Guide

The EU €3 import duty, explained for dropshippers

On 1 July 2026 the EU ended duty-free treatment for small parcels. Every low-value item shipped from outside the bloc now carries a flat €3 customs duty. It sounds tiny. On cheap products it’s the difference between a profitable test and a loss — and it quietly reshapes which products are worth selling in Europe at all. Here’s the honest version.

What actually changed

For years, parcels under €150 entered the EU without customs duty (VAT still applied). That exemption is gone. In its place, from 1 July 2026 until mid-2028, there’s an interim flat €3 customs duty on low-value goods imported from outside the EU. It’s temporary scaffolding: once the EU’s new customs system is ready around 2028, the flat €3 is replaced by normal product-by-product tariffs — which on some categories are higher than €3.

It’s per item type, not per parcel

This trips people up. The €3 is charged per tariff heading (per distinct product classification) in a shipment, not once per box. Two identical t-shirts are one classification — one €3 charge. One t-shirt plus one phone case is two classifications — €6. For typical single-product dropshipping orders this just means a flat +€3 per order. But it has a useful consequence: a multipack of the same item spreads that single €3 across several units, so bundles survive the duty far better than singles.

VAT stacks on top — and on the duty itself

The €3 isn’t the whole story. VAT is calculated on the product value plus the duty, so a €3 duty also nudges the VAT up. The practical math on a low-value item is “supplier cost + shipping + €3 + VAT on all of it” — which is exactly the calculation our EU landed-cost calculator does for you. For most B2C orders the VAT is collected from the customer at checkout via IOSS or is reclaimable, so your real cost basis is usually the ex-VAT figure — but the duty is a hard cost either way.

The part that matters most: it’s regressive

€3 on a €4 trinket you sell for €12 is fatal. €3 on a €25 product you sell for €60 is noise. So the whole low-price, low-margin, Temu-clone end of dropshipping stops working in the EU, and the surviving model is higher-priced, higher-margin, more branded products. A “winning product” for the EU in 2026 is structurally different from a 2024 one. That’s why every product in SpotPeaks now carries a duty-resilience read — how much of the sell price the €3 (plus its VAT) eats — so you can avoid building a store on something the duty has already killed.

Why EU stock is the clean escape

The duty applies to goods crossing into the EU from outside. A product already sitting in an EU warehouse ships inside the bloc, so it’s exempt from the €3 entirely — and it reaches the customer in days instead of weeks, which cuts refunds too. EU stock usually costs a little more per unit, but once you add the duty and the refund risk of three-week shipping, it’s frequently the better economics. SpotPeaks flags which products have an EU-stock source so you can skip the duty on purpose.

It’s not uniform across the EU

On top of the EU-wide €3, several countries have added their own per-parcel or per-line fees — France has a small-parcels tax assessed per item line, Italy a per-parcel administrative charge, Romania a logistics fee — and a separate EU-wide handling fee of around €2 per line is expected later in 2026. So a product that pencils out shipping to Germany can be underwater shipping to France. The landscape is fragmented and still moving; treat any single number as a planning estimate, not a final figure.

What to actually do

  • Price higher. Sub-€15 sell prices are mostly dead in the EU now; aim for products that support a €40–70 price with real perceived value.
  • Prefer EU stock for anything you’re scaling — it skips the duty and ships fast.
  • Lean into multipacks where it makes sense; one €3 across three units barely registers.
  • Avoid 2028-exposed categories (apparel, footwear, textiles) for a store you want to last — they get worse when flat €3 becomes normal tariffs.
  • Show the full cost at checkout (DDP), so customers never get a surprise duty bill at the door — that’s what causes refused parcels and chargebacks.

This is a sourcing-decision explainer, not tax or compliance advice. Exact duty, VAT, IOSS and national-fee treatment depend on the product, value and destination — confirm specifics for your situation with a tax advisor.

See which products still make money after the duty

SpotPeaks flags duty-resilient products and EU-stock sources, and does the landed-cost math for you.

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Related: EU landed-cost calculator · how to find winning products