Ask HN: Did Aliexpress stop shipping to US?

26 points by olalonde 2 days ago

I was going to buy a component on Aliexpress and noticed this at checkout: "Item not deliverable to the selected country/region". Did anyone else notice this? Is this because the seller doesn't want to deal with possible customs clearance issues? I have previously bought from this seller without this issue in the past.

kenmacd a day ago

Possibly related, but I've found recent Ali shipping to Canada has gotten much faster. I've received some thing in around a week that would normally take over a month.

wkat4242 2 days ago

AliExpress doesn't really ship much. Most of the sellers just post their goods themselves. So I expect it will highly depend on the actual vendor. AliExpress is just a marketplace.

byoung2 2 days ago

I had a supplier tell me that the shipments are being held in China until the tariff situation is resolved.

doright a day ago

I ordered $400 worth of items last month only for 70% of it to be cancelled automatically because "the seller has not shipped in the required time."

My guess is some of the vendors decided to just stop shipping overseas but they can't update the seller pages fast enough to reflect this.

  • brudgers a day ago

    Based on some Youtube channels I watch, sellers are still shipping overseas to everywhere else.

pogue 2 days ago

Last I read, shipments from Hong Kong are being blocked by the HK government and DHL is refusing to ship

michaelbrave a day ago

I've noticed many 404 pages for things I was looking for on it in just the last week or so. Some things can't be found anywhere else either.

mindslight a day ago

I squeaked a bunch of Choice (seems to be Ali's managed logistics) products in under the wire. Ten bags of stuff, some arriving just a few days before the de minimis tax exemption went away. All basically meeting or exceeding their delivery estimates - shipping time was about 6-8 days on average. Out of curiosity, I checked on a bunch of those listings a week later. Most were just 2-3x more expensive and said tariffs included. But one or two were unavailable to ship to the US as you saw.

The one item I ordered that wasn't Choice but also not expensive enough to justify Fedex seems to have been shipped but got lost. The tracking stalled long enough that I got an automatically-approved refund. Glad I didn't have to play the blame game for a found item trying to clear customs after the exemption went away.

I'm not planning on ordering anything else at the moment. But I imagine the longer the high tariff taxes stay in place, the more appealing Aliexpress (and specifically Choice) will become. The selection on Amazon and other US warehouses is going to dwindle as sellers avoid fronting the cost of paying high taxes to import items just to sit around, while taking the risk that the Mad King might have a different whim next week. Whereas direct from China purchases can pay the tariffs with cash in hand.

robotapertama 2 days ago

Can this be circumvented if it got sent to Australia first and from there to the States? Obviously, there is an additional cost. Or is Australia going to get hammered with 145% tariffs?

  • sircastor 8 minutes ago

    Yes, but it's essentially fraud. The common term is "Origin washing." You have to declare the origin of the shipment, and the exception is that it goes through "substantial transformation."

    If you were to buy a bunch of components from China, have them shipped to Australia and assembled there, then shipped to the US, you would pay the tariff applied to Australia, not China. Of course, you probably are paying some sort of import tax when the components make their way into Australia too.

  • galaxy_gas 2 days ago

    Manufactured or assembled in China = 145% doesn't matter pass through where))

  • kalleboo a day ago

    On the customs form, you're supposed to specify "country of origin". Tariffs are based on where the item was created, not just where it went in the mail box. Things get more complicated when they are built with parts from various countries.

  • cantrecallmypwd 2 days ago

    Could be interpreted as smuggling or customs fraud.

brudgers a day ago

I got that message for something last year.

Certainly seems more likely now.