Post-Brexit shoppers are paying a third more for EU goods as red tape confuses Continental retailers

Post-Brexit shoppers are paying a third more for EU goods as red tape is confusing Continental retailers amid chaos at the ports.

Tens of thousands of internet buyers are checking out without realising they will be asked to stump up extra VAT and customs duties when their parcel arrives.

Delivery company DPD asked one shopper to shell out £77 in duties and charges to release £245 worth of clothes she’d bought from a French website, The Times reported.

The expensive issue has been caused by new rules which came into force on January 1 that require VAT to be collected on delivery for goods over £135.

But in many cases the retailers are unaware that they are charging their customers VAT twice – adding their own local rate only for the Britons to be charged again when their shopping arrive. 

Trucks queue on the road leading to the Waterbrook Inland Border Facility, a temporary customs clearance centre set up in a truck stop in Ashford, Kent, Britain January 15

British customers are also liable to be hit with further duties if the goods originated, even partially, outside the EU.

The delivery companies are then whacking their own additional charges on top – 2.5 per cent of the VAT charge in the case of DHL – to cover their administrative fees.

Clothes shopper Louisa Walters, 52, told The Times she was asked for £77.23 in tax, duties and charges after splashing out more than £240 on two items of clothing from Paris-based Sandro.

Clothes shopper Louisa Walters, 52, was asked for £77.23 in tax, duties and charges after splashing out more than £240 on two items of clothing from Paris-based Sandro

Clothes shopper Louisa Walters, 52, was asked for £77.23 in tax, duties and charges after splashing out more than £240 on two items of clothing from Paris-based Sandro

It broke down to £24.50 in duty, £46.73 in VAT and £6 in charges from DPD.

The duty suggests the goods, at least partially, originated from outside the EU. It’s not clear if a sales tax was levied on the original order.

Ms Walters said she didn’t even know they were coming from France.

‘DPD offered me two options – pay the fees or return the package. There was no way I was paying £77 so I clicked to not accept the package. I was very disappointed,’ she told the paper.

It is believed that the issues can be ironed out over the next few months as more EU retailers register with HMRC.

But some have pulled the plug on their UK operations altogether in the wake of Brexit.   

It comes after it emerged yesterday the EU is demanding that Boris Johnson abandon his plans for a ‘Singapore on Thames’ before they will grease the wheels at the ports.

The bloc is said to be open to discussing how to reduce friction, with shoppers complaining of shortages at UK and French supermarkets as post-Brexit red tape has hit supplies in and out of Britain. 

It emerged that up to 200 lorries a day are being turned back from UK crossings into the EU because they lack the proper paperwork.

Emma Churchill, the head of the border and protocol delivery group at the Cabinet Office, said between 3 per cent and 8 per cent of HGVs – 100 to 200 vehicles a day –  were being refused permission to enter the continent.  

Lorry drivers have reportedly been warned that tailbacks at ports could get worse in the coming days as traffic returns to normal levels

Lorry drivers have reportedly been warned that tailbacks at ports could get worse in the coming days as traffic returns to normal levels

Ministers have admitted that post-Brexit rules are partly to blame for empty shelves in Northern Ireland supermarkets

Ministers have admitted that post-Brexit rules are partly to blame for empty shelves in Northern Ireland supermarkets

But EU diplomats have suggested that they will make moves to ease problems if Mr Johnson keeps the UK close to rules made in Brussels and ditches any plans to emulate the growth of the Asian trade powerhouse on its doorstep.

Singapore is a low tax economy and shipping fulcrum in Asia and ministers are believed to see its model as a way to reshape the UK after Brexit. 

A senior European diplomat told the Times that ‘of course we can in future discuss how to have less friction’, but they added: ‘Discussing further facilitation or ways to reduce friction would depend on what the UK is doing and where they want to go. 

‘Initiating that conversation and negotiation will not be made easier if the other side of the table is talking up deregulation or Singapore on the Thames.’

It came as it emerged Transport Secretary Grant Shapps has ‘engaged’ with the Ministry of Defence to put troops on standby to step in to ease congestion. 

Mr Shapps said in a letter to the transport and international trade select committees that the Army will get involved ‘should the situation at ports reach a sufficiently critical level and a clear role for military support emerge’. 

It came amid reports that the Cabinet Office has told haulage firms to prepare for a further squeeze at ports and as Liz Truss admitted that Brexit is partly to blame for food shortages in Northern Ireland.

The Times said the Cabinet Office has informed lorry drivers that they could face further disruption in the coming days as traffic increases. 

Government modelling apparently shows freight numbers are set to return to normal levels after a post-Brexit dip. 

There are fears that if drivers arrive at the Port of Dover with the wrong paperwork tailbacks and delays will worsen. 

Giving evidence to the Commons Public Accounts Committee Ms Churchill said the numbers were far fewer than had been expected following the end of the Brexit transition period on December 31.

She said that in around half the cases it was because the drivers did not have a negative coronavirus test following the introduction of new controls by the French at the end of last year.

She said that traffic was ‘completely free-flowing’ at the Channel ports with most drivers arriving with the correct documentation.

‘That is because the general level of trader readiness has been higher than either we feared or anticipated,’ she said.

‘The level of turnbacks at the short straits is running at about 5% which is very, very much better than we had feared but we need to keep a very, very watchful eye on that as volumes increased.’

Shoppers in the UK have reported shortages of some items in domestic supermarkets after Britain split from Brussels at the start of the year. 

Items seemingly in short supply have included cauliflower packs, citrus fruit, courgettes, French wine and brie. 

Meanwhile, M&S stores in France have faced supply issues and millions of pounds worth of meat exports from the UK have been left to rot in ports on the continent because of new border rules. 

Northern Ireland has also experienced food shortages but ministers have previously been insistent problems were not Brexit-related. 

Northern Ireland Minister Brandon Lewis said empty shelves had ‘nothing to do with leaving the EU’ as he blamed the coronavirus crisis. 

But Ms Truss, the International Trade Secretary, has now said Brexit is partly to blame, putting her at odds with her Cabinet colleague.       

She told ITV’s Peston programme: ‘Well, I think it is down to both of those issues. Of course we were always clear that we are leaving the single market, we are leaving the customs unions, there would be processes to be undertaken.

‘We are now seeing a more rapid flow of goods into Northern Ireland and those supermarket shelves are being stocked.

‘Of course there was always going to be a period of adjustment for businesses but at the same time the benefits of having the trade deal we now have with the EU is we are able to strike trade deals with the rest of the world.’ 

Her comments were in response to Simon Coveney, the Irish Foreign Minister, who said food shortages in Northern Ireland were ‘clearly a Brexit issue’.  

Liz Truss, the International Trade Secretary, said problems in Northern Ireland were 'down to both' Brexit and coronavirus

Liz Truss, the International Trade Secretary, said problems in Northern Ireland were ‘down to both’ Brexit and coronavirus

He told the same programme: ‘I don’t think it is only to do with Covid-19 although certainly that doesn’t help but the supermarket shelves were full before Christmas and there are some issues now in terms of supply chains and so that is clearly a Brexit issue.

‘It is part of the reality of the United Kingdom now being outside not only the European Union but of the customs union and the single market as well.

‘What we have in place in Northern Ireland is a protocol which effectively de-facto creates an extension of the EU’s single market for goods into Northern Ireland even though Northern Ireland as part of the United Kingdom is outside of the EU.

‘That requires a certain amount of checks on goods coming from GB into Northern Ireland and that involves some disruption that I think companies will take some time to get used to and that is what we are seeing at the moment, some companies simply weren’t ready for the change that Brexit brings, it is a very real change.’

Mr Lewis said earlier this week that shortages of some products in the weeks since the post-Brexit transition period ended on December 31 were due to the knock-on effects of UK trade with continental Europe being temporarily halted due to concerns over the new Kent variant of coronavirus.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: ‘That’s actually something we’ve seen across other parts of the UK as well, nothing to do with leaving the EU, nothing to do with the Northern Irish protocol but actually to do with some of the challenges we saw with Covid at the port of Dover just before Christmas and the impact that had on supply lines coming through.

‘I have to say supermarket supply lines at the moment are in good fettle.’

The Northern Ireland Protocol between the UK and the EU requires health certifications on animal-based food products entering Northern Ireland from the rest of the UK.

A Whitehall source added: ‘Brandon has been clear that it is important to put these issues in context. There were multiple challenges for businesses trading across the UK, including Northern Ireland, over Christmas and into the New Year.

‘That wasn’t unique to Northern Ireland and was unrelated to the Protocol. Those challenges included staff shortages due to coronavirus, NI being at the end of the supply chain and the issues we saw at Dover before Christmas. 

‘This was compounded by a period of adjustment as businesses adapted to new processes for trade from GB to NI. The flow of goods under the Protocol is now smooth overall and individual issues are being addressed quickly by relevant departments.’