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Selling to EU Customers 2026 — VAT, IOSS & Compliance

If your business is based outside the EU and you sell to EU customers, you are subject to EU VAT rules from your very first sale. There is no minimum turnover threshold, no grace period, and no small-seller exemption for non-EU businesses.

This page gives you the framework. For detailed obligations, pick the guide that matches your situation:

If you sell to both consumers and businesses, read both guides — the processes are completely separate and the rules do not overlap.

The Two Factors That Determine Your Obligations

Section titled “The Two Factors That Determine Your Obligations”

Everything depends on two questions:

  1. Is your buyer a consumer (B2C) or a business (B2B)? — This determines whether you use IOSS or the reverse charge mechanism.
  2. Is the consignment value above or below €150? — For B2C sales of physical goods, this determines whether IOSS applies or you fall back to standard import procedures.

This catches sellers out. The EU has a €10,000 cross-border threshold, but that applies exclusively to EU-based sellers shipping between EU member states. As a non-EU seller, there is no minimum. You must comply with EU VAT rules from your very first EU sale.

SituationSchemeWhat it means
B2C goods under €150, shipped from outside EUIOSSRegister via intermediary, charge destination VAT at checkout, file monthly
B2C digital services (SaaS, ebooks, courses)Non-Union OSSRegister in one EU member state, file quarterly
B2C goods over €150No schemeUse DDP courier or customer pays VAT on delivery
B2B sales (VAT-registered business buyer)Reverse ChargeZero-rate the invoice, buyer self-accounts for VAT

The €3 Customs Duty — From 1 July 2026

Section titled “The €3 Customs Duty — From 1 July 2026”

Until 30 June 2026, goods under €150 entering the EU are exempt from customs duty. From 1 July 2026, that exemption ends.

Every item shipped to the EU in a consignment under €150 will be subject to a fixed €3 customs duty per item. This applies even if you are IOSS-registered. The duty is per item, not per parcel — a parcel with three items attracts €9.

Your options:

  • Absorb it — protect your prices, accept the margin impact
  • Pass it on — add it as a customs fee at checkout
  • Raise prices — adjust EU pricing to cover it

For items priced under €10–15, €3 per item is a material cost. This will reshape the economics of selling low-value goods to the EU from outside.

A Union-wide customs handling fee (separate from the €3 duty) is also expected from November 2026. Several EU countries have already introduced national fees.

You must charge the destination country’s standard VAT rate on most goods. Current rates for all 27 EU member states:

CountryStandard RateReduced RatesCountry Guide
Austria20%10%, 13%Selling to Austria
Belgium21%6%, 12%Selling to Belgium
Bulgaria20%9%Selling to Bulgaria
Croatia25%5%, 13%Selling to Croatia
Cyprus19%5%, 9%Selling to Cyprus
Czech Republic21%12%Selling to Czech Republic
Denmark25%Selling to Denmark
Estonia24%9%, 13%Selling to Estonia
Finland25.5%10%, 14%Selling to Finland
France20%5.5%, 10%, 2.1%Selling to France
Germany19%7%Selling to Germany
Greece24%6%, 13%Selling to Greece
Hungary27%5%, 18%Selling to Hungary
Ireland23%0%, 9%, 13.5%Selling to Ireland
Italy22%4%, 5%, 10%Selling to Italy
Latvia21%5%, 12%Selling to Latvia
Lithuania21%5%, 12%Selling to Lithuania
Luxembourg17%3%, 8%, 14%Selling to Luxembourg
Malta18%5%, 7%Selling to Malta
Netherlands21%9%Selling to Netherlands
Poland23%5%, 8%Selling to Poland
Portugal23%6%, 13%Selling to Portugal
Romania19%5%, 9%Selling to Romania
Slovakia23%5%, 10%Selling to Slovakia
Slovenia22%5%, 9.5%Selling to Slovenia
Spain21%4%, 10%Selling to Spain
Sweden25%6%, 12%Selling to Sweden

These are standard rates for general goods. Many EU countries apply reduced rates to specific product categories — books, food, medical supplies. The categories and rates differ by country. Check individual country guides for product-specific rates.

Rates last verified: May 2026. Always verify against the European Commission’s rate database before filing.

The minimum setup for a non-EU seller regularly shipping B2C goods to the EU:

  1. IOSS registration via an EU intermediary — budget €10–300/month depending on volume (intermediary comparison)
  2. Store configured for destination-country VAT — correct rates at checkout per country
  3. IOSS-aware shipping carrier — must transmit the IOSS number electronically to EU customs
  4. Monthly IOSS returns — filed by your intermediary
  5. B2B reverse charge process — VIES validation and compliant invoicing for business customers (B2B guide)
  6. Budget for the €3 customs duty from July 2026

The framework above applies to any seller based outside the EU. Some countries have additional wrinkles:

  • United Kingdom — Post-Brexit, sellers based in Great Britain cannot register for IOSS directly and must use an EU-established intermediary. Northern Ireland has different rules under the Windsor Framework. See the UK seller’s guide to selling to the EU.
  • United States — guide coming soon
  • Australia — guide coming soon