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Government bans sale of Duty Free electronics and clothing from January

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The Government has published its new rules for duty free and tax free sales from 1st January 2021.

It is likely to cause significant problems for many retailers, and we may see the end of Dixons Travel and many clothing shops.

Dixons Travel to close following UK duty free changes

The good news for smokers and drinkers ….

There will be no duty charged on alcohol or tobacco products from January 2021. This applies irrespective of whether you are travelling to an EU or non-EU country.

This saves you:

  • £2.23 on a 75cl bottle of wine.
  • £2.86 on a 75cl bottle of Champagne or Prosecco.
  • £2.28 on six 50cl cans of 4% ABV beer.
  • £11.50 on a 1l bottle of 40% ABV spirits.

…… although I don’t know how many people really stock up on cans of beer at Heathrow to take to their holiday destination.

This applies to ports, airports, international rail stations and sales on ships, trains and planes.

The new personal limits on what you can bring home are covered below. Again, this applies to both EU and non-EU arrivals. You will, for example, be able to bring back three crates of beer without paying any duty. Good luck fitting that into the overhead locker.

The bad news for people who like ‘stuff’ you can’t smoke or drink ….

The Government is ending all other tax free sales from January 2021.

VAT is currently charged on goods taken into the EU but not on good taken outside the EU.

To make it easier for stores to price goods, they have generally set a blended price. A jumper which would be £100 if taken into the EU or (£100/6×5) £83.33 if taken outside the EU is sold for £90ish to everyone. If the customer is travelling to the EU, the shop quietly pays the VAT for them.

The Government was unhappy that customers travelling outside the EU were not getting the full benefit of the VAT saving. The saving has therefore been abolished.

All clothing, electronics, toys etc purchased at UK airports from January 2021 will include VAT and will presumably be sold at standard retail prices.

New UK duty free rules from 2021

VAT refunds are being scrapped for tourists

People leaving the UK to return home will no longer be able to reclaim the VAT they spend on items in the UK. This is likely to have a major impact on London shops which rely heavily on sales to non-EU visitors who can reclaim the VAT on exit.

The only exception is when an item is shipped directly from the seller to the home address of the customer.

Coming into the UK?

Here are the new inbound duty free allowances for people entering the UK:

Alcohol

  • 42 litres of beer
  • 18 litres of still wine
  • 4 litres of spirits OR 9 litres of sparkling wine, fortified wine or any alcoholic beverage less than 22% ABV

Tobacco

  • 200 cigarettes OR
  • 100 cigarillos OR
  • 50 cigars OR
  • 250g tobacco OR
  • 200 sticks of tobacco for heating
  • or any proportional combination of the above

Any other goods

  • £390 or £270 if travelling by private plane or boat

Conclusion

I’m not sure that subsidising smoking and drinking at the expense of clothing and electronics is a massive vote winner, especially amongst the young.

I don’t see any major changes to the shopping line-up at Heathrow, except potentially for a new monster sized cigarette shop. The core customers in the expensive boutiques are usually busy people who don’t have time to visit Harrods or Bond Street during the week, or tourists buying items they cannot find at home. Removing the VAT saving won’t make a major difference.

We may see the end of Dixons Travel. Buying a new iPhone at the airport and then having to keep it safe during your holiday isn’t worth the trouble if it doesn’t save you any money. The profit margin on IT equipment is often very low and Heathrow rents are very high.

I would also guess that stores at other airports with a less affluent customer base will suffer. Many of those stores do rely on value seekers rather than convenience seekers, and the value will no longer be there.

You can find out more about these changes on gov.uk here.

Comments (257)

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

  • Cheshire Pete says:

    So, will the offers for outside EU only now be removed? I often found it annoying I couldn’t buy x2 pack of Bacardi at all at £20, as I’d still save money if I paid the 20% VAT on top. But you can’t do that. No logic to it at all!

    • Jonathan says:

      The saving is predominantly the duty (£8.05 per 70cl) not the VAT. Makes you realise how cheap Barcadi & other low end spirits are when the Duty & VAT is £9.66/70cl before they’ve even thought about making/bottling/transporting it!

  • TFC says:

    So we can only go to France on the euro tunnel and bring back 18 bottles of wine and 9 bottles of bubbles?

  • Supersub says:

    Oh great. A limit of 12 bottles of champagne. That’s the end of weekend runs to Epernay.
    Thanks, Johnson – yet another Brexit bonus from this genius government.

  • Charlie M says:

    Definitely incorrect point of view in here. My British family, friends and I travel excessively due to work and all shop duty free high end items frequently at LHR and have done for years.. Why? Cost saving. Irritation? Carrying the product around the world on travels – BUT – worth the irritation for 20% off. NO saving = NO purchase. LHR shopping will be no more apart from pharmacy, cafe, travel accessories etc.

    • Rob says:

      How come? The stock at the Heathrow boutiques is about 10% of what you get in Bond Street and generally not seasonal and more Chinese-focussed – Burberry more likely to sell checked stuff in duty free whilst you see very little on Bond Street etc. Your chance of finding an item you had your eye on is close to nil.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        LV, Gucci, Louboutin etc are all genuine VAT off at Heathrow for non EU travellers and include the classics which lots of people have their eye on.

        Watched were also VAT off which still represented a decent saving vs discounters. I might not take a flight especially but if I was flying anyway I’d wait until the airport to save an extra £200-300

        • Alex says:

          And now you won’t have to carry it through your travels, you’ll buy it at the airport on the other side before coming back to the UK…

        • Lady London says:

          Some will also send a specific item to the airport for you to buy there.

        • Dezbez says:

          Yeah, I saved c£500 on an Omega Seamaster a few years ago. That included a further small discount I negotiated discount on top of the VAT saving. They even then held it in store while I was away then met me at arrivals when I landed to hand it over.

      • Jonathan says:

        If you ring them a few days before they’ll get whatever you want in. My wife certainly used to take advantage for belts & other accessories at Gucci & the only reason I let it slide was the “saving”.

        • Dezbez says:

          On a couple of occasions I’ve done that successfully as well (Mulberry and Paul Smith). Really good service all round.

      • Andrew says:

        Most of the retailers can get stock you want transferred from Bond St if you call them a few days in advance – I’ve done this several times at Prada and Fendi.

      • Kim says:

        Major brands like LV, Hermes, Prada, Gucci, Tiffany etc carry the full collection which you can’t get 17-18% discount from Bond or Sloane Street. They will gladly move stock between terminals, transfer from high street stores, offer buy and collect or posting them to your home address all for free.

  • jil says:

    I can see ending VAT refund will be a big blow to Selfridge and Harrods in central London, many Asian tourists’ mind set is the price diff between Burberry in China and UK can justify the airline ticket…

    • ChrisC says:

      They can still sell vat free but only if they send the item to the purchasers home address,

      • Jonathan says:

        But then the purchaser will have to pay the import duty etc. Guarantee most of the stuff that tourists buy & reclaim the VAT on is essentially smuggled into their home country.

      • TGLoyalty says:

        You think everyone that was entry their country was declaring the value?

        It kills the market

      • jil says:

        this means online purchase, not for people coming to the UK

    • C says:

      Agree – this is a big hit for high end central London retailing. Though the real benefit of the programs is for the companies that administer the refund schemes, and who generally charge 35-40% commissions.

    • Mark says:

      Very much agree. Actually think the bigger story here is the scrapping of the VAT Retail Export Scheme and the article headline Leads with the minor issue. Will likely have severe implications for the retail and hospitality sectors in London. Many tens of thousands of Middle and Far Eastern tourists, whose primary interest is shopping, are drawn to the capital each year to spend billions. Of course many will still come, undeterred by the axing of the VAT refund scheme, but many will now divert their spend to Paris, Milan, Rome etc., where the scheme continues to operate. At a time when retail and hospitality sector is so distressed, this seems like a major own goal for the U.K.

      • Riccatti says:

        Will be worse than this: tourists will come not realising UK stopped VAT refunds. That will not simply sit in their heads as a possibility. Then it will destroy the reputation as a major tourist/shopping destination.

        • Kim says:

          I have friends from abroad who have previously travelled to the UK and claimed VAT, have received an email already telling them that VAT refund is not happening from 1st Jan 2020.

  • Anna says:

    The only duty free item I tend to buy regularly is Caribbean rum so this is actually good news for me! Wine prices have been so low here in recent years it’s not been worth doing a booze cruise for some time, especially if you have a long drive to the southern ports.

  • Aaron C says:

    I’m surprised the government is doing something that encourages smoking especially given the huge push to improve health as a result of covid and Johnson’s clearly stated intention to make people healthier.

    • jamie says:

      Agree, this is an astonishing move from the Clown Government given the health risks from tobacco – twice as many deaths from smoking as from Covid. But fill your boots with cheap cigs and booze, will keep Nigel happy.

    • Anna says:

      I don’t even know anyone who smokes any more – nobody’s asked me to bring duty free cigs back for about 10 years now, even at dirt cheap long haul prices.

    • Chrisasaurus says:

      The government who announced half price kfc on the same day as their adverts that explained it’s obese people’s fault COVID is more deadly for them?

  • Mikeact says:

    As a non smoker, ‘200 tobacco sticks for heating’ sounds interesting?

    And slightly OT, there seem to be numerous places now to leave your comments ?

This article is closed to new comments. Feel free to ask your question in the HfP forums.

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