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When can I apply for a short-payment permit?


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Updated by CUSTOMS

A short-payment permit is required to account for the short-fall in duty and/or GST paid for goods that had been imported and declared previously. This may include but not limited to the following scenarios:

  • Overlanded goods in excess of the quantity stated in the bill of lading or Air Waybill; or
  • Under-declaration or omission of cost, insurance, freight and all other charges incidental to the sale and delivery of the goods; or
  • Wrong invoice (with a lower value than invoice value) or currency type used in the declaration of payment permit; or
  • Samples, gifts, free-of-charge items provided by overseas supplier not declared in the payment permit.
 

You should obtain the correct short payment permit:

  • In-Payment (GST including duty exemption) permit if only GST is short-paid or
  • In-Payment (Duty) permit if only duty is short-paid or
  • In-Payment (Duty and GST) permit if both duty and GST are short-paid.

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