How do you declare country of origin for customs - USA to Canada - Belgium product

Hi, I am new to ebay and I am interested in purchasing Magic the Gathering cards from 1993 to 1995 era from various USA sellers.

 

All the cards printed from this era were made in Belgium by the card company Carta Mundi and were later imported into various countries for sale as booster packs and boxes.

 

Although the physical 15 card packs and 36 pack booster boxes state "Product Made in Belgium", the individual cards themselves do not. The only identification on the cards are the Artist, Set Expansion Symbol and Year.

 

I want to purchase these individual cards from USA sellers  but the fear I have is that they will be tariffed 25% by the CBSA and then taxed 13% sales tax as I reside in the province of Ontario.

 

I have never sent a package to anyone before.

 

How does one send a package  from the USA  to Canada but lets the CBSA (Canada Border Service Agency) know the item is a Belgium product so I am only just taxed the 13%.

 

I just like to understand the process from a sellers perspective once they recieve an order on ebay and item is payed for how do you get it now into the sellers hand.

 

for example I got an order and its fully paid. Do you go to the post office, print a label, etc.

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marnotom!
Community Member

Sorry, I thought I had answered some of these questions that you posted the other day, but I guess I didn't do that great a job.

 

On eBay, you pay for the item and you pay a separate charge to have it shipped to you.  For an item that's purchased from outside of Canada, you may or may not have to pay customs charges, and if you do, you may be paying them at the time you pay for the item and shipping, or you may have to pay them later.

 

An item being handled by "eBay International Shipping" (eIS)  such as the one you seem to be referring to, will be mailed or couriered by the seller by whatever trackable mailing or shipping method they prefer to a processing hub just outside of Chicago, Illinois where it will go through pre-customs processing and prepared for shipment to its final destination.

 

The information that eIS requires for customs should be already supplied by the seller from the information the seller provided in the listing.  The item's country of origin or manufacture should be part of this and would be in the section of the listing "Item Specifics".  eIS will use that information on the customs documentation that will go with the item.  However, with tariffs now in the picture, it is not clear if that will be enough to satisfy Canada Border Services if the item itself does not have this information.