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The EU just dropped its implementation guidance for the July 1 customs change — and we're now less than 30 days out. Same kind of fire drill the U.S. ran last year on qualified party, just with more pages to read and more puzzles to solve.
In this episode of the Decoding Cross-Border Ecommerce podcast, Clint Reid, Founder and CEO of Zonos, and Aaron Bezzant, Zonos' Head of Global Trade Strategy, dig into the freshly published 32-page guidance and what it actually means for shippers, postal operators, marketplaces, and consolidators preparing for July 1, 2026.
They unpack the H7 vs. H1 vs. H6 declaration types and how the €3-per-line-item fee really works (hint: it's not per parcel — it's per HS subheading, and consolidation matters), the surprise gotcha that you can't use IOSS if you want preferential trade agreement treatment, why the EU explicitly does not want carriers collecting on delivery from consumers, the postal carve-out for UPU shipments that lets origin posts designate an EU declarant, and the express-carrier scramble to collect powers of attorney from every shipper.
The conversation also covers what's coming November 1 (product identifiers: manufacturer number, merchant number, and the optional standardized GTIN/EAN/UPC), the broader trend — the U.S. shifting from qualified party to broker-enabled clearance later this summer — and how Zonos is positioned to help, with our new Netherlands office, our U.S. broker license, and the postal infrastructure already moving the majority of postal volume into the U.S.
🎧 Tune in for a clear-eyed read of the new guidance, the trade-offs hiding inside the H7 vs. H1 decision, and what to do in the 28 days before July 1.
Chapters
[00:00:00] EU implementation guidance just dropped — 28 days out
[00:00:32] Déjà vu from the U.S. qualified party 30-day fire drill
[00:01:00] Disruption scale: the U.S. was a 10, the EU is a 7
[00:01:40] What the 32-page guidance confirms (and what surprised us)
[00:02:24] When does a joke become a dad joke?
[00:02:54] Duty-free is dead — except for the €45 gift exemption
[00:03:38] The €3 duty: per line item, not per parcel
[00:04:12] H1, H7, and H6 — the EU's clearance types
[00:04:30] H1: 10-digit HS, country of origin, full data
[00:05:20] H7: simplified, 6-digit HS, no country of origin
[00:05:58] Why H7 consolidation matters — the anorak example
[00:06:30] H7 trade-offs you shouldn't ignore
[00:07:11] Why €3 and not ad valorem (yet)
[00:07:30] The parallel to the U.S. QP technical limitations
[00:08:44] 2028: standard duty calc and the EU Data Hub
[00:09:21] Can you skip IOSS to skip the €3? No.
[00:09:32] Preferential trade agreements: yes, but…
[00:09:50] To get FTAs you have to move to H1 — and lose IOSS
[00:10:30] Lose IOSS, lose bulk clearance in the Netherlands
[00:11:30] How the decision tree forces logistics choices
[00:11:38] Consolidators vs. integrators on FTAs
[00:12:20] Postal and FTAs: same rules, different practicalities
[00:12:50] The mixed-shipment math — when FTAs are (and aren't) worth it
[00:14:54] Returns: non-refundable, with no real exception
[00:15:38] How merchants should think about H7 vs. H1
[00:16:34] Express carriers chasing powers of attorney from shippers
[00:18:01] DHL/FedEx/UPS billing DDP — and the marketplace concern
[00:18:34] The postal carve-out for UPU shipments
[00:19:09] Origin posts can designate an EU indirect representative
[00:19:48] What "declarant" actually means — and the liability cascade
[00:21:02] Australia Post example: one EU declarant for all volume
[00:21:30] No surprise collection on delivery — the EU said so
[00:22:01] Duty is for businesses, not a tax on consumers
[00:23:31] Could July 1 get delayed?
[00:24:09] The smaller-country knock-on effect
[00:24:27] How Zonos is helping — prepay app, postal volume into the U.S.
[00:24:53] Recent go-lives: Colombia, Togo
[00:26:11] Why Zonos' new Netherlands office matters
[00:26:20] Acting as the declarant in the EU
[00:27:36] Commercial carrier rails vs. postal: what's still being built
[00:28:36] Don't forget: November 1, product identifiers kick in
[00:29:21] Manufacturer, merchant, and standardized identifiers
[00:30:33] Why the standardized identifier (GTIN/EAN/UPC) is optional
[00:31:32] The next five months: EU + U.S. + November 1
[00:32:24] The two-line summary: compliance is ratcheting up — and they want their money
By ZonosThe EU just dropped its implementation guidance for the July 1 customs change — and we're now less than 30 days out. Same kind of fire drill the U.S. ran last year on qualified party, just with more pages to read and more puzzles to solve.
In this episode of the Decoding Cross-Border Ecommerce podcast, Clint Reid, Founder and CEO of Zonos, and Aaron Bezzant, Zonos' Head of Global Trade Strategy, dig into the freshly published 32-page guidance and what it actually means for shippers, postal operators, marketplaces, and consolidators preparing for July 1, 2026.
They unpack the H7 vs. H1 vs. H6 declaration types and how the €3-per-line-item fee really works (hint: it's not per parcel — it's per HS subheading, and consolidation matters), the surprise gotcha that you can't use IOSS if you want preferential trade agreement treatment, why the EU explicitly does not want carriers collecting on delivery from consumers, the postal carve-out for UPU shipments that lets origin posts designate an EU declarant, and the express-carrier scramble to collect powers of attorney from every shipper.
The conversation also covers what's coming November 1 (product identifiers: manufacturer number, merchant number, and the optional standardized GTIN/EAN/UPC), the broader trend — the U.S. shifting from qualified party to broker-enabled clearance later this summer — and how Zonos is positioned to help, with our new Netherlands office, our U.S. broker license, and the postal infrastructure already moving the majority of postal volume into the U.S.
🎧 Tune in for a clear-eyed read of the new guidance, the trade-offs hiding inside the H7 vs. H1 decision, and what to do in the 28 days before July 1.
Chapters
[00:00:00] EU implementation guidance just dropped — 28 days out
[00:00:32] Déjà vu from the U.S. qualified party 30-day fire drill
[00:01:00] Disruption scale: the U.S. was a 10, the EU is a 7
[00:01:40] What the 32-page guidance confirms (and what surprised us)
[00:02:24] When does a joke become a dad joke?
[00:02:54] Duty-free is dead — except for the €45 gift exemption
[00:03:38] The €3 duty: per line item, not per parcel
[00:04:12] H1, H7, and H6 — the EU's clearance types
[00:04:30] H1: 10-digit HS, country of origin, full data
[00:05:20] H7: simplified, 6-digit HS, no country of origin
[00:05:58] Why H7 consolidation matters — the anorak example
[00:06:30] H7 trade-offs you shouldn't ignore
[00:07:11] Why €3 and not ad valorem (yet)
[00:07:30] The parallel to the U.S. QP technical limitations
[00:08:44] 2028: standard duty calc and the EU Data Hub
[00:09:21] Can you skip IOSS to skip the €3? No.
[00:09:32] Preferential trade agreements: yes, but…
[00:09:50] To get FTAs you have to move to H1 — and lose IOSS
[00:10:30] Lose IOSS, lose bulk clearance in the Netherlands
[00:11:30] How the decision tree forces logistics choices
[00:11:38] Consolidators vs. integrators on FTAs
[00:12:20] Postal and FTAs: same rules, different practicalities
[00:12:50] The mixed-shipment math — when FTAs are (and aren't) worth it
[00:14:54] Returns: non-refundable, with no real exception
[00:15:38] How merchants should think about H7 vs. H1
[00:16:34] Express carriers chasing powers of attorney from shippers
[00:18:01] DHL/FedEx/UPS billing DDP — and the marketplace concern
[00:18:34] The postal carve-out for UPU shipments
[00:19:09] Origin posts can designate an EU indirect representative
[00:19:48] What "declarant" actually means — and the liability cascade
[00:21:02] Australia Post example: one EU declarant for all volume
[00:21:30] No surprise collection on delivery — the EU said so
[00:22:01] Duty is for businesses, not a tax on consumers
[00:23:31] Could July 1 get delayed?
[00:24:09] The smaller-country knock-on effect
[00:24:27] How Zonos is helping — prepay app, postal volume into the U.S.
[00:24:53] Recent go-lives: Colombia, Togo
[00:26:11] Why Zonos' new Netherlands office matters
[00:26:20] Acting as the declarant in the EU
[00:27:36] Commercial carrier rails vs. postal: what's still being built
[00:28:36] Don't forget: November 1, product identifiers kick in
[00:29:21] Manufacturer, merchant, and standardized identifiers
[00:30:33] Why the standardized identifier (GTIN/EAN/UPC) is optional
[00:31:32] The next five months: EU + U.S. + November 1
[00:32:24] The two-line summary: compliance is ratcheting up — and they want their money