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U.S. Postal Service reverses decision to stop accepting packages from China, after Trump ends ‘de minimis’ exemption used by Temu and SheinUpdate, Feb. 5, 2025: Early on Wednesday, the U.S. Postal Service reversed its decision ... The new U.S. tariffs include an end to the “de minimis” rule—a loophole that exempts packages ...
known as "de minimis," that's commonly used by Chinese online retailers Temu and Shein. The U.S. Postal Service said Wednesday it will resume accepting inbound mail and packages from China and ...
Chinese e-commerce firms Temu and Shein have relied on the de minimis loophole to keep prices low. The U.S. Postal Service said Tuesday it's temporarily suspending all inbound packages from China ...
A trade loophole called de minimis helped ... the U.S. Postal Service said on Tuesday that it was suspending acceptance of packages sent from China and Hong Kong — but it reversed course on ...
President Donald Trump’s 25% tariffs on imports from Canada and Mexico took effect Tuesday. But actually collecting them is ...
usually shipped directly from China. Cheap, direct postal service helps these companies keep costs low, as did the “de minimis” exemption that previously allowed shipments to go tax-free if ...
“Effective February 5, 2025, the Postal Service will continue accepting all international inbound mail and packages from China and Hong ... taxes using the de minimis exemption.
One day after the U.S. Postal Service said in a notice that it would stop accepting inbound parcels from the China and Hong ...
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