Reshippers from US to Canada

Can anyone recommend a reposting service from US to Canada. I seem to be encountering more and more sellers who do not ship to Canada. The items I collect are small and might also be interested in consolidating small packets.


Any experiences? or suggests? I goggled a few but was hoping to get first hand input on getting a US address from anyone with this experience. Thanks
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Reshippers from US to Canada

Sorry I don't know of any such service but, I often just contact the seller through an ASQ, and more than 60% of the time they say "sure, be glad to ship to you" Especially smaller or newbie sellers as many seem not to even realize they are showing US only.
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Reshippers from US to Canada

I've emailed you.
Message 3 of 11
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Reshippers from US to Canada

Sorry I don't know of any such service but, I often just contact the seller through an ASQ, and more than 60% of the time they say "sure, be glad to ship to you" Especially smaller or newbie sellers as many seem not to even realize they are showing US only.



Yes I used to do that worked well but with new changes now you cannot even ask a question!
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Reshippers from US to Canada

Another option (if you are close enough to a border crossing to make it feasible) is to pick up the item yourself; most UPS stores on the US side offer a one-time mailbox service for around $10. You buy, have the package shipped to the UPS store, they email you when it arrives and you pick it up within a couple of weeks for a single handling charge.
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Reshippers from US to Canada

Being in Surrey, BC, I actually rent a PO box at USPS in Blaine, WA, as well as have a shipping receiver for anything that comes via UPS, FedEx, etc. I'm only about 5 minutes from the border, so I just make a trip across each afternoon during the week.

A few clients overseas use a service called Borderlinx (www.borderlinx.com), and it looks like they offer service to Canada as well. There are others, such as Aramex, whom I do not recommend at all (they lose alot of our clients shipments).

I think you'd find that most US border towns have a ton of companies that specialize in receiving items for Canadians.

Good Luck!
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Reshippers from US to Canada

juststickit your neighbour bookstotheborder has occasionally posted about the paper work needed for bringing goods into the USA for shipping.

I have a friend who got caught bringing his stock from his US home to his Canadian home (he is a Canadian citizen and his wife is American, he lives there but since he has a bad heart , he keeps his home and health care here.). He now cannot drive his car across the border and when he wants to move stock he just couriers it to the appropriate home.
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Reshippers from US to Canada

I have a friend who got caught bringing his stock from his US home to his Canadian home (he is a Canadian citizen and his wife is American, he lives there but since he has a bad heart , he keeps his home and health care here.). He now cannot drive his car across the border and when he wants to move stock he just couriers it to the appropriate home.


I bring commercial items over the border all the time. At one time I was rejected back to USA because border guard did not believe the items I was bringing were for personal use.

This episode had no effect on my crossing over at Queenston/Lewiston. If you friend did not try, it may work for him to talk with port supervisor. if that does not help a simplified proceeding (filing cost $50) in federal court can make border agency to review and remove restriction.
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Reshippers from US to Canada

I forgot to mention - I bring commercial items via commercial (trucking) route. The one time I got rejected, the goods were truly personal and I was over-argued with border guard. So from their point of view, I was lying.
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Reshippers from US to Canada

juststickit your neighbour bookstotheborder has occasionally posted about the paper work needed for bringing goods into the USA for shipping.

I have a friend who got caught bringing his stock from his US home to his Canadian home (he is a Canadian citizen and his wife is American, he lives there but since he has a bad heart , he keeps his home and health care here.). He now cannot drive his car across the border and when he wants to move stock he just couriers it to the appropriate home.


The key words there are "Got Caught", implying that they were not declaring the items at the border. Both US and Canadian Customs frown on that fairly harshly, but as dipmicro said, it's doubtful such an issue would cause a long term ban on crossing the border, unless the instance was of a more serious nature.

Bringing goods across the border is a very simple procedure, and I've been doing it for over a decade. It basically comes down to having your documentation in order, and being honest with the customs officers. In Canada, big businesses like to make it sound difficult to import goods claiming high costs, duties, fees, etc. In reality, it is just their way of trying to explain why items in Canada are not priced competitively with the US.

Case in Point. 2 weeks ago I was shopping for a new Plasma TV. In Canada, it was $1999, in the US $1399. I went to a number of dealers (Future Shop, BestBuy, AVU, Visions), and none could come close to the price, with a few even claiming there was a $250 Duty on Big Screens when they are imported into Canada. They also claimed I'd have no warranty, which is also not true. None of them seemed to be aware that as Samsung manufactures their Plasmas in Mexico, they are covered under NAFTA, and there is no duty.

So, I traveled down to the US and bought my Plasma at Costco. I had to pay Washington State Tax of 8.25%, bringing my total to $1514. At the border, I declared the TV, provided the receipt, went to the customs cashier, paid 12% HST of $182.00 , walked back to the car and drove home. In all, the border crossing and import process took less than 10 minutes. Total savings: $570.00. On top of that, Costco extends the warrant to 2 years, and if there is ever an issue, I can deal with it through my closest Costco warehouse here in Canada, including returning the item for a full refund within 90 days.

In discussing this with a fellow eBayer today, I went over the cost saving I get from utilizing my proximity to the US to mitigate costs. Overall, the savings amount to about $1500 per month. Postage alone was a savings of over $800.00 compared to using Canada Post Lettermail. That's serious money to a small business like me.
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Reshippers from US to Canada

The border is a big problem for stamp dealers. Every show that wants to have American dealers must set up a special contract so that the Yankees can bring in their stock, sell, and then bring back their unsold stock.

And when a bit of paper 2cmx2cm can be worth $250,000.oo like Scott Canada #3....

And oh yes, my friend is not too taken with authority. Got caught would be the exact words.
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