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On Nov 14, 2025, at 11:09 PM, Bret Hess <bret...@gmail.com> wrote:
What's the current estimate to import an older glider (about 1980) in a trailer from Germany to the US? I know nothing about possible tariffs, VAT, shipping costs.Thanks.--
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What's the current estimate to import an older glider (about 1980) in a trailer from Germany to the US? I know nothing about possible tariffs, VAT, shipping costs.Thanks.
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In the context of EU-origin civil aircraft parts entering the U.S.:
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Customs brokers do NOT (and should not) base tariff classification, duty rates, or special tariff applicability on whether a part has an EASA Form 1.
Tariffs are based on HTSUS classification + country of origin
Form 1 is an airworthiness document only
A lack of Form 1 has no bearing on:
MFN duty
Zero-for-zero aircraft tariff treatment
Exclusion from reciprocal tariffs
Entry under 9903 Series
Whether the product is an “aircraft part” for tariff purposes
Customs and FAA certification are completely separate regulatory domains.
Absolutely. When I receive sea-freight shipments of aircraft parts and instruments, my customs broker clears them correctly with zero tariffs. In contrast, DHL, FedEx, and UPS often try to apply the 15% reciprocal tariff because their in-house clearance departments quickly handle entries without much thought. The individuals processing these entries typically have limited experience and inadequate training.
A perfect example: UPS recently cleared a shipment from HpH that included a simple sailplane electrical cable. They classified it simultaneously as 100% aluminum, 100% copper, and an electrical connector—all at once (how does that work?). To make it even worse, they marked the country of origin as Russia. The result? A completely baseless 252% tariff.