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#1
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For a recently manufactured pack of cards, it would be 49. However, the old stuff is considered more like coins, stamps, or a work of art. Those are Chapter 97 (specifically, HS9702).*
* - I'm 99% percent sure this is how they'd want you to file, but always defer to their advice. Quote:
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"Don't mistake activity for achievement." – John Wooden |
#2
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If it's 100k plus maybe just pay the guy a little extra to meet you somewhere in the states and skip the major headache.
^^^^^^^ This would create a problem for the Canadian seller though. His failure to declare that he is entering the USA with items for sale could get him into real trouble with US Customs. |
#3
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And as someone else noted, getting the seller to maybe come to the U.S. to drop off the collection may save the OP the hassle of going through customs, but the collection is still going to get hit with whatever tariffs/duties are going to be owed on it. And the seller may want quite a bit more than expected then to now cover his travel costs and the tariff/duty charges he'll be getting hit with. And I still wonder if the seller was planning to be reporting this sale for tax purposes in Canada. If not, he may not be wanting to bring it to the U.S./Canadian border himself and giving officials his name and telling them any other information about the collection he's selling then. Do not discount the possibility of Canadian and U.S. authorities sharing info about their citizens moving back and forth across their borders. Last edited by BobC; 01-09-2023 at 03:21 PM. |
#4
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Grant,
How much of a drive is the collection from where you live in Washington? If it's a days drive, I'd just drive and bring it back. Is any of it graded? If it's all raw, then it just looks like cardboard sports cards. If it's slabbed stuff, then it looks like potential $$$ signs. ![]() ![]() If it's a lot of cards that can't be hand carried then do you really want to put the cards in the cargo hold of a plane and have the cards potentially lost/damaged? I guess all the high $$ ticket items would be in the carry-on. Edited to add - 10 years ago most people wouldn't have thought about declaring cardboard... Never really thought about the implications of moving the stuff across international borders. I can remember having (6) N162s (including an Anson) shipped to me from Australia. I never thought about the custom's/duties on that stuff. I just looked at it as baseball cards heading to my collection.
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fr3d c0wl3s - always looking for OJs and other 19th century stuff. PM or email me if you have something cool you're looking to find a new home for. Last edited by Fred; 01-09-2023 at 03:32 PM. |
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