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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.

  • Niel says:

    Electronics in Heathrow never duty free anyway. It has always been ‘airport competitive price’ tho I dnt know what competitive about it coz most of the time they are more expensive than Amazon. Lmfao

  • Nick says:

    It’s like going back 30 years with the pro-smoking policy! Who would ever think that’s a good idea. Would be better to go down the route of ‘one open packet only’ like some countries have done.

    • Josh says:

      There are far cheaper places to buy cigs on holiday than Heathrow Duty Free. Besides which… You could always travel to Jersey and purchase tax free cigs…or go to Gibraltar for exceptionally cheap booze

  • Tony says:

    Typical brexiter policy as they don’t really want anybody to leave the UK and don’t like Johnny Foreigner so this is one way to stop him coming as suddenly all purchases become 20% more expensive but guess they reason pound will loose another 20% of it value so will all balance out.
    What a dump the UK is becoming.

  • Lumma says:

    Head for Points – spend £6 on Boris bikes and get £10 of AMEX points

    Also Head for Points – outrage that an ludicrously overpriced “designer” belt will now cost £120 instead of £100 at the airport

    • WaynedP says:

      Ha ha, good point Lumma.

      I’m amazed that airport luxury goods prices apparently include a 20% discount according to comments here – I’m with you that they’ve always looked hideously overpriced to me.

      But amusing to learn how the other half lives 🙂

      • callum says:

        When I briefly worked at John Lewis, I was constantly shocked at the absurd amount people were spending on designer clothes. People were spending more on a (completely plain and generic looking) tie than I would spend on the entire suit!

    • Andrew says:

      A designer belt is more in the £300 region, not £120.

      • LB says:

        I’m assuming riche people need more leather to get around their waistline 😉

        • LB says:

          ☆rich☆

          • Lady London says:

            Fat=poor & unsuccessful, in advanced Western economies. Look around. Who are the fat ones?

            I’m not sure if I fully believe this but someone very wise and realistic told me this.

        • Andrew says:

          Many rich people, such as myself have a personal trainer to keep their waistline fabulously slim.

        • Rob says:

          Get thee to my kids school at 8am. Average mother has a 26 inch waist I’d guess ….

          • Anna says:

            Lol. One of my friends refers to that as “competitive dieting”, it’s common among the Cheshire set as well!

          • Jack Patel says:

            Hi Rob,

            Dixons Travel is not a duty free store, it hasn’t been a duty free store for nearly 15 years. VAT is charged at 20% on everything the store sells.

          • Rob says:

            There is only one price shown, but your receipt if flying ex-EU will show no VAT was charged. Intra-EU, it is.

            For the self-employed this was always a good place to pick up IT kit since you effectively got the VAT saving but, because VAT was actually charged if flying to the EU, you could reclaim it.

          • KBuffett says:

            Were they supplying VAT receipts?

          • Rob says:

            I assume so, if asked. The normal receipt is, realistically, good enough unless HMRC start poking around though.

          • DV says:

            Yes, they were quite happy to do so. They are obliged to do so on request where the transaction is over £100, I believe.

          • Harry T says:

            Sounds like there’s quite a crew of yummy mummys

      • Rob says:

        To be fair, they last for ever. If you buy 3-4 in your 30’s you’re unlikely to ever have to buy another belt in your life if you keep the weight off.

        One sign of getting old is that you look at stuff in shops and think ‘that’ll see me out ……’ 🙂

        Don’t buy one with a logo buckle though, as they are very naff.

  • Paul says:

    The 4 litre allowance is ludicrous but clearly a bone for the red wall that elected this lunatic.

    The removal of the VAT for tourists is probably the the most sensible thing I have heard from this incompetent government since the cabal took power.

    Very few nations allowed this and those that did always made it incredibly difficult to get it back. Meanwhile we set up huge offices with big red signs to encourage millionaires and reclaim 20% on £100k watches. It was mad. If London, post covid, cannot sell without giving VAT back then they need to reduce the prices. Charity starts at home.

    • Anna says:

      It’s so tedious that bitter Remainers continue to sneer at the working class – you really will try and turn absolutelty anything into a snub aimed at anyone who doesn’t agree with you, won’t you?

    • Niel says:

      Duty free shopping and tax refund is one big driver for tourism in the UK.

    • Niel says:

      Plus duty free and tax refund does not offer the full 20% cut. Only upto 14% depends on the amount of a certain transaction.

  • Colin MacKinnon says:

    Edinburgh Airport Dixons used to be big, now it is a large cupboard at the edge – had real trouble finding it last year when I needed a £50 tablet at the last minute.
    Duty-free whisky? The distillers have already come up with dates and brands “unique” to duty-free to stop price comparison.
    Roll-on 4l from the Canaries – decent Spanish brandy for cooking and winter hot chocolate!

  • blenz101 says:

    I can see a fantastic opportunity here for Ireland. They already offer tax free shopping for international tourists (VAT back at I think around 23%) for visitors from outside the EU.

    Presumably they will open this up to the UK after Jan 1st so those shopping for luxury goods will have a great incentive to make this trip both from the UK. Equally international tourists who would previously travelled to purely for luxury shopping in central London/Bicester will have a great incentive from Ireland to visit.

    I can easily see a situation where an equivalent of Bicester and perhaps some Harrods / LV / JL type stores open up outside Dublin.

    Ireland has hardly been shy in the past about using tax breaks to support its economy.

    Paris could also be in for a boost given it will also now have a competitive edge over London if they allow UK travellers (high net worth) to shop VAT free.

    • Anna says:

      Perhaps booze cruises from Holyhead will be the new thing – though Stena would seriously have to lower their ferry prices to make this viable!

    • martin heywood says:

      There is already a designer outlet in Ireland within an hour of Dublin with over 100+ stores at Kildare and is own by Bicester Village

  • Goldmember says:

    It’s interesting how since the abolition of duty free within the EU was introduced in the UK in 1993, how they’ve now quadrupled the alcohol allowance (used to be 1 litre of spirits or equivalents in other drinks) and yet tobacco remains the same at 200 cigarettes. With a pack in the UK shops now costing £10-£13 of which UK duty accounts for a significant proportion of this. You can buy a carton of 200 in duty free for close to £40 or as low as £12 in places like Doha. I think this is going to be where UK customs will be concentrating their efforts because the saving to the consumer/loss to the public purse on cigarettes and tobacco is going to be the most significant.

    • Anna says:

      How much?! No wonder all the northerners have given up smoking. 🤣

      • Goldmember says:

        £13 ish for a pack of Benson and Hedges in the UK. €50 at the tabac in Alicante Airport you get an entire carton (10 packs). At the moment I can bring back as many as I like for personal consumption. This all ends on 31DEC. Or I can go to the duty free shop in Geneva Airport and pay around the same as Switzerland is outside the EU but only bring one carton back. Or I can by them at Heathrow on the way out to wherever and pay £70 for the privilege because they mark up the prices. I’ll wait until I get where I’m going thanks.

        • Charlieface says:

          Northerners smoke L&B not B&H 🙂
          Moral of the story: fly somewhere they sell it cheap and bring it back.
          Illegal cigarette imports have been going on for years, because UK duty free prices aren’t cheap enough. This is unlikely to change anything

          • Goldmember says:

            lol well regardless to the brand of choice, you don’t even need to do it illegally.
            I’m going to get a decent cig run in to the EU before 31DEC which should hopefully last me through. whether that’s taking the car over to France or an Avios redemption somewhere. That said until this year I’ve been inclined to do a day out somewhere using Avios like Zurich or Geneva and bringing my allowance back. £35×2 for a RFS to GVA offsetting 400 fags is still a good deal compared to the prices Tesco or my local garage charge.

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