szukalski
Well-known member
Well, they're not leeching. They're doing work on your behalf and charging you for it..Can you go into more detail about avoiding the DHL leeches? We have 23% VAT in Poland and I think ordering from Tayda costs something crazy like 50 Euros.
I can talk about Germany, but I assume Poland is similar because.. TARIC defines the goods categories for the EU. When you import into EU, you need to declare your line items against these categories, to let customs know what tariffs to apply (ie. all resistors fall into a single category, so you may have 50 line items of different resistors aggregated to one category in the customs declaration). You can do this on your own, in Germany this is with the ATLAS system.
DHL will do this on your behalf if you authorise them, they do the first 3 (I think) for free and then it is a cost per category (IIRC €4) plus a handling fee. I haven't done the self-declaration yet, but what I have read is you do it, then customs process it, and pass back to DHL who deliver.
After looking at the ATLAS system, I am not sure it's worth my time to do it. Instead, it becomes more cost/time effective to do a massive order of a core set of components (resistors, pots, caps, toggle switches) and get other things from other or local sources. I get ICs from local electronics stores, footswitches/enclosures/pots from Daier via AliExpress. Daier needs scale, but you can get 6 white or black 125Bs for €7 each delivered..
AliExpress is interesting, because it includes the tax when you pay, and it doesn't have extra handling fees (a la DHL) because, I believe, they bundle customer orders together and declare customs themselves. JLCPCB does similar with their EuroPacket option.
You need to really buy in bulk, set yourself up for a long time, and do incremental purchases locally when you run out of certain values.
I wish I knew a better way, Tayda UV is awesome but it's more cost effective to do PCB faceplates, or vinyl stickers..