Tag: Customs Duties


  • Answer Capsule The EU maintains over 40 preferential Free Trade Agreements covering 70+ trading partners, reducing tariffs between the EU and partner countries. To claim preferential tariff rates, importers must ensure goods meet rules of origin (regional content requirements) and provide proof through EUR.1 certificates, REX declarations, or origin statements. Many FTAs enable cumulation of…

  • Answer Capsule The Windsor Framework replaced the Northern Ireland Protocol to resolve post-Brexit tensions by creating a dual market access system for goods destined for Northern Ireland. The framework establishes green lanes (reduced checks for goods destined for NI only) and red lanes (full customs checks for goods destined for the rest of the UK),…

  • Answer Capsule Customs valuation determines the taxable base for import duties and is a critical cost driver for all EU importers. The EU applies six WTO-derived valuation methods in strict hierarchical order, with transaction value (the actual price paid) as the primary method in most cases. Importers must understand additions to transaction value (freight, insurance,…

  • Canada and Turkey maintain a complex bilateral trade relationship characterized by significant trade flows in key sectors but complicated by the absence of a formal free trade agreement. For Canadian exporters and importers, understanding the current trade landscape is essential for making strategic decisions about market entry, sourcing optimization, and tariff planning. This guide covers…

  • Turkey is one of the world’s most active users of trade defence measures, with hundreds of anti-dumping duties, safeguard surcharges, and additional customs duties currently in force. For importers sourcing from non-EU countries, Turkish trade defence measures can dramatically increase product costs, affect supply chain feasibility, and require active management. This guide explains how Turkish…

  • Turkey represents a critical gateway for North American trade into Europe, the Middle East, and Central Asia. However, successfully importing into or exporting from Turkey requires mastering a complex web of customs procedures, duty calculations, VAT treatment, and special levies. This comprehensive guide covers the essential mechanics of Turkish customs operations, helping importers and exporters…

  • The European Union Customs Union with Turkey, established in 1995 under EU Council Decision 1/95, is one of the most consequential and complex trade arrangements affecting global commerce. For North American importers and exporters, understanding this relationship is essential because it fundamentally shapes Turkish tariff rates, customs procedures, and trade opportunities. This guide explains the…

  • Turkey represents one of the most strategically important trade gateways for North American importers and exporters. As a member of the European Union Customs Union for industrial goods but not a full EU member state, Turkey occupies a unique position in global trade that creates both tremendous opportunities and complex regulatory challenges. Peacock Tariff Consulting…

  • Serbia has emerged as a strategic European manufacturing destination, attracting major automotive OEMs and suppliers. Low labor costs, strategic location for EU market access, free zones with tax incentives, and infrastructure improvements position Serbia as competitive for automotive, agriculture, and technology manufacturing. Understanding tariff and supply chain implications is essential for manufacturers evaluating Serbia operations.…

  • Serbia possesses a uniquely diverse FTA network encompassing the EU (450M consumers), EAEU, Russia, China, Turkey, and EFTA, rare for any country. This multi-directional trade access creates exceptional opportunities for businesses to use Serbia as a manufacturing or distribution hub. However, leveraging multiple FTAs requires careful rules of origin planning and understanding each agreement’s terms…