Chasing Phyto Certificate UK

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Jkwinston
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Chasing Phyto Certificate UK

#1

Post by Jkwinston »

I have sent the last two weeks trying to find an easy way to get the actual certificate, but there are many difficulties. I have just come across the fees which have left me puzzled. Jkw

Fees
If you’re moving plants from England, Wales or Scotland to Northern Ireland, you do not need to pay for them to be inspected and certified. Your certifier invoices the government for these costs as part of the movement assistance scheme (MAS).

The following fees apply to exports from England and Wales to the EU and non-EU countries. For fees in Scotland please contact the Scottish government.

Inspection costs
For each inspection you’ll be charged a minimum of 30 minutes, which costs £127.60.

After that you’ll pay £63.80 for every 15 minutes of an inspector’s time spent on:

carrying out the inspection on site
associated on site activities
You’ll have to pay in full for every 15 minutes, even if it takes less time. For example, if it takes the inspector 42 minutes to do everything you will pay for 45 minutes.

The time it takes for the inspector to travel to and from the site to conduct the inspection is already included in the fees.

Certificate and laboratory costs
A phytosanitary certificate costs £25.52.

If you ask for an amendment to your phytosanitary certificate, you’ll pay £15.76.

You’ll pay £33.56 for each sample examined by a laboratory.

Application costs
If you submit an export certification application in paper form, rather than using the online eDomero system, you’ll pay an extra fee of £15.76.

Reduced fees
To apply for the concessionary rate you must fill in the Application for export services at concessionary rates form (PDF, 518 KB, 1 page) and send it to APHA before you apply for a phytosanitary certificate. The concessionary rate is for the first £1,500 (full price value) of APHA services in a financial year if any of the following apply:

you’re exporting VAT-exempt goods
you’re not registered for VAT and do not need to be registered in that financial year
your certified exports were worth less than £5,000 in the last financial year

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edds
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Re: Chasing Phyto Certificate UK

#2

Post by edds »

If you're doing it commercially, even selling as a hobbyist, then I believe all those charges apply, subject to the discount listed. I have emailed APHAS three times now asking them how I can send gifts of plants to the EU using the email given on their website as the place to contact and they have never got back to me.

If you aren't a big commercial operator then the government simply didn't consider us when setting up all this nonsense. It seems they had no idea that hobbyists bought and sold plants across the EU (and beyond).
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Stan
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Re: Chasing Phyto Certificate UK

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Post by Stan »

The certificate is about $25 and all the rest is $300 and up? Not much incentive.
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Jkwinston
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Re: Chasing Phyto Certificate UK

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Post by Jkwinston »

You are so right Edds, and I have heard it all depends also on their inspection, and they can refuse to offer you one if they are not happy. I can imagine if you are sending a pallet of a hundred plants you can get away with one payment, but as Stan says there is no incentive to follow their rules if you are selling plants individually. Jkw
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Jkwinston
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Re: Chasing Phyto Certificate UK

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Post by Jkwinston »

Stan wrote: Thu Feb 16, 2023 2:50 pm The certificate is about $25 and all the rest is $300 and up? Not much incentive.
I spent last week trying to apply for a Phytosanitary Certificate. I registered and I did the bureaucratic bit, but I was still left guessing. A customer from Poland was hoping to purchase some Pereskia cuttings from me, and was quite willing to pay for the Phyto. i worked out it will cost him £150.00 for the inspection/certificate, plus the cost of the cuttings and of course the postage. I find the price tag quite embarrassing, and I am thinking how to handle it. Jkw

PS. Anyone posted any parcels to EU lately. About a week ago I sent a parcel to France, and luckily it arrived today which means it arrived in a week. That is very good time compared with the troublesome Pandemic period; the only bad news was the customer was asked to pay 11 Euros extra Custom tax to receive it. Is this a Brexit Tax ?
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