Customs-Managed Freight: Simplifying UK and Switzerland Shipping in the Post-Brexit Era
On 1 January 2021, the United Kingdom ceased to be part of the EU Customs Union. Overnight, what had been a domestic logistics operation -- loading goods in Barcelona and delivering them in Birmingham without a single customs form -- became an international trade transaction requiring export declarations, import declarations, duty calculations, and regulatory compliance checks.
For the thousands of European businesses that trade with the UK, this was not a theoretical policy change. It was a sudden, practical disruption that added cost, complexity, and transit time to every shipment.
Switzerland presents a parallel challenge. Despite its geographic position at the heart of Europe and its extensive bilateral agreements with the EU, Switzerland has never been part of the EU Customs Union. Every commercial shipment entering or leaving Switzerland requires customs clearance.
This guide covers both corridors in detail: the documentation, the processes, the costs, and the strategies that separate smooth cross-border freight from the kind that sits at a border crossing for three days while missing paperwork is chased.
Why Customs Management Matters Now More Than Ever
The post-Brexit reality in numbers
The EU-UK Trade and Cooperation Agreement (TCA), effective since 1 January 2021, provides for zero tariffs and zero quotas on goods that qualify under the rules of origin provisions. But "zero tariffs" does not mean "zero paperwork." Every shipment still requires:
- An export declaration in the country of departure
- An import declaration in the country of arrival
- Proof of origin (to claim preferential tariff rates under the TCA)
- Safety and security declarations (Entry Summary Declarations for UK imports)
- Regulatory compliance certificates (for food, agricultural products, chemicals, and other regulated goods)
The UK Government's own estimates suggest that post-Brexit customs procedures cost UK-EU traders an aggregate of GBP 7.5 billion per year in additional administrative burden. For individual shipments, customs-related costs typically add EUR 50 to EUR 200 per declaration in brokerage fees, plus potential duty and VAT liabilities.
Switzerland: a long-standing customs border
Unlike the UK, Switzerland's customs border with the EU is not new. But that does not make it simple. Swiss customs procedures involve:
- Swiss import declarations through the e-dec electronic system
- LSVA charges (distance-related heavy vehicle fee for all trucks over 3.5 tonnes)
- Phytosanitary and veterinary controls for certain agricultural products
- Product conformity requirements that differ from EU standards in specific areas
- VAT at import (currently 8.1% standard rate, 2.6% reduced rate)
The combination of these requirements means that shipping to Switzerland demands the same level of customs management expertise as shipping to the UK, despite Switzerland's geographic proximity to EU member states.
Key Customs Documents Explained
1. Export Declaration
Filed electronically in the country of export before goods leave the EU customs territory. In Spain, this is processed through the AEAT (Agencia Estatal de Administracion Tributaria) electronic customs system.
Required information:
- Exporter EORI number
- Consignee details
- Commodity codes (HS/CN codes at 8-digit level)
- Customs value
- Country of origin
- Net and gross weight
- Number of packages
- Transport details (vehicle registration, carrier)
- Procedure code (indicating the customs regime -- e.g., permanent export, temporary export, re-export)
2. Import Declaration
Filed in the destination country. For the UK, this is processed through the Customs Declaration Service (CDS), which replaced the legacy CHIEF system. For Switzerland, declarations are filed through the e-dec/NCTS system.
Key difference from export declarations: Import declarations trigger duty and tax liability. The importer (or their customs broker acting as direct or indirect representative) is responsible for:
- Calculating duty based on the applicable tariff rate and customs value
- Paying or deferring VAT on importation
- Providing any required licences, certificates, or permits
3. T1 Transit Document (Common/Union Transit)
The T1 transit document is a customs procedure that allows goods to move across customs territories under customs supervision without paying duties at each border crossing. It is particularly important for shipments that cross multiple customs territories.
How it works for UK shipments:
- Goods are placed under T1 transit at the EU office of departure (e.g., the Spanish customs office)
- The T1 document covers the goods as they cross France, enter the Channel Tunnel or ferry port, and arrive in the UK
- At the UK office of destination, the T1 is discharged and the goods enter the UK import clearance process
How it works for Switzerland:
- Goods are placed under T1 transit at the EU border office
- The T1 covers the goods through Swiss territory to the office of destination
- At the Swiss customs office, T1 is discharged and Swiss import clearance begins
Switzerland is a full member of the Common Transit Convention (CTC), which enables seamless transit documentation between the EU, EFTA states, UK, Turkey, North Macedonia, and Serbia.
4. Entry Summary Declaration (ENS) -- UK Specific
Since the UK's Border Target Operating Model (BTOM) implementation, all goods entering the UK require an Entry Summary Declaration filed in advance. This safety and security declaration provides UK Border Force with risk assessment data before goods arrive.
Filing deadlines:
- Road freight: at least 2 hours before arrival at the UK border
- Short sea shipping: at least 2 hours before arrival at the port of destination
5. Proof of Origin -- Statement on Origin
To claim zero-tariff preference under the EU-UK TCA, the exporter must provide a Statement on Origin. This is a prescribed text that the exporter includes on any commercial document (typically the invoice) that identifies the goods and confirms they meet the TCA's rules of origin.
Critical point: If no Statement on Origin is provided, the importer must pay the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) tariff rate, which can range from 0% to over 40% depending on the product. For automotive parts, chemicals, agricultural products, and textiles, the MFN rate can be significant.
The Statement on Origin text must include:
- Exporter reference number (REX number for EU exporters)
- Origin criteria (wholly obtained, sufficiently processed, etc.)
- The prescribed declaration wording as specified in the TCA
6. Commercial Invoice and Packing List
While not customs-specific documents, the commercial invoice and packing list form the foundation of every customs declaration. Customs authorities use them to verify:
- Transaction value (the basis for customs duty calculation)
- Product description (for tariff classification verification)
- Quantity and weight (for statistical and compliance purposes)
Common invoice errors that cause customs delays:
- Missing or incorrect HS/commodity codes
- Vague product descriptions ("parts," "samples," "miscellaneous")
- Inconsistent values (invoice value does not match declared customs value)
- Missing Incoterms reference
- No currency specification
EORI Registration: The Gateway to EU/UK Trade
What is EORI?
The Economic Operators Registration and Identification (EORI) number is a unique identifier required for any business that imports or exports goods into or out of the EU or UK customs territory. Without a valid EORI number, customs declarations cannot be filed.
EU EORI
- Format: Country code + up to 15 characters (e.g., ES12345678A for a Spanish entity)
- Required for: any EU-based business that files customs declarations, or any non-EU business that needs to make customs declarations in the EU
- Registration: through the customs authority of the EU member state where the business is established
UK EORI
- Format: GB + 12 digits (e.g., GB123456789000)
- Required for: any business importing or exporting goods to/from the UK
- Registration: through HMRC (His Majesty's Revenue and Customs)
SAVA Express is EORI-registered, enabling us to act as a customs representative for clients on both EU export and (where authorised) UK/Swiss import procedures. This means we can file declarations on your behalf, significantly streamlining the customs process.
HS Tariff Codes: Getting Classification Right
The Harmonised System (HS) is an international nomenclature for classifying traded products. Developed by the World Customs Organization (WCO), it uses a 6-digit code structure that is harmonised globally, with additional digits added at the regional or national level:
- HS 6-digit: International standard (e.g., 8471.30 -- portable computers)
- CN 8-digit: EU Combined Nomenclature (e.g., 8471.30.00)
- UK Trade Tariff 10-digit: UK-specific classification (e.g., 8471.30.00.00)
- Swiss tariff 8-digit: Swiss-specific classification
Why correct classification matters
- Duty rate determination -- different HS codes attract different duty rates. Misclassification can result in overpayment or underpayment of duty.
- Trade agreement eligibility -- preferential tariff rates under the TCA or Swiss bilateral agreements depend on correct classification.
- Regulatory requirements -- certain HS codes trigger additional requirements (import licences, conformity certificates, phytosanitary checks).
- Penalties for misclassification -- customs authorities can assess back-duty, interest, and penalties for incorrect classification, even if the error was unintentional.
Practical classification tips
- Always use the most recent version of the applicable tariff schedule
- Start with the product's material composition and function/use -- these are the primary criteria
- Refer to the General Interpretive Rules (GIRs) for guidance on classifying composite or multi-functional goods
- When in doubt, request a Binding Tariff Information (BTI) ruling from the relevant customs authority -- this provides legal certainty for 3 years
- Keep records of your classification reasoning -- customs auditors may ask for justification years after the shipment
Common Causes of Customs Delays (and How to Avoid Them)
Customs delays are not random bad luck. They follow predictable patterns. Understanding the most common causes enables proactive prevention.
1. Incomplete or inaccurate declarations
The problem: Missing data fields, incorrect commodity codes, or value discrepancies trigger automated customs system flags that require manual review.
The solution: Use a standardised pre-shipment checklist. Verify all declaration data against the commercial invoice before filing. Ensure HS codes are current and accurate.
2. Missing proof of origin
The problem: Without a valid Statement on Origin, UK customs cannot apply the zero-tariff TCA rate. Goods are either held pending documentation or released subject to MFN duty.
The solution: Include the Statement on Origin on every commercial invoice for EU-origin goods shipped to the UK. Maintain records of your products' origin status.
3. Regulatory holds -- SPS, chemical, and product safety checks
The problem: Certain product categories face additional regulatory scrutiny at the border:
- Sanitary and Phytosanitary (SPS) checks for food, animal products, and plants
- REACH compliance for chemicals entering the EU or UK
- Product safety markings (CE marking for EU, UKCA marking for UK)
The solution: Identify whether your products require pre-border notification or certificates. File any required notifications (e.g., IPAFFS for UK food/animal imports) well in advance.
4. Customs value disputes
The problem: The declared customs value does not match the customs authority's assessment, often due to inconsistent treatment of freight costs, insurance, royalties, or related-party transaction pricing.
The solution: Understand which Incoterms basis your customs value should reflect (CIF for most import valuations, FOB for US imports). Ensure all cost elements are correctly included or excluded.
5. EORI number errors
The problem: The EORI number on the declaration does not match the registered entity, is expired, or belongs to an entity in the wrong country.
The solution: Verify EORI numbers before shipping. The European Commission provides an online EORI validation tool. For UK EORI numbers, verify through the HMRC checking service.
6. T1 transit document discrepancies
The problem: The goods described in the T1 transit document do not match what customs officers find at the border -- different quantities, weights, or product descriptions.
The solution: Ensure T1 data is prepared from the actual loading information, not from advance estimates. Reconcile T1 contents with the packing list before departure.
Duty and Tax Calculations
UK import duties
Under the TCA, goods that qualify under the rules of origin are subject to 0% duty. For goods that do not qualify (e.g., goods re-exported from the EU but originally manufactured in a third country), the UK Global Tariff (UKGT) rates apply.
Additionally, UK VAT at 20% (standard rate) is charged on import, calculated on the customs value plus any duty payable. Businesses registered for UK VAT can reclaim this input VAT, but the cash-flow impact of paying VAT at importation remains significant.
Postponed VAT Accounting (PVA): UK VAT-registered importers can opt to account for import VAT on their VAT return rather than paying it at the border. This eliminates the cash-flow impact and is strongly recommended.
Swiss import duties
Switzerland applies its own tariff schedule, which uses weight-based duty for many product categories rather than ad valorem (percentage of value) rates common in other countries. This means:
- A shipment of lightweight, high-value electronics may incur relatively low Swiss duty
- A shipment of heavy, low-value goods (e.g., building materials) may face proportionally higher duty
Swiss VAT is applied at importation:
- Standard rate: 8.1%
- Reduced rate: 2.6% (for essential goods, food, medicines)
- Special rate: 3.8% (accommodation services)
Calculating landed cost
The landed cost of goods delivered to the UK or Switzerland includes:
- Product cost (ex-works or purchase price)
- Transport cost to the border
- Customs brokerage fees (typically EUR 50-150 per declaration)
- Import duty (if applicable)
- Import VAT
- Final-mile delivery cost from the border/port to the destination
Failing to account for all landed cost elements leads to pricing errors, margin erosion, and customer disputes. SAVA Express provides transparent landed cost estimates as part of our customs-managed freight quotes.
Digital Customs: The Technology Landscape
Customs processes across Europe are increasingly digital, which creates both opportunities and challenges for shippers.
Key digital systems
- EU ICS2 (Import Control System 2): Pre-arrival safety and security data filing for goods entering the EU
- UK CDS (Customs Declaration Service): The UK's electronic customs declaration platform
- NCTS (New Computerised Transit System): The electronic system for managing T1/T2 transit documents across the Common Transit Convention countries
- AES (Automated Export System): Electronic export declaration filing (used in various national implementations)
- Swiss e-dec: Switzerland's electronic customs declaration system
Benefits of digital customs management
- Faster clearance: Electronic declarations are processed in minutes rather than hours
- Pre-clearance: Many systems allow declarations to be filed and cleared before goods arrive at the border, enabling "green lane" passage
- Audit trail: Complete digital records for compliance and reconciliation
- Error reduction: System validations catch data errors before submission
SAVA Express digital capability
Our customs team files all declarations electronically through direct system connections. For UK shipments, we pre-file export declarations through the Spanish AEAT system and coordinate import clearance with UK-side customs brokers through CDS. For Swiss shipments, we manage the T1 transit documentation through NCTS and coordinate Swiss-side clearance through our local brokerage partners.
SAVA Express UK and Switzerland Corridors
Spain to United Kingdom
- Transit time: 72 hours door-to-door
- Frequency: 3 departures per week from Barcelona
- Service type: LTL groupage and FTL
- Customs included: Full export and import declaration management
- Additional services: Postponed VAT Accounting guidance, Statement on Origin preparation, HS code classification support
Spain to Switzerland
- Transit time: 48-72 hours depending on final destination
- Service type: LTL groupage and FTL
- Customs included: T1 transit documentation, Swiss import clearance coordination
- Additional services: LSVA fee management, Swiss tariff classification, duty calculation
End-to-end customs management
When you book a customs-managed shipment with SAVA Express, the following is handled on your behalf:
- Pre-shipment review -- we verify your commercial documentation, commodity codes, and origin status before goods are collected
- Export declaration filing -- submitted electronically through the Spanish customs system
- T1 transit documentation -- opened at departure, managed through transit, discharged at destination
- Import clearance coordination -- working with our destination customs brokers to clear goods promptly
- Duty and VAT management -- calculating liabilities, advising on deferment options, providing post-clearance documentation
- Issue resolution -- if customs queries arise, our team handles them directly with the authorities
Your Pre-Shipment Customs Checklist
Before shipping to the UK or Switzerland, verify that you have:
- ] Valid EORI number (EU EORI for export, UK/Swiss EORI or importer's reference for import)
- [ ] Accurate commercial invoice with full product descriptions, HS codes, values, and Incoterms
- [ ] Packing list matching the invoice (quantities, weights, package counts)
- [ ] Statement on Origin on the invoice (for UK shipments claiming TCA zero-tariff preference)
- [ ] Safety Data Sheets if shipping chemicals or hazardous goods
- [ ] Regulatory certificates where required (phytosanitary, CE/UKCA conformity, organic certification, etc.)
- [ ] Importer details confirmed (UK or Swiss consignee with valid tax registration)
- [ ] Incoterms agreed (determines which party is responsible for customs clearance and duty payment)
- [ ] Correct classification -- HS codes verified against current tariff schedules
- [ ] Goods description in English (required for UK customs; recommended for Swiss customs)
Avoid These Costly Mistakes
- Assuming zero tariff means zero customs -- The TCA eliminated tariffs for qualifying goods, but every shipment still requires full customs declarations. Budget for brokerage fees and administrative time.
- Using outdated HS codes -- Tariff schedules are updated annually. A code that was correct last year may have been reclassified or split.
- Neglecting rules of origin -- If your product incorporates non-EU components, you may not meet the TCA's origin rules. Verify origin status product by product, not assumption by assumption.
- Filing declarations with estimated data -- Customs authorities audit declarations retrospectively. Inaccurate weights, values, or descriptions filed as "estimates" can result in reassessments and penalties years later.
- Ignoring the importer's responsibilities -- Under most Incoterms, the importer handles customs clearance and duty payment at destination. If your UK or Swiss customer is unprepared, goods will sit at the border regardless of how good your export documentation is.
- Not using a customs-managed freight service -- Attempting to self-manage customs for occasional shipments is time-consuming and error-prone. The cost of a customs-managed freight service is almost always lower than the cost of delays, penalties, and internal staff time.
Next Steps: Simplify Your Cross-Border Freight
Customs complexity is a permanent feature of UK and Swiss trade. But complexity does not have to mean disruption. With the right logistics partner managing the documentation, declarations, and regulatory compliance, your goods can move as smoothly to London or Zurich as they do to Lyon or Berlin.
SAVA Express has been operating European cross-border freight for over 14 years, serving 1,150+ clients across 30+ countries. Our customs-managed freight service for the UK and Switzerland combines transport expertise with dedicated customs brokerage capability, backed by our EORI registration, ISO 9001 quality management certification, and a team that processes customs declarations every working day.
Get a customs-managed freight quote:
- Online: [savaexpress.com/budget
- Phone: +34 627 259 871
Let us handle the customs paperwork while you focus on growing your business across borders.
