Arctorro wrote:Hmmm...
The one time I ordered from them I didn't receive an email like that.
At a guess I'd say it is to give you the opportunity to display a lower value on the parcel for any customs fees. In Australia any personal imports of $1000 dollars or more incur fees, so the option to lower the parcel value would allow someone to avoid that.
Sabrblade, just email them to tell them that they can mark it as the full amount of what you paid.
Just so all of you know ... it is illegal in all of our countries to deceive the postal system. If something you purchased is valued at $300, you can't ask the seller to mark the value of the package as a gift or ask that the value of the item be marked lower than the actual amount you paid. In the U.S., this is more of an issue with sellers shipping internationally because we are rarely, if ever, charged tax on imported items that are shipped to us. I've been buying internationally for about 15 years and have never had customs charge a tax on something I've purchased. However, many of my customers who live internationally have been charged taxes by their customs office.
Here is the verbiage from listings in
Seibertron.com's eBay store regarding this matter:
International Buyers - Please Note: Import duties, taxes, and charges are not included in the item price or shipping cost. These charges are the buyer's responsibility. Please check with your country's customs office to determine what these additional costs will be prior to bidding or buying. Customs fees are normally charged by the shipping company or collected when you pick the item up. These fees are not additional shipping charges. More information can be found at
http://ocs.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ContactCS. In addition, we won't under-value merchandise or mark the item as a gift on customs forms. Doing that is against U.S. and international laws. More information about this can be found at
http://pages.ebay.com/help/pay/internat ... rules.html.
And from eBay at the link above:
eBay wrote:Note: It's illegal to falsify customs declarations or mark an item as a "gift" in order to avoid customs fees. If a buyer asks you to commit customs fraud, report it to us.