Turkey’s Presidential Decree No. 10813, published 7 January 2026, abolishes simplified customs declarations for B2C e‑commerce shipments, effective 6 February 2026. All shipments, even those valued at €30 or less, must now use regular customs procedures, with specific exceptions for medicines and food supplements under prescription. The decree also imposes fixed customs duties of 30% for EU and 60% for non‑EU shipments for certain products and adds a 20% Special Consumption Tax where applicable.
It takes effect from 6 February 2026, 30 days after the decree’s publication.
Simplified customs declarations are no longer allowed; all such shipments must use regular customs declaration procedures.
Yes, medicines and food supplements valued up to €1500 and not of commercial quantity, shipped under a medical prescription, can still be imported by postal administration or authorized operators by paying a fixed customs duty of 30% for EU shipments and 60% for non‑EU shipments.
An additional 20% Special Consumption Tax will apply to those products.
Get VAT and indirect tax news delivered to your inbox twice a week.
No spam. Unsubscribe anytime.
EY Global Tax News · 1 day ago
Turkiye’s Presidential Decree No. 10813, published 7 January 2026, abolishes simplified customs declarations for B2C e‑commerce shipments valued at €30 or less, effective 6 February 2026. All such imports must now use regular customs procedures, and products up to €1500 that are not of commercial quantity require full duty declaration and necessary permits. Medicines and food supplements under prescription up to €1500 remain exempt from the €30 limit but are subject to fixed duty rates and potential special consumption tax.
VATCalc · 8 days ago
Turkey’s Revenue Administration proposes a phased reduction of the Digital Services Tax (DST) from 7.5% to 5% in January 2026 and further to 2.5% in January 2027. The DST applies to digital service providers exceeding a global revenue threshold of EUR 750 million or local revenue of TRY 20 million, with strict monthly reporting and no deductions allowed. Exemptions require an independent auditor report and are subject to strict thresholds.
Global VAT Compliance · about 5 hours ago
The Romanian National Agency for Fiscal Administration (ANAF) has set key filing dates for January 2026, covering VAT registrations, returns, social contributions, withholding tax, and One‑Stop‑Shop (OSS) submissions. The deadlines vary by taxpayer type and transaction profile, with specific dates for quarterly VAT taxpayers, registration changes, and December 2025 related filings.
OpenEnvoy · about 7 hours ago
Ukraine requires all VAT‑registered businesses to issue electronic invoices in XML format and submit them to the Unified Register of Tax Invoices before sending them to recipients. Public sector suppliers must use e‑invoicing for all transactions, with digital signatures mandatory and invoices archived for three years.
Comarch · about 7 hours ago
Ukraine requires electronic invoicing for taxpayers with annual revenue above UAH 1 million, and mandates SAF‑T reporting for SMEs since 1 Jan 2023 and for large enterprises since 1 Jan 2022. The Cabinet adopted a two‑year experimental e‑TTN project on 30 May 2024, which will become mandatory after the trial period, eliminating paper consignment notes.
SuperyachtNews · about 8 hours ago
The article discusses how adopting Article 59 bis of Directive 2006/112/EC would allow Spain to exclude from VAT the portion of charter fees earned in international waters, aligning its rules with France and Italy. Currently Spain applies a flat 21 % VAT to all charter fees regardless of itinerary. The author highlights the feasibility of implementing this measure using satellite geolocation for accurate itinerary certification.