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Pleasure and Vacation Travel

1. Know Before You Go
2. When You Return to the United States
3. You Must Declare
4. Duty-Free Exemptions
5. Items from Certain Countries
6. Personal Belongings and Household
    Effects

7. Paying Duty
8. Sending Goods to the United States
9. Unaccompanied Purchases from Insular
    Possessions and Caribbean Countries

10. Duty-Free Shops
11. Customs Service
12. Money and Other Monetary
      Instruments

13. Traveling Back and Forth Across
      the Border

14. Photographic Film
15. Customer Service Programs and
      Other Travel-related Information

6. Personal Belongings and Household Effects
What Items are Duty-free?


Personal Belongings
Your personal belongings can be sent back to the United States duty-free if they are of U.S. origin and if they have not been altered or repaired while abroad. Personal belongings like worn clothing can be mailed home and will receive duty-free entry if you write the words "American Goods Returned" on the outside of the package.

Household Effects
Household effects include furniture, carpets, paintings, tableware, stereos, linens, and similar household furnishings. Tools of trade, professional books, implements, and instruments that you've taken out of the United States will be duty-free when you return.

You may import household effects you acquired abroad duty-free if:
  • You used them for at least one year while you were abroad.
  • They are not intended for anyone else or for sale.
Clothing, jewelry, photography equipment, portable radios, and vehicles are considered personal effects and cannot be brought in duty-free as household effects. However, the amount of duty collected on them will be reduced according to the age of the item.







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