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Analysis

Buy a tech treat from abroad

Posted on 20 Aug 2010 at 11:22

Dave Stevenson reveals how to save money on better-spec products by buying from abroad

The salesman in my local PC World was emphatic: “We’re sold out.” Apart from the not-for-sale units on display at the back of the store, he tells me, the Apple iPad is nowhere to be found. But no matter. “They’re cheaper in the States. That’s where I’ll get mine.”

The advantages to buying abroad are clear: you could pay less, you can get the latest gizmos ahead of the rest of the pack and, with the net revolutionising home shopping, there’s little practical difference between buying a new mobile phone in Carlisle or California.

There’s little practical difference between buying a new mobile phone in Carlisle or California

But what are the rules for consumers bringing in tech treats from abroad? Is computing equipment free from duty tax, and do you have to pay VAT on something when you may have already paid tax elsewhere?

In this feature, we’re going to examine the real-world consequences of buying tech from abroad, and help you decide whether those tempting foreign prices really are the bargain they first appear.

The British tech tax

That British consumers are at a disadvantage when it comes to buying technology is beyond doubt. Comparing the pre-tax price of identical products is sure to leave you with a bitter taste in your mouth.

For instance, the Apple iPad costs $499 (£338) in the US. Buy one in the UK and, with VAT removed, it will cost £365. With the strong dollar, that’s a relatively paltry difference of £27. But the average sales tax in the US is around 8%, 9.5% less than in the UK. The difference will become even more significant if, as predicted, VAT rises to 20%.

The difference is starker elsewhere. Adobe – well known for its disparate approach to pricing in the UK and the US – charges $699 (£473) for Photoshop CS5. On its British site, that somehow equates to £548, a difference of £75.

Release delay

Even if there were no price difference, British techies are frequently kept from the most interesting products of the day. The iPad was launched in the US on 3 April; the British launch was initially slated for the end of the same month. But, caught out by demand for the tablet, Apple infuriated British buyers by delaying the release date by a month so it could fulfil orders in its homeland.

iPad

Apple isn’t the only company that holds back its best from this country. Microsoft’s well-received Zune player has never been offered for sale in the UK. The almost universally loved Chumby, the Linux-powered internet device, was available in the US for almost a year before it launched in the UK in April 2009.

And the much-vaunted Sony VAIO P Series, a diminutive laptop PC Pro called “stunning” when it was reviewed, was available at a significantly higher specification in its native Japan than in the UK. Japanese buyers could revel in the system’s 2.13GHz CPU; British buyers were left with a less powerful system with a 1.6GHz processor.

Why the disparity? Douglas Krone is the CEO of Dynamism, an American company that sells rare or unavailable products from Asia to western consumers. He says differing approaches to technology in international markets leads manufacturers to release different products. In the west, “the focus is first of all on price point. So the thought process is, ‘okay, we need this device to be £399, so what we need to do to get it on the shelf at that price point?’”

“When you’re designing a product for Japan, it’s a different psychology,” he explained. Instead of price, the emphasis is on the specification.

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User comments

Other things to consider...

Power supply differences?

DVD region limitations?

By jbarnett on 20 Aug 2010

Broken Link!

http://www.pcpro.co.uk/www.pcpro.co.uk/links/191hm
rc gives a 404 error on your error trapping page!

By BornOnTheCusp on 20 Aug 2010

Britain is not alone, in fact its not that bad here. I know of an EU country that is still denied the iPhone which as been on the UK market for years.

By McDragonSI on 21 Aug 2010

What do you take us for?

Why is it at PC Pro you lot often talk about the UK as if it is a 3rd world country? If any of you don't like the way things are here, I suggest you go and live somewhere else.

By formula_86 on 21 Aug 2010

3rd World?

If it was 3rd world, they wouldn't be complaining, because the tech would be dirt cheap...

The problem is, because the UK is a small market and most stuff has to be imported, it tends to be more expensive than bigger markets.

That said, mainland Europe often get a far worse deal than the UK - especially for software. As was pointed out in the box-out interview with me (not on this web page, but in the magazine itself), software like Creative Suite, which is a rip-off in the UK, costs another 30-40% more in Germany... It is actually cheaper to fly to New York, stay in a good hotel, eat a meal, buy a copy of CS and fly back again!

By big_D on 23 Aug 2010

@formula_86

If we don't like the way things are here, we get them changed.
It's called democracy

By greemble on 23 Aug 2010

Small market?

I should have thought that the UK market ranked quite high in terms of size. In addition, I have noticed that many products and the their marketing are identical to those marketed in the USA.

By Arthurbitter on 23 Aug 2010

@Arthurbitter

The UK is a very small market, globally speaking.

Some American States have a bigger market than the UK, let alone the whole country. Parts of Asia also dwarf the UK market.

Mainland Europe is also a bigger market, for some goods, although software needs to be localised.

On top of that, you have the UK VAT, which makes American prices look even more attractive, as they are all without sales tax, as that depends on where you buy the products - it can range from 0% to well over 20%, depending on which State you are in.

European power cords are also more standardised, so they can be used in several countries, the products for the UK need to have the UK 3-pin plug, which is unique to the UK.

The collapse of the Pound last year, means that the UK is now a favourite shopping destination for many Europeans, because everything is now so cheap...

By big_D on 24 Aug 2010

Yes and no...

big_D's right about Adobe. It's cheaper to fly over the Atlantic for it.

Those "UK only" power cords are also used in the Irish Republic so not quite unique.

The UK is a huge market. A small market would be somehwere like Ireland who coincidentally already have the sky high rate on VAT and are expected to pay Irish VAT rates on any international tech purchase and where we also have to charge the higher VAT rate on any service work such as web design.

The solution to most of these issues would be to use the web to setup some kind of international purchase system which utilises members of a buying network in locations across the world in order to take advantage of local purchasing rates, and circumventing the price fixing currently in place with vertical tech markets.

By Gindylow on 25 Aug 2010

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For more details about purchasing this feature and/or images for editorial usage, please contact Jasmine Samra on pictures@dennis.co.uk

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