City
Epaper

Mexico halts postal, parcel deliveries to US over new customs rule

By IANS | Updated: August 28, 2025 10:15 IST

Mexico City, Aug 28 Mexico has announced a temporary suspension of postal and parcel shipments to the United ...

Open in App

Mexico City, Aug 28 Mexico has announced a temporary suspension of postal and parcel shipments to the United States after Washington moved to impose taxes on all incoming packages, regardless of their value.

US President Donald Trump signed an executive order last month to abolish the de minimis treatment, which has allowed goods worth less than $800 to enter the United States duty-free.

The exemption will end on Friday, reports Xinhua news agency.

Correos de Mexico, the national postal service, said the temporary suspension took effect on Wednesday while new operational procedures are to be defined.

Mexico thus joined countries including India, Germany, Australia, Canada, Japan and New Zealand that have adopted similar measures.

The Mexican government said it is in talks with US authorities and international postal organisations to establish mechanisms for an orderly resumption of services, aiming to provide certainty for users and avoid delivery delays and disruptions.

On Tuesday, the Universal Postal Union (UPU) announced that 25 member countries have suspended postal shipments to the United States, citing uncertainties linked to planned changes by the US administration to its rules on customs clearance of imports valued less than $800.

As the United Nations specialised agency for the postal sector with 192 member countries, the UPU said in a statement that it is working with US authorities to ensure that details of the new operational requirements are clearly communicated to its members.

The statement also noted that the UPU Director General Masahiko Metoki also conveyed member states' concerns about potential disruptions in a letter to US Secretary of State Marco Rubio on Monday.

According to an executive order signed by US President Donald Trump, the long-standing "de minimis" exemption rule, which allowed goods worth less $800 to enter duty-free, is to end August 29.

The UPU said it is taking all possible measures to prepare its member countries for the impacts of the new requirements.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

EntertainmentNia Sharma visits Ravi Dubey’s new sea-facing luxurious apartment on Ganesh Chaturthi

Hockey"Mindset is to play smartly, maintain that energy, plan, structure": Indian hockey skipper Harmanpreet ahead of Asia Cup

NationalGovt won’t do injustice to Maratha and OBC communities: Maha CM

FootballMansukh Mandaviya felicitates young footballers after historic European treble; calls it new beginning for football in India

EntertainmentSidharth Malhotra Shares How Life Transformed After Baby Girl’s Arrival With Kiara Advani

International Realted Stories

InternationalIndia, Bangladesh Border Forces chart joint action against cross-border crime, infiltration at Dhaka meet

InternationalHungary bans Ukrainian commander over repeated pipeline attacks

InternationalLaos advances nutrition efforts using fortified rice

InternationalGerman delegation in Dehradun pushes for closer India ties

InternationalIndian diaspora in Tokyo eagerly awaits PM Modi's arrival