USPS suspends all packages from China, including e-commerce purchases

The United States Postal Service has temporarily stopped accepting inbound parcels from China and Hong Kong, and according to Wired, it’s already causing huge problems with e-commerce shipments to the US. USPS posted the notice on its website, announcing that the suspension will be in place “until further notice.” As Wired notes, the international parcel suspension is a direct result of the Trump administration’s order to end import tax exemption for small packages shipped into the US worth less than $800. The administration also imposed an additional 10 percent tariff on goods imported from China.

The “de minimis” import tax exemption rule allows e-commerce companies like Shein and Temu to sell to customers in the US while keeping prices on their platforms low. It was originally intended to make it easier to send gifts stateside, but the US government has been considering removing or altering it in recent years due to the rise of e-commerce shipments. Now, the Trump administration has removed it completely, and so quickly, that shipping companies are apparently scrambling to find a way to get packages into the US.

A Canadian trucking company owner told Wired that his trucks were turned away at the border because they contained packages from China. The owner said that border control was “actually going through the trucks and randomly checking the packages.” He explained that it won’t be easy to sort packages to remove everything coming in from China, so this development would most likely cause delivery delays.

According to US Customs, there were over 1.36 billion de minimis shipments to the US within the 2024 fiscal year. If the agency decides to hold all de minimis shipments at the border, that means they may have to process around 3.7 million packages a day to check how much import taxes and other additional fees the receiver or buyer has to pay. That could cause a massive backlog in shipments. A customs and trade management business executive told Wired that the government could choose to keep packages moving instead and to charge people for the fees retroactively. In the future, though, China’s e-commerce platforms could start adding those fees, along with the 10 percent tariff now required for Chinese goods, to a customer’s total amount, making it more expensive to buy from websites like Shein and Temu.

Related Posts

Why Did Fiat Discontinue The Multipla, And How Much Is One Worth Today?

Studio MDF/Shutterstock The Fiat Multipla is often considered one of the ugliest and weirdest cars ever made due to its bulbous behind, beluga-like blubbery forehead, and extra set of headlights….

Read more

How To Remove Snow From Your Car Without A Scraper

We may receive a commission on purchases made from links. Tetra Images/Getty If you’ve ever lived somewhere that experiences harsh winters with heavy snowfall, you probably understand just how debilitating…

Read more

5 Things You Can’t Buy With An Amazon Gift Card

Nicole Glass Photography/Shutterstock It often feels like you can buy almost anything from Amazon. The company’s website and mobile apps offer millions of products, ranging from books and music to…

Read more

‘Dengue Boy’ Is the Weird, Fleshy Novel You Need Right Now

Evolution, ethnography, epidemics—this is the soup from which Dengue Boy, a brilliantly strange new novel by the Argentine author Michel Nieva, emerges. The eponymous Dengue Boy is a mosquito–human hybrid…

Read more

The Super Bowl is being broadcast with Dolby Atmos audio for the first time

Tubi isn’t the only service touting its Super Bowl LIX presentation prowess ahead of Sunday’s big game. If you have the right setup, the whistles, slamming helmets and quarterback play-calls…

Read more

Relic Entertainment unveils DLC for Company of Heroes 3

Relic Entertainment, a newly independent maker of real-time strategy games, has announced its new upcoming downloadable content (DLC) and major update for Company of Heroes 3. The Vancouver, Canada-based game…

Read more

Leave a Reply