Informações sobre alfândega
Here is everything you need to know to ensure your entry into South Africa is hassle-free.
Customs Duty
When you enter South Africa, you must declare any goods that attract duties to a customs official and pay the relevant duties and VAT. Customs duty is levied on imported goods based on the value of the goods.
Duty-free Goods
Visitors to South Africa: Personal effects, sporting and recreational equipment, new or used, imported either as accompanied or unaccompanied baggage, for your own use during your stay.
South African Residents: Personal effects and sporting and recreational equipment, new or used, exported for your own use while abroad and subsequently re-imported either as accompanied or unaccompanied baggage.
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The following goods may be included in travellers’ baggage by residents or non-residents, up to the following limits:
- Wine: 2 litres per person
- Spirits and other alcoholic beverages: 1 litre per person
- Cigarettes: 200 cigarettes per person
- Cigars: 20 cigars per person
- Cigarette or pipe tobacco: 250g per person
- Perfume: 50ml per person
- Eau de toilette: 250ml per person
- Other new or used goods to a total value not exceeding R5 000 per person, excluding consumables.
- Allowances may not be pooled or transferred to other persons
Visitors may be required to pay a cash deposit to cover duties and tax on expensive articles such as video cameras. The deposit on the goods is refunded on departure from South Africa.
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- Children under 18 may claim duty free allowances on goods used by them
- They may not claim allowances for tobacco and alcohol
- Parents may make a customs declaration on behalf of their children
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- Select either the red or green channel upon arrival in South Africa.
- By selecting the red channel, a traveller indicates that he or she has goods to declare.
- The customs officer must ascertain the value of the goods declared and the duties payable according to duty free allowances.
- By selecting the green channel, a traveller indicates that he or she has no goods to declare.
- Random searches of travellers and baggage in the green channel are conducted.
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Vegetables, groundnuts, firewood, honey, used pneumatic tyres, raw animal wool and hair, electric blankets, coins, video recorders and reproducers, revolvers and pistols.
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(unless special permits are obtained from the relevant government department)
Human bodies or body parts; meat and edible portions from cattle, sheep, goats or pigs; meat and edible animal offal salted, in brine, dried or smoked; edible flours and meals of meat or offal; cane or beet sugar and chemicals; pure sucrose in solid form; raw hides and skins of bovine or equine animals (fresh or salted, dried, limed, pickled or otherwise preserved, but not tanned, parchment-dressed or further prepared), whether or not dehaired or split; bank notes, securities or foreign currency.
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The exportation and importation of a wide variety of goods is either totally prohibited or is subject to inspection by other authorities and/or production of special permits and licences, issued by certain authorities only. A comprehensive list of prohibited and restricted imports and exports is available on the South African Revenue Service website (www.sars.gov.za)