10-23-2025 11:15 AM
10-23-2025 09:05 PM
@rdemaree wrote:
I think if you live in a log cabin in the middle of the woods away from 3rd party shippers like chitchats and all you sell are rare artifacts that nobody can find anywhere else the EIS works great for you because you have no other shipping options and buyers have no choice but to pay whatever you ask for your impossible to find items.
I basically do live in a cabin in the middle of the woods and I still refuse to use eIS. It's a scam for buyers and sellers. I still have my fingers crossed we see a return of discounted Canada Post labels to the US....hopefully it's not just wishful thinking...
10-24-2025 12:36 AM
Yeah like I said I could theorertically find some limited use for the program but only if I could implement it in my shop the way that benefits my shop the most.
IE:
-I can pick and choose which listings use it.
-It isn't the default shipping option for my listings.
10-24-2025 10:27 AM
10-24-2025 12:03 PM
You don't need to be in the middle of the woods. It was only a few years ago that Ottawa got Chitchats and they have minimized the drop off spots so much that is not that handy for a lot of people.
10-24-2025 10:15 PM - edited 10-24-2025 10:17 PM
@rdemaree wrote:
I was recently enrolled in the EIS program and found its import fees to be inaccurate. I had one listing which was made in the Netherlands and it had more than 100% import fee into the USA when the rate is only 15%. There’s no way brokerage on that would be that high.
Could you be a bit more specific on the numbers for this, please? What were the actual dollar amounts that we're talking about here?
And is this an item that would be subject to duty as well as tariffs?
12-09-2025 01:35 PM
I just want to get into the EIS program as promised in October. It is now December and I have lost HUGE amount of $$$ as 98% of my customers reside in the USA.
12-09-2025 02:12 PM
Tariff Duty and sales taxes could add up to 100% of purchase price.
As I understand it eIS is a Seller Protection program.
If the buyer refuses to pay the import fees, FedEx and UPS will deliver the item and charge those fees to the seller.
And Canada Post/Zonos charges the seller a fee of $1.99 + 10% of the import fees.
If the buyer refuses to pay the import fees, eIS will not let you ship at all. The transaction is void.
12-09-2025 05:49 PM
@blackvelvetvintage wrote:I just want to get into the EIS program as promised in October. It is now December and I have lost HUGE amount of $$$ as 98% of my customers reside in the USA.
Send them an email at [email protected] and see if that gets it going for you. Keep in mind that it isn't a magic switch that will suddenly cause all your USA sales to return. Since being accepted to the program, roughly 25% of my sales have been through eIS and more have gone overseas than to the USA. Prior to the Trump madness, roughly 50% of my sales were to the USA.
12-09-2025 06:55 PM - edited 12-09-2025 06:57 PM
@flipistics wrote:
Keep in mind that it isn't a magic switch that will suddenly cause all your USA sales to return.
Agree with that. In fact, the impression I’ve been getting from both the US and Canadian versions of the program is that eIS may not work that well with sales of antique or vintage items. It may not be the saviour @blackvelvetvintage is seeking.
12-09-2025 11:39 PM
Since being accepted to the program, roughly 25% of my sales have been through eIS and more have gone overseas than to the USA. Prior to the Trump madness, roughly 50% of my sales were to the USA.
I did a quick count.
Since November I had 17 sales to the USA, not all on eBay, out of 64.
Two of the US sales were cancelled due to Trump Tariffs.
The number of sales and the value of sales has not varied particularly, especially considering that Q4 is my off-season.
So apparently US sales are off, but domestic and overseas sales are making up for them.
Fingers and toes crossed for Q1/2026.