I'm a Canadian living with my American wife in L.A., and we are getting ready to move to Canada. We're worried about getting our stuff across the border without getting anything confiscated or being forced to pay duty or any bad thing happening to us. Bad things are the worst.
I've been digging around, and I read this on immigration.ca:
1) What constitutes a possession of value? Everything worth $50 or more? $100? And how do we determine the values? The original prices or the resale values?
2) Surely we don't need to describe and assign a value to every book, knick-knack, and pillow we own. Do we?
3) Does it make sense for me, as a Canadian returning to the country after being gone for more than a year, to claim most of our possessions as mine specifically, using the Personal Effects Accounting Document (Form B4) as outlined in the brochure "Moving Back to Canada" rather than through my wife's landing process?
So what are your experiences with bringing your things across the border? Are the border officials uptight about this list? Did you get burned and forced to pay duty on something?
I've been digging around, and I read this on immigration.ca:
This is good advice, but it leaves many unanswered questions.List of goods and possessions - Immigrants should prepare two detailed lists of personal possessions on a plain sheet of paper entitled: Annex "A" Goods in Possession and Annex "B" Goods to Follow. Possessions of value should include serial numbers with the approximate value of each item as well as insurance policies or jeweler's appraisals. This information will be presented to the Customs Officials following the admission process. Items that have been owned, possessed and used, will qualify for importation, duty -free.
1) What constitutes a possession of value? Everything worth $50 or more? $100? And how do we determine the values? The original prices or the resale values?
2) Surely we don't need to describe and assign a value to every book, knick-knack, and pillow we own. Do we?
3) Does it make sense for me, as a Canadian returning to the country after being gone for more than a year, to claim most of our possessions as mine specifically, using the Personal Effects Accounting Document (Form B4) as outlined in the brochure "Moving Back to Canada" rather than through my wife's landing process?
So what are your experiences with bringing your things across the border? Are the border officials uptight about this list? Did you get burned and forced to pay duty on something?