07-30-2025 03:19 PM - edited 07-30-2025 03:33 PM
07-30-2025 08:09 PM
Who is "I" in that document?
Does that person have the right or the power to change trade treaties?
07-30-2025 08:12 PM
That 96% statement is pure hogwash. Central & South America are out, as is Africa, Eastern Europe, China & India. What does that leave you, 20% maybe. The USA is huge market of actual buyers that is being eliminated. It can't be replaced.
07-30-2025 08:39 PM - edited 07-30-2025 08:39 PM
eBay badly needs a delivery duty paid global shipping program for Canadian sellers, soon. It could be a competitive advantage that brings small business from other platforms on to eBay.
This has come a lot sooner than expected for most, but they are going to need to come up with a way to heavily market "delivery duties paid" with each shipment.
Even if you use a delivery duties paid service, an issue that you will encounter is successfully marketing to US buyers that they won't get hit with charges. Unless eBay implements delivery duties paid across the board and heavily pushes it so that each user knows duties won't be charged after checkout, buyers will assume that every purchase from a Canadian seller will result in charges on delivery.
This is going to be brutal for everybody. Especially if the Canada Post union votes no and there is a lockout on top of this. I have a fairly strong segment of my business that is purely aimed at Canadian buyers but relies on lettermail. The de minimis and a lockout at the same time takes away a huge majority of my options to produce sales.
07-30-2025 08:39 PM
07-30-2025 09:05 PM - edited 07-30-2025 09:06 PM
The American perspective (as on eBay.com):
De Minimis Ending For All Countries August 29, 202... - The eBay Community
07-30-2025 10:11 PM
Type 11 entry is still avaiable for orders under $2500. It is informal, I believe. The transportation company would just be required to collect. I think it might be possible to consolidate orders to US warehouse and unpack once over border.
07-30-2025 10:47 PM
@phc64 wrote:
Hopefully eBay.ca will soon make it possible for sellers to offer to US buyers only our made-in-USA items.
That option has always been available, sellers are the ones that decide where they are willing to sell, if you want to block US buyers for specific items it's simple emough.

07-30-2025 11:41 PM
07-30-2025 11:45 PM
I feel bad for Chit Chats and Stallion as most of their business was shipping to the US and internationally. I don't know if they will survive for the next few years.
07-30-2025 11:49 PM
07-30-2025 11:53 PM
Life goes on, and Buyers will adapt, as will resilient Sellers...
If you have something a "collector" wants, they will pay their "duties" and "fees" if it has any value...
For the rest, it's maybe time to find "new" markets or "new "hobbies. "
07-31-2025 12:15 AM
I appreciate your optimism, but I don't think this is a fair outlook of the situation for anybody other than a collector or hobby type seller who is going to go from a few sales a month to a few less sales a month.
This is going to kill most Canadian online retail businesses that are anything except complete cash cows.
Everybody knew this was coming, but it doesn't help for it to come out of nowhere. Very bad timing with the Canada Post union pushing for a no to the offer, and this happening after most of the votes were already in. If the offer is rejected, and Canada Post projects that they will lose most remaining US bound parcels, I can't see how they keep going.
Of course, there will be businesses less affected by this, but for most the timing and suddenness of this combined with the outcome of the Canada Post vote could be absolutely catastrophic.
07-31-2025 12:42 AM - edited 07-31-2025 12:47 AM
@flipistics wrote:
@prescilaschina wrote:
With a stroke of a pen the orange dictator ruins small business international tradeThere's still 80% of the 1st world population out there for us to trade with (and 96% of the total world population). US buyers will still pay for hard to find items. It will certainly hurt Canadian small businesses more than those from other countries, but it's also an opportunity to expand trade worldwide for those who currently don't.
5 years ago I would ship 5 orders per month that were not Canada or USA. Now lucky to send 1 or 2 every 3 months. The issue with shipping internationally is the shipping cost. Unless the item is small buyers run away when they see what they consider high shipping. Everything pretty much has to be sent using Intl. Tracked unless you are up to chancing small packet air and the risks included. As for tracked parcel that service is only available to 40 countries. Out of those 40 countries are a selection the buyer can pay for tracked but the service magically gets hidden when you go to create a label. Then you are in a pickle because you have to ship using Snapship at a higher rate... taking a loss.
(Past few years bulk of my international sales have been UK, Scandanavian countries and Australia. Rest of Europe is not worth the hassle if they have the packaging requirements.)
07-31-2025 07:49 AM
07-31-2025 10:16 AM - edited 07-31-2025 10:17 AM
@cottagewoman wrote:
Right now a little word from eBay - just a 'hey we're working on this we've got your back' would go a VERY long way.
You'd think they would say something, as this is certainly going to hurt their bottom line.
But...maybe they are just taking the approach of waiting and seeing how things are shaping up. closer to 8/29.
I think we all know by now that these situations are very volatile, and it can change on a dime, as it's customary with the Orange guy, down south.
07-31-2025 11:11 AM - edited 07-31-2025 11:13 AM
@reallynicestamps wrote:Who is "I" in that document?
Does that person have the right or the power to change trade treaties?
You know who the “I” is.
This is an executive order. The “I” is claiming there’s a national emergency and that applying tariffs will take care of that emergency. Since this is couched as a national emergency, the constitution has granted the “I” the power to modify treaties by executive order.
07-31-2025 11:23 AM
07-31-2025 11:43 AM - edited 07-31-2025 11:47 AM
That won't work.
The problem is by "upping" the prices for the American customers to include the tariffs, you Up the prices for the canadian market too. There is no way to fix a price for a specific country on eBay.
I refuse to charge more to my canadian customers because of americans. Canadian customers don't have to pay for this.
Unless eBay allows us to charge different prices to different countries, I will not pay their tariffs from my pocket.
The only way would be by using the Handling fees, but then, it's handling fees for all international (with the current Business policies configuration). We cannot set a percent, only a fixed amount. We cannot set handling fees specific to countries. We then penalize everyone in the world (except canadians) because of a single country... Which I also refuse to do.
07-31-2025 12:24 PM - edited 07-31-2025 12:27 PM
What are you referring to when you say upping the price for Canadian customers? I am open to the idea that I may have mis-spoke or communicated an idea poorly, but I re-read my post and I didn't get that anywhere.
I'm suggesting eBay create a GSP that Canadian sellers can access to so that US (and international customers) can't confidently shop from Canadian sellers and know that the cost they pay at checkout (item, shipping, taxes, tariffs, fees, etc) is the total cost and there will not be any surprise charges at the door. This would be independent of domestic sales and at least directly would not change what you charge a Canadian buyer.
If you're referring to my comment about sellers using delivery duty paid servies independent of a GSP, and how I don't think that is a proper solution because of the difficulty marketing it - that wasn't me advocating or not advocating for sellers going that route. It also wasn't me discussing how practical it would be to implement different price points for different countries.
The point was that delivery duties paid would be difficult for any one individual seller to market on this platform, so even if they offer that service, they are unlikely to attract US buyers on eBay unless eBay creates a GSP that standardizes the process for all sellers and enables them to market to US (and international) buyers that they will not be charged anything except for the total at checkout. The total at checkout being subtotal, shipping, taxes, fees, tariffs, etc.
The point of bringing that up was to enforce that eBay needs a central GSP that they can market to US and international buyers as being a guarantee that if they buy from a Canadian seller who participates, they will not be charged extra at the door (because they will pay it at checkout).
The point wasn't to say that US (or international) buyers won't pay tariffs because Canadian sellers will eat the costs for them and pass those on to Canadian buyers. The point was with a GSP US buyers would know that whatever they see at checkout is the complete cost of the item and they don't have to worry about additional charges.
The US market isn't coming back, it's done. But a GSP could allow sellers to recover the smaller portion of the market willing to pay a higher price for their same items, and it could also simplify international trade and open the seller to shipping to millions of other buyers. That would help offset some of the loss of the US market.
07-31-2025 12:28 PM
@ilikehockeyjerseys eBay sent around a survey a few months ago and seemed to hint that they were thinking about an international shipping program for Canada (as well as various other things). Hopefully they've already started something on that front. With the Trump changes, I think it's now gone from a possible wish list item to a necessity.