WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ON ENTERING SERBIA
To make your visit a pleasurable experience and avoid
possible misunderstandings and unnecessary delays at the border, it would be
useful to remind you of the main rules to be followed and the obligations to be
complied with in going through the customs.
Always stick to the golden rule: Declare everything you
have in your luggage or on you.
Declaring items brought into the country
When crossing the border of Serbia, each
traveller is required to declare and show, if asked, to the customs officer all
items he/she is bringing into the country.
Personal luggage and items for personal use or use of family
members are declared orally (unless the customs officer has not explicitly asked
for a declaration to be made in writing). An exception in this respect are
articles that are being imported or exported temporarily. Such articles are, as
a rule, declared in writing.
Beside personal luggage, the goods to be imported or exported
include household effects and non-commercial goods intended to cater for the
needs of members of the family.
Personal luggage
Personal luggage may contain any items that the traveller is
carrying on his/her journey and are needed for that purpose, such as clothes,
shoes, toiletries, food items and other articles intended for personal use.
Quantities of these luggage items will vary depending on the purpose of journey,
sex, occupation, season or other circumstances relating to the journey and stay
of the traveller in this or in a foreign country.
Items such as one litre of strong alcoholic drink, one
perfume, one toilet water, 200 cigarettes or an appropriate quantity of tobacco
products and medicines for personal use in normal quantities are also regarded
as personal luggage.
Customs clearance
The goods imported should be cleared through the customs, in
normal or summary procedure.
A specific feature of summary procedure is that it is
simple and the traveller does not have to wait long for the items to be cleared
at the border crossing point.
Such customs clearance procedure is applied to items intended
for personal or household use whose value does not exceed EUR 3,000. If they are
in excess of that value, normal procedure is applicable.
All duties payable in a summary procedure are under 33 per
cent of the value of articles.
The traveller will receive a pro forma invoice of import
taxes on carry-on items (Form 6).
Items that the traveller fails to declare up to the point
when the customs officer asks him/her to show the items are considered as
undeclared items. Such items will be confiscated until the relevant
procedure is completed.
Exemption from import taxes
Travellers are exempted from import taxes on:
- personal luggage;
- articles for personal use and use of family members up to a total
equivalent value of EUR 100 in the local currency (This does not apply to
foreign travellers);
- books and publications of a scientific, educational or cultural nature
and documents;
- own publications imported by researchers, writers and artists;
- decorations, medals, plaques, sporting or other trophies or items
awarded as prizes abroad at competitions, exhibitions or events of
international importance;
- farm or livestock products from the border zone that are brought in by
citizens living in the border zone.
Articles not to be imported
Travellers should not import any of these:
- any commercial goods;
- narcotic drugs, poisons or any other toxic substances;
- arms and ammunition (except for temporary import of hunting weapons with
corresponding rounds of ammunition in case of organized game shooting);
- pesticides;
- any material that contains substances that are harmful to public health
and interests of the country.
*Goods used by self-employed persons or in a gainful
occupation, whatever the value of goods, are to be cleared through customs
according to normal procedure, after the necessary legal requirements have been
met.
*Pet animals may be imported into the country, if furnished
with a clean-bill-of-health document from the country of export upon entering.
Temporary import of goods or items
Both residents and foreign nationals visiting for shorter
periods of time may temporarily import articles that are needed by them during
their visits.
These articles should be listed on Form 7 "Effects
temporarily imported along with information on the traveller and description of
goods that will permit their identification".
This list is to be signed and affixed seal to by the customs
official. A comment "PUR" (meaning "temporarily imported goods") is then written
in the passport, dated and signed.
Temporarily imported articles must be exported when first
leaving the country. The PUR comment should be crossed out on that occasion.
Note. The articles temporarily imported may be declared at
the customs office as well. The customs office clearing the Form 7 items will
cancel out the PUR comment. However, in case the traveller clears through the
customs only a part of the effects that he/she has temporarily imported, the
customs official puts the reference number and date of the declaration and
indicates the kind of customs procedure. The list will then be returned to the
traveller without the PUR comment being voided. That will be done at the border
crossing point when the rest of the effects are transported to a foreign
country. If the traveller fails to let the relevant customs know that he/she
will export the items he/she has temporarily imported by listing them, or if
he/she fails to provide evidence that the items have been cleared through the
customs, they will not be considered exported from the country and the customs
will institute proceedings in breach of customs laws.
How motor vehicles may be
temporarily imported and exported
Foreign nationals and residents living abroad may enter
the country in a vehicle bearing foreign registration plates and drive it as
long as the reasons (visit, holiday, business) for it exist.
Foreign nationals staying for more than three months
(students, foreigners married a national, business undertaking) may temporarily
import a vehicle free of duty provided:
1. The vehicle is under six years old;
2. The person is allowed to stay in the country for more than
three months;
3. The person has owned the vehicle at least six months prior
to entering the country.
If conditions 2 and 3 are not applicable, a motor vehicle may
be imported temporarily only if it is not older than six years. In that case, 3
per cent of all import taxes payable on the vehicle if sold on the date of the
temporary import declaration will be paid for each month or part of the month
during which the vehicle has been on the temporary import regimen.
Bringing into and taking foreign and
local currency out of the country
- Foreign currencies may be brought into the country freely with no
restrictions as to the amount of currencies imported;
- Foreigners and nationals living and working abroad (non-residents) may
declare a foreign currency to the customs officer and receive a receipt
allowing them to take it out on first leaving the country;
- Both nationals and foreigners may import up to 120,000 local currency
(dinars) in 1,000 notes or in smaller denominations. An amount in excess of
120,000 dinars may be imported, if proved to have been bought abroad. A
receipt from a foreign bank may serve as proof;
- Credit cards may be brought into freely.
WHAT ONE NEEDS TO KNOW BEFORE LEAVING
SERBIA
No taxes are payable on items exported by travellers leaving
the country. The traveller (i.e. the national or foreign national having
temporary residence or permanent residence permit in this country) may take out
personal luggage and items needed for travel purposes. If so, he/she will be
asked to list them as items being temporarily exported (Form 5) and to provide
personal details and information on the articles for identification purposes.
The customs official will sign and affix seal to the list.
On return from abroad, the list may be used as proof that the
articles have been temporarily exported from the country. As such they will not
be subject to any import taxes.
CITIZENS WORKING AS MIGRANTS ABROAD AND
FOREIGNERS
In case citizens living and temporarily working abroad and
foreigners have temporarily imported some items into Serbia, for which they have
been issued with a certified list of effects temporarily imported (Form 5), they
will be asked to produce it and show the items to the customs officer on leaving
the country. Upon their inspection, the officer will cross out the PUR comment
contained in the passport. In doing so, the officer will sign his name and affix
the official seal.
There is no obligation to export the articles imported on the
temporary regimen, if cleared through the customs previously. The passport with
the voided PUR comment will be accepted as proof. (Voiding will be done by the
customs office where the goods have been cleared.)
Travellers are not allowed to export
- any commercial goods;
- narcotics;
- arms and ammunition;
- gold bullions and nuggets.
ITEMS OF HISTORICAL, ARTISTIC OR
CULTURAL SIGNIFICANCE
Items having historic, artistic or cultural value as well as
rare natural beauties under protection may be exported only if having the
permission of the Serbian Ministry of Foreign Economic Relations.
The permission is granted upon prior agreement of the
competent authorities (i.e. Institute for the Protection of Cultural Sites).
The group of items of this class includes:
- any items forming real cultural property (monuments, historical
architectural cores, archeological sites and places of interest) or parts
thereof;
- movable cultural property (works of art or history, archival materials,
film footage, old and rare books, etc.);
- heritage enjoying prior protection (e.g. registration material, objects
of fine and applied arts, archeological, ethnographic and natural science
items, rare or historically valuable items related to technological
development, old coins and postage stamps and like items);
- protected species of wild animals and plants.
WILDLIFE TROPHIES
Trophies of wild animals may be exported if accompanied by :
- permission of the Ministry of Foreign Economic Relations in the Republic
for stuffed animals and parts thereof;
- game shooting certificate in the case of other trophies.
Wildlife trophies mean:
- antlers of deer or roe buck;
- moufflon or chamoix horns;
- wild boar's teeth;
- deer's teeth and fangs;
- skulls and hide of bear, wolf, lynx or wildcat;
- skulls of fox or badger;
- stuffed animals and parts thereof.
TAKING OUT CASH FUNDS IN LOCAL OR
FOREIGN CURRENCY
- Nationals and foreigners are free to take out of Serbia without proof an
amount of EUR under 2,000;
- Foreigners and nationals living and working abroad (non-residents) may
also take out foreign money if they have written proof that they
have brought it into the country. The letter proving it will expire on
the date of first exiting the country;
- Foreigners and nationals living and working abroad (non-residents) may
further take out foreign currency if they have a letter from their bank
proving they have withdrawn it from their foreign exchange or savings
account with the bank;
- Nationals and foreigners may take out up to 120,000 local currency in
1,000 notes or smaller denominations;
- If the traveller intends to take out foreign and local currency as well
as traveller's cheques, the total amount may not exceed EUR 2,000;
- No restrictions are placed on credit cards upon exiting the country;
- Citizens may transfer the inherited foreign currency funds only through
authorized bank remittances for the purpose of studies, medical treatment,
business trips, emigration to a foreign country or financial support to the
family living abroad.
- Warning to all travellers
*In case the above rule is not followed and local and foreign
currency, cheques or securities are taken out together, they will be temporarily
confiscated and a receipt issued. Further action will be taken before the
Foreign Currency Inspectorate, as the competent body.
*In case plants, plant products, animals and animal products or inputs are
imported or exported, it is necessary to provide a proper certificate to the
effect that the plants, animals or their products have a clean bill of health
issued by the country of origin or the receiving country. Depending on the
products involved, this certificate may be sanitary, veterinary or
phito-pathological.