The European Commission confirmed on 2 July 2026 that the €150 customs duty exemption on low-value e-commerce parcels shipped from outside the bloc has been removed with effect from 1 July 2026, replaced by a flat €3 duty per item, with mandatory product-identifier declarations from November 2026. Source: Global Cosmetics News, "EU removes customs exemption for low-value e-commerce imports," 2 July 2026 (https://www.globalcosmeticsnews.com/eu-removes-customs-exemption-for-low-value-e-commerce-imports/), and the European Commission Taxation and Customs Union announcement of 13 November 2025 (https://taxation-customs.ec.europa.eu/news/e-commerce-150-eur-customs-duty-exemption-threshold-be-removed-2026-2025-11-13_en).
The Commission's political framing was safety and compliance. Global Cosmetics News cites over 60% of low-value imports failing EU safety or compliance checks. The commercial consequence for indie beauty is different from the political one, and it is more useful.
What actually changed on 1 July
Before 1 July 2026, a beauty parcel arriving in the EU from outside the bloc with a declared value under €150 paid no customs duty. VAT still applied through the Import One-Stop Shop, but the customs duty line was zero. That is the regime under which Shein, Temu, AliExpress, and every direct-to-consumer overseas beauty seller has been quoting €4 lip gloss, €6 serum, and €8 fragrance dupes to EU consumers with a clean landed cost.
From 1 July 2026, that same parcel pays a flat €3 duty per item. A four-item order from an overseas seller now carries €12 of customs duty on top of VAT. A single €5 item pays €3 in duty, moving the landed cost past €6 before VAT.
From November 2026, product-identifier declarations become mandatory. That closes the second loophole, which was misdeclared product category or generic descriptions on customs paperwork.
The exemption was the structural reason the cheapest tier of overseas beauty could undercut compliant EU indies. It is now closed.
Why this matters more to indie beauty than to the majors
Large beauty groups do not compete with Shein and Temu on price. Their pricing power sits above the point where the exemption removal matters. Coty, L'Oreal and LVMH prestige brands are not repositioning because of a €3 duty line.
The brands the exemption removal actually helps are indie EU beauty at the £500k to £5m band, which is where two forces have been squeezing margin. First, retailers have been leaning on indie brands to hold or drop price, citing the overseas comparison as leverage. Second, direct consumers making the price comparison at home have been abandoning compliant indie SKUs for cheaper overseas equivalents at rates that indie founders privately concede but rarely raise in retailer meetings.
Both those pressures ease from 1 July. The retailer comparison gets weaker because the overseas landed cost went up. The consumer comparison narrows because the €4 lip gloss no longer arrives at €4.
That is a real structural tailwind and it deserves to be used.
What to do with it in the next 90 days
Three concrete moves for a £500k-£5m EU beauty brand this quarter.
Restate the pricing argument to retailers. Every buyer conversation this year that has included a "your competition sells for X on Shein" line needs a fresh response. Rebuild the pricing deck to show the pre-1-July and post-1-July landed cost for the closest overseas comparable in each category the brand plays in. The number will surprise buyers who have not yet done the maths on the €3 flat duty and the product-identifier rules. Do that work for them before September buyer reviews.
Reframe the compliance story from a cost centre to a defensible position. Compliant EU manufacturing and honest INCI declarations have been an operational burden that indie brands paid for without capturing much commercial credit. The Commission's own framing, that over 60% of low-value imports failed safety checks, hands indies a claim they can now make cleanly on packaging, ecommerce PDPs, and buyer decks. "Made and tested in the EU under full CPR compliance" is not a new claim but it is now a live differentiator against a category the regulator has publicly labelled unsafe. Use the language the Commission used.
Recalculate consumer-facing price positioning if the brand has been holding a discounted tier for price-sensitive segments. Some indies have been running discounted lines, refill programmes, or entry-price SKUs to keep pace with overseas comparisons. From 1 July those lines are less commercially necessary. Whether the right move is to hold the discount and capture the margin, or lift the price to protect brand equity, depends on the specific brand. Either way the calculation has changed and the brands that recalculate now will make better decisions than the brands that leave the discounted tier running by default.
The traps to avoid
Two mistakes are already visible in how some indie brands are reading the change.
Do not treat this as a marketing moment on its own. A social post about the regulation change will not move the numbers. The pricing conversation with buyers, the wholesale terms review, the PDP claim update, and the direct-to-consumer positioning are what move the numbers. Communicate to those audiences, not to a general beauty consumer who does not care about customs policy.
Do not overclaim safety credentials the brand does not actually hold. The compliance framing works because it is true for the brands that do it properly. A brand with a soft compliance record that starts making CPR claims because the regulation shifted is exposed to the same enforcement risk it was already exposed to. If the compliance story is not fully clean internally, spend the next quarter making it clean rather than putting a claim on the box.
The wider pattern
The last three years of EU regulatory action, from the Omnibus VI CMR phase-outs to the AI Act content disclosure rules to now the customs exemption removal, share a pattern. Each one imposes a real cost on brands with weak compliance discipline and hands a real advantage to brands with strong compliance discipline. Indie beauty founders spend a lot of time treating regulation as a headwind. It is often a tailwind for the brands that are set up to use it.
The €150 exemption removal is the clearest example this year of a regulatory shift that quietly helps compliant EU indie beauty at the expense of overseas undercutters. Twelve weeks to reprice, restate, and get the argument in front of the right audiences. The brands that use those weeks well will be in a stronger commercial position in October than they are today.