Refunds and drawbacks
Under specific circumstances Customs may approve a refund or a drawback of duty and/or GST paid on goods imported into New Zealand, or on excisable goods manufactured in New Zealand.
A refund is when Customs repay some or all of the duty and/or GST back to the payee and can be applied for when:
- Duty and/or GST is paid in error
- There is a change between provisional Customs values paid and the final value
- There is a duty concession available for the goods you have imported which hasn’t been applied
- Something has happened to your imported goods before they have been released from Customs control which means you cannot use the goods for their intended purpose.
- Conditions apply: businesses should contact your Customs Broker or see excise drawbacks and refunds for application to excisable goods
A drawback is a refund of import duty or GST that was paid on items you have imported and are now exporting, or have exported.
You can apply for a drawback of duty and/or GST for:
- items you’ve imported, and are now exporting
- excisable items you’re exporting
- see information specific to excise drawbacks and refunds
- imported parts and materials used in, worked into or attached to items that are made in New Zealand and then exported
- imported materials – except fuel or plant equipment – used to make items in New Zealand that are then exported.
The minimum refund or drawback for commercial clients is $50.
Who can apply for a refund or drawback
Businesses
You can’t claim GST drawbacks if you’re GST-registered and you’re using the items for work.
Applying for a Refund
If you’re a business who has paid duty on imported goods and you believe one of the refund provisions applies to you, contact your Customs Broker to discuss how to apply for a refund.
Applying for a drawback
If you’re a business that regularly exports products that you have previously imported you may be eligible for a drawback of import duties paid on the items at the time they were imported.
To apply electronically for a drawback, your Customs Broker must:
- lodge the standard export entry
- specify the type as “drawback”
- include the item’s Customs import entry number
- include how much duty you paid and how much you are claiming and why
- provide all the relevant documents.
Timeframes
You should lodge your standard drawback entry 48 hours before the goods are shipped for export as sometimes Customs may need to inspect your goods to verify that the goods match the imported goods.
In some cases late and periodic drawback claims can be made independently of an export entry. The time limit for a late drawback entry is four years from the time of exportation.
Items you can’t claim drawbacks on
- Any fuel and plant equipment you use to make items which you’re going to export
- Waste material made by item(s) you imported to make other item(s) that you’re not exporting.
Valuation of replacement goods supplied free of charge
“Replacement goods” could be supplied to an importer free of charge if the goods originally supplied were:--
- faulty, and are under a guarantee or warranty; or
- incorrect; or
- damaged in transit.
It is important to note that for Customs valuation purposes, the replacement goods must be treated as a separate matter from the originally imported goods.
Notwithstanding that the replacement goods are provided “free of charge” to the importer, the replacement goods must be treated as a new import, and the importer will have to pay tariff duty (if any) and GST on entry of the goods.
As the goods have no transaction value, the Customs value of the goods must be determined by proceeding sequentially from Method 2 to Method 6 (transaction value of identical or similar goods, deductive value, computed value, residual basis of valuation), to the first such Method that the Customs value can be determined.
Depending on the situation, the Customs value of the replacement goods could be determined on the basis of the Customs value declared for the originally imported goods (applying the identical goods value method), or by reference to the latest list price of the goods (representing a sale for export to New Zealand).
If the importer can show that the originally (incorrectly or damaged) imported goods have been reexported overseas or have been destroyed under Customs supervision, the importer can claim a refund of tariff duty on those goods, but the refund application is considered as a separate matter.