17 '16 at 15:38


















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