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Wednesday, 27 August, 2025

Postal Services to US Halted by 25 Countries Amid Tariff Dispute, Says UN

Express Desk
  27 Aug 2025, 02:26

At least 25 countries have decided to suspend package deliveries to the United States, as concern grows over the impact of President Donald Trump’s looming tariffs, a UN body said on Tuesday.

The Trump administration said late last month that it would abolish a tax exemption on small packages entering the US from August 29.

The move has sparked a flurry of announcements from postal services, including in France, Britain, Germany, Italy, India, Australia and Japan, that most US-bound packages would no longer be accepted.

The United Nations’ Universal Postal Union (UPU) said it had already been advised by 25 member countries that their postal operators “have suspended their outbound postal services to the US, citing uncertainties specifically related to transit services”.

It said the suspensions would remain in place until there was more clarity on how US authorities planned to implement the announced measures.

The UPU did not provide a list of postal services it had heard from.

‘Considerable operational changes’

The organisation, which was established in 1874 and counts 192 member states, warned that the new US measures would “entail considerable operational changes for postal operators around the world”.

From Friday, the UPU said the measures would require postal carriers delivering packages to the US “to collect customs duties from senders in advance”, on behalf of the US Customs and Border Protection agency.

India’s communications ministry said at the weekend that Trump’s executive order issued last month required transport carriers or other “qualified parties” approved by US authorities to collect and remit the tariff duties.

But “several critical processes relating to the designation of ‘qualified parties’ and mechanisms for duty collection and remittance remain undefined,” it said in a statement.

Under the new US measures, individual customers will still be able to send documents and items worth up to $100 as presents to the country without being taxed.

But anything above that value is expected to be hit with the same tariff rates applied to other imports from the sending country.

That means 15 per cent for countries in the European Union and 50pc for India.

And Germany’s postal service DHL warned last week that even exempted items would be subject to extra checks to prevent the service from being used for commercial goods.

‘Sustainable solutions’

The UPU stressed that it was “taking all possible measures to prepare its member countries for the impacts [the new measures] may have on their postal flows”.

UPU chief Masahiko Metoki had sent a letter to US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Monday to convey member countries’ concern regarding the operational disruptions, it said.

Pointing to the short implementation timeline and voicing particular concern over the impact on the delivery of e-commerce items, the union said it was “working with the relevant US authorities to ensure that information on the operational requirements of the measures is communicated effectively to other member countries”.

In parallel, it said it was working with “relevant postal stakeholders” to help find sustainable solutions, including one initiative aimed at developing a system to facilitate duty collection and remittance across its network.

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Postal Services to US Halted by 25 Countries Amid Tariff Dispute, Says UN

Express Desk
  27 Aug 2025, 02:26

At least 25 countries have decided to suspend package deliveries to the United States, as concern grows over the impact of President Donald Trump’s looming tariffs, a UN body said on Tuesday.

The Trump administration said late last month that it would abolish a tax exemption on small packages entering the US from August 29.

The move has sparked a flurry of announcements from postal services, including in France, Britain, Germany, Italy, India, Australia and Japan, that most US-bound packages would no longer be accepted.

The United Nations’ Universal Postal Union (UPU) said it had already been advised by 25 member countries that their postal operators “have suspended their outbound postal services to the US, citing uncertainties specifically related to transit services”.

It said the suspensions would remain in place until there was more clarity on how US authorities planned to implement the announced measures.

The UPU did not provide a list of postal services it had heard from.

‘Considerable operational changes’

The organisation, which was established in 1874 and counts 192 member states, warned that the new US measures would “entail considerable operational changes for postal operators around the world”.

From Friday, the UPU said the measures would require postal carriers delivering packages to the US “to collect customs duties from senders in advance”, on behalf of the US Customs and Border Protection agency.

India’s communications ministry said at the weekend that Trump’s executive order issued last month required transport carriers or other “qualified parties” approved by US authorities to collect and remit the tariff duties.

But “several critical processes relating to the designation of ‘qualified parties’ and mechanisms for duty collection and remittance remain undefined,” it said in a statement.

Under the new US measures, individual customers will still be able to send documents and items worth up to $100 as presents to the country without being taxed.

But anything above that value is expected to be hit with the same tariff rates applied to other imports from the sending country.

That means 15 per cent for countries in the European Union and 50pc for India.

And Germany’s postal service DHL warned last week that even exempted items would be subject to extra checks to prevent the service from being used for commercial goods.

‘Sustainable solutions’

The UPU stressed that it was “taking all possible measures to prepare its member countries for the impacts [the new measures] may have on their postal flows”.

UPU chief Masahiko Metoki had sent a letter to US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Monday to convey member countries’ concern regarding the operational disruptions, it said.

Pointing to the short implementation timeline and voicing particular concern over the impact on the delivery of e-commerce items, the union said it was “working with the relevant US authorities to ensure that information on the operational requirements of the measures is communicated effectively to other member countries”.

In parallel, it said it was working with “relevant postal stakeholders” to help find sustainable solutions, including one initiative aimed at developing a system to facilitate duty collection and remittance across its network.

Comments

Premarital Consensual Sex is ‘Adultery’, Not Rape: Indian Court
Regional Cooperation Needed to Curb Myanmar’s Crimes, Says Dr Khalilur
Dhaka Urges Concrete Steps to Halt Israeli Aggression in Palestine
Gaza Hospital Strike by Israel Kills 15, Including 5 Journalists, Sparks Outcry
Russia offers significant compromises in Ukraine peace bid, says US VP Vance