Sorry, there are many wild guesses about the VAT-system or the conditions for a scopemonth-winner in Germany.
Is there really no one else then me, who had learned it at school?
BTW: I had to deal with customs for years on a daily base.
To the winner in Germany:
You will have to sign a form from Keysight. Reason of this form:
- Assuring that you are a winner in legal kind. (minimum 18 years old, resident in a eligible country and so on).
- Permission for the public use of your name.
- Notes about the responsibility for taxes and duties. Remenber: This form has to fit for all countries!
Therefor there is written: "[...] responsive for local taxes and duties, if any. [...]".
The magic words: "local" and "if any".
- Further: You have to fill a form (W8BEN or so) for the US department of treasury.
Important: They have to know, that you are not a citizen of the US.
All this is needed from KS because legal and taxation laws.
What´s then going on?
- Keysight sends a new unit from malaysia to your chosen distributor. (It must not be KS Germany. It doesn´t really matter which distributor is used.)
- The distributor pays the VAT at the time of the import, BUT he gets the payed VAT back. Official text:
"However, as far as imports are concerned, VAT must be paid at the moment the goods are imported so they are immediately placed on the same footing as equivalent goods produced in the Community. Taxable people registered for VAT will be allowed to deduct this VAT in their next VAT return."
- There are no duties on oscilloscopes, only one exception: CRT-scopes.
- Further possible taxes (depending of the country): lottery tax, income tax. Both is not the case in Germany.
Also: You get your scope for zero/ null/ nothing/ niente! No US-taxes, no malaysian taxes, no german taxes or duties.
What you want more???
You have only to fill the forms and to wait some days. (They build their scopes in malaysia and need some time for the shipping, you know?)
That´s a quite paradox situation: A winner in the US, winning a scope from an US-company, has worse conditions as a winner in the EU. He has to pay income tax.
A complete different case is the winning of Dave´s dumpster found scopes.
If you are a private person, then there is VAT to pay at the import. Depending of the declared value. Usually together with the handling fees from e.g. FED EX.
Example: Dave declares the value of the "used" scope as 1000 US$. And pays 100 US$ for shipping.
He doesn´t send it to a distributor, he send it direct to you. So, you are the importer.
You have to pay the VAT (e.g. 19%) for the value and the shipping.
In this case: (1000 + 100) * 19% = 209 US$ [the equivalent Euros, of course]
Fed Ex sues you with their fees, too: Additional 25 €. That´s it. Done.
Lowering the declared value lowers the taxes, but the value must be reasonable.
Otherwise will the value estimated from the costums...
And: The declared value ist important for the insurance.
Assuming the worst case: The scope will be lost on the way. Sad... But:
The money from the insurance (+ the money, dedicated for the VAT) allows you to buy a scope, allways.
But, that is not relevant for Germany anymore since Dave made his decision to rule Germany out.
(Probably based on the weird behavior of our new german hero: Sebastian W.)
I´m firmly confident: It´s quite fair to penalize a whole country for one guy, for sure...
Lesson learned: In an international forum are some countries more international than others.