Would taking my used laptop to South Africa attract an import duty?










3















I will be traveling BOM (India) – DOH (Qatar) – CPT (South Africa) and return.



I plan to take my personal/work laptop or if it is too much hassle (for customs bit) then leave it behind in India itself. At the very least I would have to carry a photocopy that the laptop was purchased in India.



Update - read this -
https://south-africa.visahq.com/customs/#!import-regulations



It says "Travellers may be asked to pay deposit on expensive items like laptops, which is refunded to you when the item is re-exported." . It doesn't state how much deposit and do you get any sort of receipt ? Can somebody share their experiences.










share|improve this question
























  • You won't be charged a duty leaving South Africa, and you should be able to have any VAT you paid in South Africa (for goods you're taking with you) refunded to you at the airport before you leave.

    – brhans
    Jun 15 '16 at 18:49







  • 4





    Possible duplicate of How much electronics and other valuables can I bring duty-free when going to India?

    – David Richerby
    Jun 15 '16 at 19:09






  • 3





    I don't think this is a duplicate. This question is asking about bringing the laptop into South Africa, not into India.

    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:00











  • my question is that notification/regulation is unclear. If it told of a certain value and told the VAT rates, I would know and have the requisite amount of money . Also the regulation doesn't talk about any receipt through which when you are going back, you could claim whatever VAT you had paid when getting your lappy into South Africa.

    – shirish
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:06






  • 1





    @DavidRicherby I disagree. This is not a duplicate. The OP is taking the laptop out of India, not bringing it in.

    – Aleks G
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:50















3















I will be traveling BOM (India) – DOH (Qatar) – CPT (South Africa) and return.



I plan to take my personal/work laptop or if it is too much hassle (for customs bit) then leave it behind in India itself. At the very least I would have to carry a photocopy that the laptop was purchased in India.



Update - read this -
https://south-africa.visahq.com/customs/#!import-regulations



It says "Travellers may be asked to pay deposit on expensive items like laptops, which is refunded to you when the item is re-exported." . It doesn't state how much deposit and do you get any sort of receipt ? Can somebody share their experiences.










share|improve this question
























  • You won't be charged a duty leaving South Africa, and you should be able to have any VAT you paid in South Africa (for goods you're taking with you) refunded to you at the airport before you leave.

    – brhans
    Jun 15 '16 at 18:49







  • 4





    Possible duplicate of How much electronics and other valuables can I bring duty-free when going to India?

    – David Richerby
    Jun 15 '16 at 19:09






  • 3





    I don't think this is a duplicate. This question is asking about bringing the laptop into South Africa, not into India.

    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:00











  • my question is that notification/regulation is unclear. If it told of a certain value and told the VAT rates, I would know and have the requisite amount of money . Also the regulation doesn't talk about any receipt through which when you are going back, you could claim whatever VAT you had paid when getting your lappy into South Africa.

    – shirish
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:06






  • 1





    @DavidRicherby I disagree. This is not a duplicate. The OP is taking the laptop out of India, not bringing it in.

    – Aleks G
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:50













3












3








3








I will be traveling BOM (India) – DOH (Qatar) – CPT (South Africa) and return.



I plan to take my personal/work laptop or if it is too much hassle (for customs bit) then leave it behind in India itself. At the very least I would have to carry a photocopy that the laptop was purchased in India.



Update - read this -
https://south-africa.visahq.com/customs/#!import-regulations



It says "Travellers may be asked to pay deposit on expensive items like laptops, which is refunded to you when the item is re-exported." . It doesn't state how much deposit and do you get any sort of receipt ? Can somebody share their experiences.










share|improve this question
















I will be traveling BOM (India) – DOH (Qatar) – CPT (South Africa) and return.



I plan to take my personal/work laptop or if it is too much hassle (for customs bit) then leave it behind in India itself. At the very least I would have to carry a photocopy that the laptop was purchased in India.



Update - read this -
https://south-africa.visahq.com/customs/#!import-regulations



It says "Travellers may be asked to pay deposit on expensive items like laptops, which is refunded to you when the item is re-exported." . It doesn't state how much deposit and do you get any sort of receipt ? Can somebody share their experiences.







air-travel customs-and-immigration indian-citizens india south-africa






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jun 15 '16 at 22:02









David Richerby

13.8k94587




13.8k94587










asked Jun 15 '16 at 18:43









shirishshirish

1,66641038




1,66641038












  • You won't be charged a duty leaving South Africa, and you should be able to have any VAT you paid in South Africa (for goods you're taking with you) refunded to you at the airport before you leave.

    – brhans
    Jun 15 '16 at 18:49







  • 4





    Possible duplicate of How much electronics and other valuables can I bring duty-free when going to India?

    – David Richerby
    Jun 15 '16 at 19:09






  • 3





    I don't think this is a duplicate. This question is asking about bringing the laptop into South Africa, not into India.

    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:00











  • my question is that notification/regulation is unclear. If it told of a certain value and told the VAT rates, I would know and have the requisite amount of money . Also the regulation doesn't talk about any receipt through which when you are going back, you could claim whatever VAT you had paid when getting your lappy into South Africa.

    – shirish
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:06






  • 1





    @DavidRicherby I disagree. This is not a duplicate. The OP is taking the laptop out of India, not bringing it in.

    – Aleks G
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:50

















  • You won't be charged a duty leaving South Africa, and you should be able to have any VAT you paid in South Africa (for goods you're taking with you) refunded to you at the airport before you leave.

    – brhans
    Jun 15 '16 at 18:49







  • 4





    Possible duplicate of How much electronics and other valuables can I bring duty-free when going to India?

    – David Richerby
    Jun 15 '16 at 19:09






  • 3





    I don't think this is a duplicate. This question is asking about bringing the laptop into South Africa, not into India.

    – Zach Lipton
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:00











  • my question is that notification/regulation is unclear. If it told of a certain value and told the VAT rates, I would know and have the requisite amount of money . Also the regulation doesn't talk about any receipt through which when you are going back, you could claim whatever VAT you had paid when getting your lappy into South Africa.

    – shirish
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:06






  • 1





    @DavidRicherby I disagree. This is not a duplicate. The OP is taking the laptop out of India, not bringing it in.

    – Aleks G
    Jun 15 '16 at 21:50
















You won't be charged a duty leaving South Africa, and you should be able to have any VAT you paid in South Africa (for goods you're taking with you) refunded to you at the airport before you leave.

– brhans
Jun 15 '16 at 18:49






You won't be charged a duty leaving South Africa, and you should be able to have any VAT you paid in South Africa (for goods you're taking with you) refunded to you at the airport before you leave.

– brhans
Jun 15 '16 at 18:49





4




4





Possible duplicate of How much electronics and other valuables can I bring duty-free when going to India?

– David Richerby
Jun 15 '16 at 19:09





Possible duplicate of How much electronics and other valuables can I bring duty-free when going to India?

– David Richerby
Jun 15 '16 at 19:09




3




3





I don't think this is a duplicate. This question is asking about bringing the laptop into South Africa, not into India.

– Zach Lipton
Jun 15 '16 at 21:00





I don't think this is a duplicate. This question is asking about bringing the laptop into South Africa, not into India.

– Zach Lipton
Jun 15 '16 at 21:00













my question is that notification/regulation is unclear. If it told of a certain value and told the VAT rates, I would know and have the requisite amount of money . Also the regulation doesn't talk about any receipt through which when you are going back, you could claim whatever VAT you had paid when getting your lappy into South Africa.

– shirish
Jun 15 '16 at 21:06





my question is that notification/regulation is unclear. If it told of a certain value and told the VAT rates, I would know and have the requisite amount of money . Also the regulation doesn't talk about any receipt through which when you are going back, you could claim whatever VAT you had paid when getting your lappy into South Africa.

– shirish
Jun 15 '16 at 21:06




1




1





@DavidRicherby I disagree. This is not a duplicate. The OP is taking the laptop out of India, not bringing it in.

– Aleks G
Jun 15 '16 at 21:50





@DavidRicherby I disagree. This is not a duplicate. The OP is taking the laptop out of India, not bringing it in.

– Aleks G
Jun 15 '16 at 21:50










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















4














Here's a page from South African Customs that may be useful: Arrival in SA



As a practical matter, no. Personal effects that travelers bring in with the intent of bringing them back out at the end of a visit are generally exempt from duty, and South Africa appears to be no different in that regard. You are allowed to bring "personal effects" (except for prohibited and restricted items, like illegal drugs or weapons) without payment of duty, as long as you'll be taking them back out of the country with you. This is why your clothes aren't subject to duty either. You can also bring 5,000 Rand of goods duty free, such as gifts you plan to leave in South Africa.



You can see this on the Traveler Card you'll be asked to complete as well:




Personal effects and/or sporting and recreational equipment are duty and tax free if brought in by:



  • Visitors for own use and if goods do not remain in South Africa



Now, for some valuable items, it's possible that they'll want a deposit, to make sure that you don't plan to leave the goods behind and evade payment:




Please note that you may be required to lodge a cash deposit to cover
the potential duty/tax on expensive articles if you are bringing them
in on a temporary basis. The deposit will be refunded when you leave
after a Customs officer has physically inspected the items and
verified that the goods are being re-exported. Visitors must notify
the Customs office where the deposit was lodged at least two days
before you leave to ensure that the refund is ready. You will find the
office number on the documents which will be given to you when paying
your deposit.



If you are leaving from a port other than the port where
you lodged the deposit, the inspection report confirming the
re-exportation of the items will be forwarded to the office where the
deposit was lodged and a cheque will be posted to the address that you
provided.




A deposit requirement like this for an ordinary business traveler's laptop seems quite unlikely to me. Travelers routinely bring their used laptops and other common electronic items with them to many countries without incident or charge. In the very unlikely case that Customs believes you plan to leave the laptop in the country, they have the right to require a deposit, which you can reclaim on your way out after you present the laptop.



It would be a good idea to have some kind of proof that you bought the laptop in India and paid taxes on it there, so you can demonstrate to Indian Customs officials that you are bringing it back and should not be charged duty on it.






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    1 Answer
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    active

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    4














    Here's a page from South African Customs that may be useful: Arrival in SA



    As a practical matter, no. Personal effects that travelers bring in with the intent of bringing them back out at the end of a visit are generally exempt from duty, and South Africa appears to be no different in that regard. You are allowed to bring "personal effects" (except for prohibited and restricted items, like illegal drugs or weapons) without payment of duty, as long as you'll be taking them back out of the country with you. This is why your clothes aren't subject to duty either. You can also bring 5,000 Rand of goods duty free, such as gifts you plan to leave in South Africa.



    You can see this on the Traveler Card you'll be asked to complete as well:




    Personal effects and/or sporting and recreational equipment are duty and tax free if brought in by:



    • Visitors for own use and if goods do not remain in South Africa



    Now, for some valuable items, it's possible that they'll want a deposit, to make sure that you don't plan to leave the goods behind and evade payment:




    Please note that you may be required to lodge a cash deposit to cover
    the potential duty/tax on expensive articles if you are bringing them
    in on a temporary basis. The deposit will be refunded when you leave
    after a Customs officer has physically inspected the items and
    verified that the goods are being re-exported. Visitors must notify
    the Customs office where the deposit was lodged at least two days
    before you leave to ensure that the refund is ready. You will find the
    office number on the documents which will be given to you when paying
    your deposit.



    If you are leaving from a port other than the port where
    you lodged the deposit, the inspection report confirming the
    re-exportation of the items will be forwarded to the office where the
    deposit was lodged and a cheque will be posted to the address that you
    provided.




    A deposit requirement like this for an ordinary business traveler's laptop seems quite unlikely to me. Travelers routinely bring their used laptops and other common electronic items with them to many countries without incident or charge. In the very unlikely case that Customs believes you plan to leave the laptop in the country, they have the right to require a deposit, which you can reclaim on your way out after you present the laptop.



    It would be a good idea to have some kind of proof that you bought the laptop in India and paid taxes on it there, so you can demonstrate to Indian Customs officials that you are bringing it back and should not be charged duty on it.






    share|improve this answer





























      4














      Here's a page from South African Customs that may be useful: Arrival in SA



      As a practical matter, no. Personal effects that travelers bring in with the intent of bringing them back out at the end of a visit are generally exempt from duty, and South Africa appears to be no different in that regard. You are allowed to bring "personal effects" (except for prohibited and restricted items, like illegal drugs or weapons) without payment of duty, as long as you'll be taking them back out of the country with you. This is why your clothes aren't subject to duty either. You can also bring 5,000 Rand of goods duty free, such as gifts you plan to leave in South Africa.



      You can see this on the Traveler Card you'll be asked to complete as well:




      Personal effects and/or sporting and recreational equipment are duty and tax free if brought in by:



      • Visitors for own use and if goods do not remain in South Africa



      Now, for some valuable items, it's possible that they'll want a deposit, to make sure that you don't plan to leave the goods behind and evade payment:




      Please note that you may be required to lodge a cash deposit to cover
      the potential duty/tax on expensive articles if you are bringing them
      in on a temporary basis. The deposit will be refunded when you leave
      after a Customs officer has physically inspected the items and
      verified that the goods are being re-exported. Visitors must notify
      the Customs office where the deposit was lodged at least two days
      before you leave to ensure that the refund is ready. You will find the
      office number on the documents which will be given to you when paying
      your deposit.



      If you are leaving from a port other than the port where
      you lodged the deposit, the inspection report confirming the
      re-exportation of the items will be forwarded to the office where the
      deposit was lodged and a cheque will be posted to the address that you
      provided.




      A deposit requirement like this for an ordinary business traveler's laptop seems quite unlikely to me. Travelers routinely bring their used laptops and other common electronic items with them to many countries without incident or charge. In the very unlikely case that Customs believes you plan to leave the laptop in the country, they have the right to require a deposit, which you can reclaim on your way out after you present the laptop.



      It would be a good idea to have some kind of proof that you bought the laptop in India and paid taxes on it there, so you can demonstrate to Indian Customs officials that you are bringing it back and should not be charged duty on it.






      share|improve this answer



























        4












        4








        4







        Here's a page from South African Customs that may be useful: Arrival in SA



        As a practical matter, no. Personal effects that travelers bring in with the intent of bringing them back out at the end of a visit are generally exempt from duty, and South Africa appears to be no different in that regard. You are allowed to bring "personal effects" (except for prohibited and restricted items, like illegal drugs or weapons) without payment of duty, as long as you'll be taking them back out of the country with you. This is why your clothes aren't subject to duty either. You can also bring 5,000 Rand of goods duty free, such as gifts you plan to leave in South Africa.



        You can see this on the Traveler Card you'll be asked to complete as well:




        Personal effects and/or sporting and recreational equipment are duty and tax free if brought in by:



        • Visitors for own use and if goods do not remain in South Africa



        Now, for some valuable items, it's possible that they'll want a deposit, to make sure that you don't plan to leave the goods behind and evade payment:




        Please note that you may be required to lodge a cash deposit to cover
        the potential duty/tax on expensive articles if you are bringing them
        in on a temporary basis. The deposit will be refunded when you leave
        after a Customs officer has physically inspected the items and
        verified that the goods are being re-exported. Visitors must notify
        the Customs office where the deposit was lodged at least two days
        before you leave to ensure that the refund is ready. You will find the
        office number on the documents which will be given to you when paying
        your deposit.



        If you are leaving from a port other than the port where
        you lodged the deposit, the inspection report confirming the
        re-exportation of the items will be forwarded to the office where the
        deposit was lodged and a cheque will be posted to the address that you
        provided.




        A deposit requirement like this for an ordinary business traveler's laptop seems quite unlikely to me. Travelers routinely bring their used laptops and other common electronic items with them to many countries without incident or charge. In the very unlikely case that Customs believes you plan to leave the laptop in the country, they have the right to require a deposit, which you can reclaim on your way out after you present the laptop.



        It would be a good idea to have some kind of proof that you bought the laptop in India and paid taxes on it there, so you can demonstrate to Indian Customs officials that you are bringing it back and should not be charged duty on it.






        share|improve this answer















        Here's a page from South African Customs that may be useful: Arrival in SA



        As a practical matter, no. Personal effects that travelers bring in with the intent of bringing them back out at the end of a visit are generally exempt from duty, and South Africa appears to be no different in that regard. You are allowed to bring "personal effects" (except for prohibited and restricted items, like illegal drugs or weapons) without payment of duty, as long as you'll be taking them back out of the country with you. This is why your clothes aren't subject to duty either. You can also bring 5,000 Rand of goods duty free, such as gifts you plan to leave in South Africa.



        You can see this on the Traveler Card you'll be asked to complete as well:




        Personal effects and/or sporting and recreational equipment are duty and tax free if brought in by:



        • Visitors for own use and if goods do not remain in South Africa



        Now, for some valuable items, it's possible that they'll want a deposit, to make sure that you don't plan to leave the goods behind and evade payment:




        Please note that you may be required to lodge a cash deposit to cover
        the potential duty/tax on expensive articles if you are bringing them
        in on a temporary basis. The deposit will be refunded when you leave
        after a Customs officer has physically inspected the items and
        verified that the goods are being re-exported. Visitors must notify
        the Customs office where the deposit was lodged at least two days
        before you leave to ensure that the refund is ready. You will find the
        office number on the documents which will be given to you when paying
        your deposit.



        If you are leaving from a port other than the port where
        you lodged the deposit, the inspection report confirming the
        re-exportation of the items will be forwarded to the office where the
        deposit was lodged and a cheque will be posted to the address that you
        provided.




        A deposit requirement like this for an ordinary business traveler's laptop seems quite unlikely to me. Travelers routinely bring their used laptops and other common electronic items with them to many countries without incident or charge. In the very unlikely case that Customs believes you plan to leave the laptop in the country, they have the right to require a deposit, which you can reclaim on your way out after you present the laptop.



        It would be a good idea to have some kind of proof that you bought the laptop in India and paid taxes on it there, so you can demonstrate to Indian Customs officials that you are bringing it back and should not be charged duty on it.







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited Jun 15 '16 at 23:02

























        answered Jun 15 '16 at 22:23









        Zach LiptonZach Lipton

        61.3k11187246




        61.3k11187246



























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