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EU to levy fee on small packages from outside bloc

Jon Shelton with AFP, dpa
March 27, 2026

The European Union has announced that it will introduce handling fees for non-EU small packages from November 1. The fee will be charged in addition to a customs tax on such items that goes into effect in July.

https://p.dw.com/p/5BEmq
A pile of orange Temu packages stacked in front of a German apartment building
Chinese discount platforms send some 400,000 packages to German customers each day, overwhelming customs authoritiesImage: CHROMORANGE/picture alliance

The EU Parliament and the European Council on Thursday voted to introduce handling fees for small packages arriving from outside the bloc starting on November 1, at the latest.

The blanket fee, which the European Commission must set, will likely be around €2 ($2.30) per package and will come in addition to a per package customs fee of €3 on purchases worth up to €150.

The customs fee is scheduled to go into effect in July.

The move comes largely in response to the flood of items arriving in Europe from cheap Chinese online platforms such as Shein, Temu and AliExpress, but also from Amazon. The EU says that 5.9 million such packages entered the bloc in 2025, with 90% of them originating in China.

EU customs agents can't keep up with flood of hazardous packages from China

Another issue that prompted the move is the fact that the sheer volume of packages arriving in the EU mean customs officials have little chance of thoroughly inspecting each one.

Consumer rights groups, for instance, say that more than 90% of items on offer at discount Chinese platforms contain hazardous chemicals that are illegal in the EU.

The new fee approved on Thursday will be used in part to hire more customs agents.

If you think fast fashion is bad, check out SHEIN

Beyond greenlighting the new handling fee, European lawmakers also set fines for companies found guilty of violating EU safety regulations.

These measures, which will go into effect in 2028, mean financial penalties equal to as much as 6% of all revenue generated by a company's annual exports to the bloc can be charged if they are proven to have exported dangerous materials to the EU.

Consumer groups hail move against hazardous Chinese imports

The European consumer organization BEUC welcomed the move, citing the threat posed by hazardous items entering the EU, with the group highlighting deadly toys that pose chocking hazards to children as well as "textiles drenched in banned chemicals."

Consumer rights groups say that additionally, EU customers have increasingly complained of the poor quality of products from the Chinese sites as well as hard to understand rules for returning packages.

The German Trade Association (HDE) estimates that platforms Shein and Temu alone send some 400,000 packages to customers in Germany each day, accounting for between €2.7 and €3.3 billion in revenues in 2024.

HDE data suggests that more than 14 million Germans purchased items from the platforms in 2025.

France targets fast fashion: Shein and Temu under fire

Edited by: Alex Berry

Jon Shelton Writer, translator and editor with DW's online news team.