Do I need to declare official laptop and other electronics at UK customs?Laptop Searches by Customs - UK and USLaptop customs in IndiaCarrying two iPads (and other electronics) to India from USACarry a boxed iPhone 6 to the USA - do I need to declare it to customs?China, short visit of a foreigner. Declare laptop for work?Goods allowance while travelling to singapore?Do I have to declare my new laptop when leaving?Do I need to declare phone/laptop at customs in Japan?Do I need to declare ice axes at customs?Family with lots of electronics traveling to India connecting flight in India customs

What F1 in name of seeds/varieties means?

Would an object launched by the Catapult spell do full damage against a Scarecrow?

Can a wire having a 610-670 THz (frequency of blue light) AC frequency supply, generate blue light?

Which noble houses were destroyed during the Game of Thrones?

Is my router's IP address really public?

Could IPv6 make NAT / port numbers redundant?

In what episode of TOS did a character on the bridge make a comment about raising one to some power?

Different PCB color ( is it different material? )

Can a non-EU citizen travel within schengen zone freely without passport?

What does uniform continuity mean exactly?

Leading and Suffering Numbers

What is the best linguistic term for describing the kw > p / gw > b change, and its usual companion s > h

Solmization with syllables - du da di

How many chess players are over 2500 Elo?

Draw a checker pattern with a black X in the center

Restoring order in a deck of playing cards

Split polygon using another polygon in QGIS

Is this story about US tax office reasonable?

How can I find where certain bash function is defined?

Why do Russians call their women expensive ("дорогая")?

How do Russian speakers idiomatically express the idea of "Ce n’est pas donné à tout le monde de ..." in French?

How to properly maintain eye contact with people that have distinct facial features?

If a massive object like Jupiter flew past the Earth how close would it need to come to pull people off of the surface?

What does the behaviour of water on the skin of an aircraft in flight tell us?



Do I need to declare official laptop and other electronics at UK customs?


Laptop Searches by Customs - UK and USLaptop customs in IndiaCarrying two iPads (and other electronics) to India from USACarry a boxed iPhone 6 to the USA - do I need to declare it to customs?China, short visit of a foreigner. Declare laptop for work?Goods allowance while travelling to singapore?Do I have to declare my new laptop when leaving?Do I need to declare phone/laptop at customs in Japan?Do I need to declare ice axes at customs?Family with lots of electronics traveling to India connecting flight in India customs






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








8















I am travelling to the UK from India with family on a vacation. I want to carry my official laptop just to check emails and respond if necessary on a crisis. I have the permission letter from my company for the same.



Do I need to declare the laptop at UK customs on arrival? Its value is more than the 390 GBP limit mentioned on gov.uk website for other goods. How does this rule actually apply? I will be taking my digital camera, phone and kindle also. Do I need to declare those? Should I pay duty on them?



I imagine that this rule does not apply to items for personal use and which you will take back with you. Can somebody please clear this up for me?










share|improve this question




























    8















    I am travelling to the UK from India with family on a vacation. I want to carry my official laptop just to check emails and respond if necessary on a crisis. I have the permission letter from my company for the same.



    Do I need to declare the laptop at UK customs on arrival? Its value is more than the 390 GBP limit mentioned on gov.uk website for other goods. How does this rule actually apply? I will be taking my digital camera, phone and kindle also. Do I need to declare those? Should I pay duty on them?



    I imagine that this rule does not apply to items for personal use and which you will take back with you. Can somebody please clear this up for me?










    share|improve this question
























      8












      8








      8








      I am travelling to the UK from India with family on a vacation. I want to carry my official laptop just to check emails and respond if necessary on a crisis. I have the permission letter from my company for the same.



      Do I need to declare the laptop at UK customs on arrival? Its value is more than the 390 GBP limit mentioned on gov.uk website for other goods. How does this rule actually apply? I will be taking my digital camera, phone and kindle also. Do I need to declare those? Should I pay duty on them?



      I imagine that this rule does not apply to items for personal use and which you will take back with you. Can somebody please clear this up for me?










      share|improve this question














      I am travelling to the UK from India with family on a vacation. I want to carry my official laptop just to check emails and respond if necessary on a crisis. I have the permission letter from my company for the same.



      Do I need to declare the laptop at UK customs on arrival? Its value is more than the 390 GBP limit mentioned on gov.uk website for other goods. How does this rule actually apply? I will be taking my digital camera, phone and kindle also. Do I need to declare those? Should I pay duty on them?



      I imagine that this rule does not apply to items for personal use and which you will take back with you. Can somebody please clear this up for me?







      uk customs-and-immigration indian-citizens electronic-items






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked May 15 at 3:43









      VikkyVikky

      1228




      1228




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          10














          No. Everything you are taking to the U.K. you plan to take back with you when your tourist visit finishes. You do not need to pay duties on those items. You aren’t importing them to the U.K.




          Declaring goods to customs
          You must tell customs (known as ‘declaring’) on arrival in the UK if you have goods:



          • over your
            duty-free allowance

          • that are banned or restricted

          • that you plan to sell

          Use the red channel at customs if you have something to declare.
          If there’s no red channel, use the red-point phone to declare goods to customs.




          Gov.UK



          The duty free allowance section lists Alcohol and Tobacco for the limits you mention in the question. It does not seem to include personal use electronics.



          Must Read: Bringing goods into the UK



          Food for thought: If everybody bringing a laptop/cellphone for use was declaring it then the red channel would always be full. These days there is hardly any traveler without one of those items with them.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Thanks for your response. If I understand correctly this rule and limit of 390 GBP applies only for goods being brought into the UK for commercial use and not for personal use on my visit? Also it applies to UK residents returning to the UK from their visit abroad and not to tourists entering the UK? Is this correct?

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 7:24






          • 1





            Its not just about commercial goods, its about the intention. If you were to shift to the UK for an extended period that would then have different restrictions, If it is just a short tourist visit in which you are bringing things for your own use and you will take them back with you there is no custom duty to be paid. In fact any eligible purchases that you make in the UK, you can claim VAT refund on those when you leave the UK.

            – Hanky Panky
            May 15 at 7:30











          • I had read the link "Bringing goods into the UK" - the section "Allowance for other goods" in that got me thinking whether it applies to other personal belongings and hence my question. I will use the green channel with nothing to declare. Thank you for settling my doubts.

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 8:00






          • 2





            Just to clarify, "commercial goods" and "commercial use" in this context means things that you plan on selling, not tools that you use for work.

            – Moyli
            May 15 at 9:08






          • 2





            @Vikky It applies to goods that will stay in the UK after your visit. There's no duty on anything that you bring into the UK and then take out again.

            – David Richerby
            May 15 at 9:48


















          1














          Thousands of international business travellers arrive at Heathrow every day. If they had to declare their phones, laptops, etc it would be chaos. In my experience with the red channel at Heathrow, it's rarely manned, and they get grumpy when you do declare something (like a carnet)



          However once when I was getting a Carnet stamped at Manchester I had a grumpy customs officer tell me I should also have a carnet for my laptop.



          The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa.






          share|improve this answer























          • They probably have to take it all out when they depart (in most airports globally). Airports have no problem taking everyone through that. It's security theatre.

            – JJJ
            May 15 at 9:44











          • @JJJ If they wanted every arriving passenger to take their laptops and other electronics out, they'd have to build almost as much infrastructure to deal with that as they have for pre-flight security.

            – David Richerby
            May 15 at 9:50











          • @DavidRicherby yes, so that doesn't necessarily mean chaos. YPM would call it a job lot, tackle unemployment. Defense of the Realm, give those youngster a comprehensive education, well, to make up for their comprehensive education. Oh, those were the days, whwn Brittain was Greatest. Old times. ;p

            – JJJ
            May 15 at 10:03







          • 1





            @Paul "The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa." - Are you serious?? Isn't that a personal decision how I spend my time on my vacation? After all, I am responding to my current employer if really necessary - I am not seeking employment in the UK to support my visit or anything. Will the immigration or/and customs officer consider this a violation of the terms of my visa, if I mention it?Unless somebody asks I am not going to mention that I am carrying my work laptop. Please do let me know.

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 11:42







          • 1





            @Vikky Doing actual work whilst in the UK remotely whilst on a tourist visa isn't allowed by the UK. "If a person is being paid for work they are carrying out whilst in the UK it is considered that they are working" you're paid whilst on holiday so it would fall under that. There's much more detail here: talk.uk-yankee.com/index.php?topic=70129.0 I'd suggest not taking your laptop and actually having a holiday, if you got hit by a bus your employers would have to manage so let them learn to manage.

            – Ryan McDonough
            May 15 at 14:33












          Your Answer








          StackExchange.ready(function()
          var channelOptions =
          tags: "".split(" "),
          id: "273"
          ;
          initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

          StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
          // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
          if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
          StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
          createEditor();
          );

          else
          createEditor();

          );

          function createEditor()
          StackExchange.prepareEditor(
          heartbeatType: 'answer',
          autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
          convertImagesToLinks: false,
          noModals: true,
          showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
          reputationToPostImages: null,
          bindNavPrevention: true,
          postfix: "",
          imageUploader:
          brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
          contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
          allowUrls: true
          ,
          noCode: true, onDemand: true,
          discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
          ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
          );



          );













          draft saved

          draft discarded


















          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f138604%2fdo-i-need-to-declare-official-laptop-and-other-electronics-at-uk-customs%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown

























          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes








          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          10














          No. Everything you are taking to the U.K. you plan to take back with you when your tourist visit finishes. You do not need to pay duties on those items. You aren’t importing them to the U.K.




          Declaring goods to customs
          You must tell customs (known as ‘declaring’) on arrival in the UK if you have goods:



          • over your
            duty-free allowance

          • that are banned or restricted

          • that you plan to sell

          Use the red channel at customs if you have something to declare.
          If there’s no red channel, use the red-point phone to declare goods to customs.




          Gov.UK



          The duty free allowance section lists Alcohol and Tobacco for the limits you mention in the question. It does not seem to include personal use electronics.



          Must Read: Bringing goods into the UK



          Food for thought: If everybody bringing a laptop/cellphone for use was declaring it then the red channel would always be full. These days there is hardly any traveler without one of those items with them.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Thanks for your response. If I understand correctly this rule and limit of 390 GBP applies only for goods being brought into the UK for commercial use and not for personal use on my visit? Also it applies to UK residents returning to the UK from their visit abroad and not to tourists entering the UK? Is this correct?

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 7:24






          • 1





            Its not just about commercial goods, its about the intention. If you were to shift to the UK for an extended period that would then have different restrictions, If it is just a short tourist visit in which you are bringing things for your own use and you will take them back with you there is no custom duty to be paid. In fact any eligible purchases that you make in the UK, you can claim VAT refund on those when you leave the UK.

            – Hanky Panky
            May 15 at 7:30











          • I had read the link "Bringing goods into the UK" - the section "Allowance for other goods" in that got me thinking whether it applies to other personal belongings and hence my question. I will use the green channel with nothing to declare. Thank you for settling my doubts.

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 8:00






          • 2





            Just to clarify, "commercial goods" and "commercial use" in this context means things that you plan on selling, not tools that you use for work.

            – Moyli
            May 15 at 9:08






          • 2





            @Vikky It applies to goods that will stay in the UK after your visit. There's no duty on anything that you bring into the UK and then take out again.

            – David Richerby
            May 15 at 9:48















          10














          No. Everything you are taking to the U.K. you plan to take back with you when your tourist visit finishes. You do not need to pay duties on those items. You aren’t importing them to the U.K.




          Declaring goods to customs
          You must tell customs (known as ‘declaring’) on arrival in the UK if you have goods:



          • over your
            duty-free allowance

          • that are banned or restricted

          • that you plan to sell

          Use the red channel at customs if you have something to declare.
          If there’s no red channel, use the red-point phone to declare goods to customs.




          Gov.UK



          The duty free allowance section lists Alcohol and Tobacco for the limits you mention in the question. It does not seem to include personal use electronics.



          Must Read: Bringing goods into the UK



          Food for thought: If everybody bringing a laptop/cellphone for use was declaring it then the red channel would always be full. These days there is hardly any traveler without one of those items with them.






          share|improve this answer

























          • Thanks for your response. If I understand correctly this rule and limit of 390 GBP applies only for goods being brought into the UK for commercial use and not for personal use on my visit? Also it applies to UK residents returning to the UK from their visit abroad and not to tourists entering the UK? Is this correct?

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 7:24






          • 1





            Its not just about commercial goods, its about the intention. If you were to shift to the UK for an extended period that would then have different restrictions, If it is just a short tourist visit in which you are bringing things for your own use and you will take them back with you there is no custom duty to be paid. In fact any eligible purchases that you make in the UK, you can claim VAT refund on those when you leave the UK.

            – Hanky Panky
            May 15 at 7:30











          • I had read the link "Bringing goods into the UK" - the section "Allowance for other goods" in that got me thinking whether it applies to other personal belongings and hence my question. I will use the green channel with nothing to declare. Thank you for settling my doubts.

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 8:00






          • 2





            Just to clarify, "commercial goods" and "commercial use" in this context means things that you plan on selling, not tools that you use for work.

            – Moyli
            May 15 at 9:08






          • 2





            @Vikky It applies to goods that will stay in the UK after your visit. There's no duty on anything that you bring into the UK and then take out again.

            – David Richerby
            May 15 at 9:48













          10












          10








          10







          No. Everything you are taking to the U.K. you plan to take back with you when your tourist visit finishes. You do not need to pay duties on those items. You aren’t importing them to the U.K.




          Declaring goods to customs
          You must tell customs (known as ‘declaring’) on arrival in the UK if you have goods:



          • over your
            duty-free allowance

          • that are banned or restricted

          • that you plan to sell

          Use the red channel at customs if you have something to declare.
          If there’s no red channel, use the red-point phone to declare goods to customs.




          Gov.UK



          The duty free allowance section lists Alcohol and Tobacco for the limits you mention in the question. It does not seem to include personal use electronics.



          Must Read: Bringing goods into the UK



          Food for thought: If everybody bringing a laptop/cellphone for use was declaring it then the red channel would always be full. These days there is hardly any traveler without one of those items with them.






          share|improve this answer















          No. Everything you are taking to the U.K. you plan to take back with you when your tourist visit finishes. You do not need to pay duties on those items. You aren’t importing them to the U.K.




          Declaring goods to customs
          You must tell customs (known as ‘declaring’) on arrival in the UK if you have goods:



          • over your
            duty-free allowance

          • that are banned or restricted

          • that you plan to sell

          Use the red channel at customs if you have something to declare.
          If there’s no red channel, use the red-point phone to declare goods to customs.




          Gov.UK



          The duty free allowance section lists Alcohol and Tobacco for the limits you mention in the question. It does not seem to include personal use electronics.



          Must Read: Bringing goods into the UK



          Food for thought: If everybody bringing a laptop/cellphone for use was declaring it then the red channel would always be full. These days there is hardly any traveler without one of those items with them.







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited May 15 at 7:44

























          answered May 15 at 4:55









          Hanky PankyHanky Panky

          27k480134




          27k480134












          • Thanks for your response. If I understand correctly this rule and limit of 390 GBP applies only for goods being brought into the UK for commercial use and not for personal use on my visit? Also it applies to UK residents returning to the UK from their visit abroad and not to tourists entering the UK? Is this correct?

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 7:24






          • 1





            Its not just about commercial goods, its about the intention. If you were to shift to the UK for an extended period that would then have different restrictions, If it is just a short tourist visit in which you are bringing things for your own use and you will take them back with you there is no custom duty to be paid. In fact any eligible purchases that you make in the UK, you can claim VAT refund on those when you leave the UK.

            – Hanky Panky
            May 15 at 7:30











          • I had read the link "Bringing goods into the UK" - the section "Allowance for other goods" in that got me thinking whether it applies to other personal belongings and hence my question. I will use the green channel with nothing to declare. Thank you for settling my doubts.

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 8:00






          • 2





            Just to clarify, "commercial goods" and "commercial use" in this context means things that you plan on selling, not tools that you use for work.

            – Moyli
            May 15 at 9:08






          • 2





            @Vikky It applies to goods that will stay in the UK after your visit. There's no duty on anything that you bring into the UK and then take out again.

            – David Richerby
            May 15 at 9:48

















          • Thanks for your response. If I understand correctly this rule and limit of 390 GBP applies only for goods being brought into the UK for commercial use and not for personal use on my visit? Also it applies to UK residents returning to the UK from their visit abroad and not to tourists entering the UK? Is this correct?

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 7:24






          • 1





            Its not just about commercial goods, its about the intention. If you were to shift to the UK for an extended period that would then have different restrictions, If it is just a short tourist visit in which you are bringing things for your own use and you will take them back with you there is no custom duty to be paid. In fact any eligible purchases that you make in the UK, you can claim VAT refund on those when you leave the UK.

            – Hanky Panky
            May 15 at 7:30











          • I had read the link "Bringing goods into the UK" - the section "Allowance for other goods" in that got me thinking whether it applies to other personal belongings and hence my question. I will use the green channel with nothing to declare. Thank you for settling my doubts.

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 8:00






          • 2





            Just to clarify, "commercial goods" and "commercial use" in this context means things that you plan on selling, not tools that you use for work.

            – Moyli
            May 15 at 9:08






          • 2





            @Vikky It applies to goods that will stay in the UK after your visit. There's no duty on anything that you bring into the UK and then take out again.

            – David Richerby
            May 15 at 9:48
















          Thanks for your response. If I understand correctly this rule and limit of 390 GBP applies only for goods being brought into the UK for commercial use and not for personal use on my visit? Also it applies to UK residents returning to the UK from their visit abroad and not to tourists entering the UK? Is this correct?

          – Vikky
          May 15 at 7:24





          Thanks for your response. If I understand correctly this rule and limit of 390 GBP applies only for goods being brought into the UK for commercial use and not for personal use on my visit? Also it applies to UK residents returning to the UK from their visit abroad and not to tourists entering the UK? Is this correct?

          – Vikky
          May 15 at 7:24




          1




          1





          Its not just about commercial goods, its about the intention. If you were to shift to the UK for an extended period that would then have different restrictions, If it is just a short tourist visit in which you are bringing things for your own use and you will take them back with you there is no custom duty to be paid. In fact any eligible purchases that you make in the UK, you can claim VAT refund on those when you leave the UK.

          – Hanky Panky
          May 15 at 7:30





          Its not just about commercial goods, its about the intention. If you were to shift to the UK for an extended period that would then have different restrictions, If it is just a short tourist visit in which you are bringing things for your own use and you will take them back with you there is no custom duty to be paid. In fact any eligible purchases that you make in the UK, you can claim VAT refund on those when you leave the UK.

          – Hanky Panky
          May 15 at 7:30













          I had read the link "Bringing goods into the UK" - the section "Allowance for other goods" in that got me thinking whether it applies to other personal belongings and hence my question. I will use the green channel with nothing to declare. Thank you for settling my doubts.

          – Vikky
          May 15 at 8:00





          I had read the link "Bringing goods into the UK" - the section "Allowance for other goods" in that got me thinking whether it applies to other personal belongings and hence my question. I will use the green channel with nothing to declare. Thank you for settling my doubts.

          – Vikky
          May 15 at 8:00




          2




          2





          Just to clarify, "commercial goods" and "commercial use" in this context means things that you plan on selling, not tools that you use for work.

          – Moyli
          May 15 at 9:08





          Just to clarify, "commercial goods" and "commercial use" in this context means things that you plan on selling, not tools that you use for work.

          – Moyli
          May 15 at 9:08




          2




          2





          @Vikky It applies to goods that will stay in the UK after your visit. There's no duty on anything that you bring into the UK and then take out again.

          – David Richerby
          May 15 at 9:48





          @Vikky It applies to goods that will stay in the UK after your visit. There's no duty on anything that you bring into the UK and then take out again.

          – David Richerby
          May 15 at 9:48













          1














          Thousands of international business travellers arrive at Heathrow every day. If they had to declare their phones, laptops, etc it would be chaos. In my experience with the red channel at Heathrow, it's rarely manned, and they get grumpy when you do declare something (like a carnet)



          However once when I was getting a Carnet stamped at Manchester I had a grumpy customs officer tell me I should also have a carnet for my laptop.



          The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa.






          share|improve this answer























          • They probably have to take it all out when they depart (in most airports globally). Airports have no problem taking everyone through that. It's security theatre.

            – JJJ
            May 15 at 9:44











          • @JJJ If they wanted every arriving passenger to take their laptops and other electronics out, they'd have to build almost as much infrastructure to deal with that as they have for pre-flight security.

            – David Richerby
            May 15 at 9:50











          • @DavidRicherby yes, so that doesn't necessarily mean chaos. YPM would call it a job lot, tackle unemployment. Defense of the Realm, give those youngster a comprehensive education, well, to make up for their comprehensive education. Oh, those were the days, whwn Brittain was Greatest. Old times. ;p

            – JJJ
            May 15 at 10:03







          • 1





            @Paul "The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa." - Are you serious?? Isn't that a personal decision how I spend my time on my vacation? After all, I am responding to my current employer if really necessary - I am not seeking employment in the UK to support my visit or anything. Will the immigration or/and customs officer consider this a violation of the terms of my visa, if I mention it?Unless somebody asks I am not going to mention that I am carrying my work laptop. Please do let me know.

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 11:42







          • 1





            @Vikky Doing actual work whilst in the UK remotely whilst on a tourist visa isn't allowed by the UK. "If a person is being paid for work they are carrying out whilst in the UK it is considered that they are working" you're paid whilst on holiday so it would fall under that. There's much more detail here: talk.uk-yankee.com/index.php?topic=70129.0 I'd suggest not taking your laptop and actually having a holiday, if you got hit by a bus your employers would have to manage so let them learn to manage.

            – Ryan McDonough
            May 15 at 14:33
















          1














          Thousands of international business travellers arrive at Heathrow every day. If they had to declare their phones, laptops, etc it would be chaos. In my experience with the red channel at Heathrow, it's rarely manned, and they get grumpy when you do declare something (like a carnet)



          However once when I was getting a Carnet stamped at Manchester I had a grumpy customs officer tell me I should also have a carnet for my laptop.



          The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa.






          share|improve this answer























          • They probably have to take it all out when they depart (in most airports globally). Airports have no problem taking everyone through that. It's security theatre.

            – JJJ
            May 15 at 9:44











          • @JJJ If they wanted every arriving passenger to take their laptops and other electronics out, they'd have to build almost as much infrastructure to deal with that as they have for pre-flight security.

            – David Richerby
            May 15 at 9:50











          • @DavidRicherby yes, so that doesn't necessarily mean chaos. YPM would call it a job lot, tackle unemployment. Defense of the Realm, give those youngster a comprehensive education, well, to make up for their comprehensive education. Oh, those were the days, whwn Brittain was Greatest. Old times. ;p

            – JJJ
            May 15 at 10:03







          • 1





            @Paul "The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa." - Are you serious?? Isn't that a personal decision how I spend my time on my vacation? After all, I am responding to my current employer if really necessary - I am not seeking employment in the UK to support my visit or anything. Will the immigration or/and customs officer consider this a violation of the terms of my visa, if I mention it?Unless somebody asks I am not going to mention that I am carrying my work laptop. Please do let me know.

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 11:42







          • 1





            @Vikky Doing actual work whilst in the UK remotely whilst on a tourist visa isn't allowed by the UK. "If a person is being paid for work they are carrying out whilst in the UK it is considered that they are working" you're paid whilst on holiday so it would fall under that. There's much more detail here: talk.uk-yankee.com/index.php?topic=70129.0 I'd suggest not taking your laptop and actually having a holiday, if you got hit by a bus your employers would have to manage so let them learn to manage.

            – Ryan McDonough
            May 15 at 14:33














          1












          1








          1







          Thousands of international business travellers arrive at Heathrow every day. If they had to declare their phones, laptops, etc it would be chaos. In my experience with the red channel at Heathrow, it's rarely manned, and they get grumpy when you do declare something (like a carnet)



          However once when I was getting a Carnet stamped at Manchester I had a grumpy customs officer tell me I should also have a carnet for my laptop.



          The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa.






          share|improve this answer













          Thousands of international business travellers arrive at Heathrow every day. If they had to declare their phones, laptops, etc it would be chaos. In my experience with the red channel at Heathrow, it's rarely manned, and they get grumpy when you do declare something (like a carnet)



          However once when I was getting a Carnet stamped at Manchester I had a grumpy customs officer tell me I should also have a carnet for my laptop.



          The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered May 15 at 9:36









          PaulPaul

          191




          191












          • They probably have to take it all out when they depart (in most airports globally). Airports have no problem taking everyone through that. It's security theatre.

            – JJJ
            May 15 at 9:44











          • @JJJ If they wanted every arriving passenger to take their laptops and other electronics out, they'd have to build almost as much infrastructure to deal with that as they have for pre-flight security.

            – David Richerby
            May 15 at 9:50











          • @DavidRicherby yes, so that doesn't necessarily mean chaos. YPM would call it a job lot, tackle unemployment. Defense of the Realm, give those youngster a comprehensive education, well, to make up for their comprehensive education. Oh, those were the days, whwn Brittain was Greatest. Old times. ;p

            – JJJ
            May 15 at 10:03







          • 1





            @Paul "The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa." - Are you serious?? Isn't that a personal decision how I spend my time on my vacation? After all, I am responding to my current employer if really necessary - I am not seeking employment in the UK to support my visit or anything. Will the immigration or/and customs officer consider this a violation of the terms of my visa, if I mention it?Unless somebody asks I am not going to mention that I am carrying my work laptop. Please do let me know.

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 11:42







          • 1





            @Vikky Doing actual work whilst in the UK remotely whilst on a tourist visa isn't allowed by the UK. "If a person is being paid for work they are carrying out whilst in the UK it is considered that they are working" you're paid whilst on holiday so it would fall under that. There's much more detail here: talk.uk-yankee.com/index.php?topic=70129.0 I'd suggest not taking your laptop and actually having a holiday, if you got hit by a bus your employers would have to manage so let them learn to manage.

            – Ryan McDonough
            May 15 at 14:33


















          • They probably have to take it all out when they depart (in most airports globally). Airports have no problem taking everyone through that. It's security theatre.

            – JJJ
            May 15 at 9:44











          • @JJJ If they wanted every arriving passenger to take their laptops and other electronics out, they'd have to build almost as much infrastructure to deal with that as they have for pre-flight security.

            – David Richerby
            May 15 at 9:50











          • @DavidRicherby yes, so that doesn't necessarily mean chaos. YPM would call it a job lot, tackle unemployment. Defense of the Realm, give those youngster a comprehensive education, well, to make up for their comprehensive education. Oh, those were the days, whwn Brittain was Greatest. Old times. ;p

            – JJJ
            May 15 at 10:03







          • 1





            @Paul "The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa." - Are you serious?? Isn't that a personal decision how I spend my time on my vacation? After all, I am responding to my current employer if really necessary - I am not seeking employment in the UK to support my visit or anything. Will the immigration or/and customs officer consider this a violation of the terms of my visa, if I mention it?Unless somebody asks I am not going to mention that I am carrying my work laptop. Please do let me know.

            – Vikky
            May 15 at 11:42







          • 1





            @Vikky Doing actual work whilst in the UK remotely whilst on a tourist visa isn't allowed by the UK. "If a person is being paid for work they are carrying out whilst in the UK it is considered that they are working" you're paid whilst on holiday so it would fall under that. There's much more detail here: talk.uk-yankee.com/index.php?topic=70129.0 I'd suggest not taking your laptop and actually having a holiday, if you got hit by a bus your employers would have to manage so let them learn to manage.

            – Ryan McDonough
            May 15 at 14:33

















          They probably have to take it all out when they depart (in most airports globally). Airports have no problem taking everyone through that. It's security theatre.

          – JJJ
          May 15 at 9:44





          They probably have to take it all out when they depart (in most airports globally). Airports have no problem taking everyone through that. It's security theatre.

          – JJJ
          May 15 at 9:44













          @JJJ If they wanted every arriving passenger to take their laptops and other electronics out, they'd have to build almost as much infrastructure to deal with that as they have for pre-flight security.

          – David Richerby
          May 15 at 9:50





          @JJJ If they wanted every arriving passenger to take their laptops and other electronics out, they'd have to build almost as much infrastructure to deal with that as they have for pre-flight security.

          – David Richerby
          May 15 at 9:50













          @DavidRicherby yes, so that doesn't necessarily mean chaos. YPM would call it a job lot, tackle unemployment. Defense of the Realm, give those youngster a comprehensive education, well, to make up for their comprehensive education. Oh, those were the days, whwn Brittain was Greatest. Old times. ;p

          – JJJ
          May 15 at 10:03






          @DavidRicherby yes, so that doesn't necessarily mean chaos. YPM would call it a job lot, tackle unemployment. Defense of the Realm, give those youngster a comprehensive education, well, to make up for their comprehensive education. Oh, those were the days, whwn Brittain was Greatest. Old times. ;p

          – JJJ
          May 15 at 10:03





          1




          1





          @Paul "The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa." - Are you serious?? Isn't that a personal decision how I spend my time on my vacation? After all, I am responding to my current employer if really necessary - I am not seeking employment in the UK to support my visit or anything. Will the immigration or/and customs officer consider this a violation of the terms of my visa, if I mention it?Unless somebody asks I am not going to mention that I am carrying my work laptop. Please do let me know.

          – Vikky
          May 15 at 11:42






          @Paul "The bigger problem would be responding to work while on vacation -- that may well not be allowed under the conditions of your visa." - Are you serious?? Isn't that a personal decision how I spend my time on my vacation? After all, I am responding to my current employer if really necessary - I am not seeking employment in the UK to support my visit or anything. Will the immigration or/and customs officer consider this a violation of the terms of my visa, if I mention it?Unless somebody asks I am not going to mention that I am carrying my work laptop. Please do let me know.

          – Vikky
          May 15 at 11:42





          1




          1





          @Vikky Doing actual work whilst in the UK remotely whilst on a tourist visa isn't allowed by the UK. "If a person is being paid for work they are carrying out whilst in the UK it is considered that they are working" you're paid whilst on holiday so it would fall under that. There's much more detail here: talk.uk-yankee.com/index.php?topic=70129.0 I'd suggest not taking your laptop and actually having a holiday, if you got hit by a bus your employers would have to manage so let them learn to manage.

          – Ryan McDonough
          May 15 at 14:33






          @Vikky Doing actual work whilst in the UK remotely whilst on a tourist visa isn't allowed by the UK. "If a person is being paid for work they are carrying out whilst in the UK it is considered that they are working" you're paid whilst on holiday so it would fall under that. There's much more detail here: talk.uk-yankee.com/index.php?topic=70129.0 I'd suggest not taking your laptop and actually having a holiday, if you got hit by a bus your employers would have to manage so let them learn to manage.

          – Ryan McDonough
          May 15 at 14:33


















          draft saved

          draft discarded
















































          Thanks for contributing an answer to Travel Stack Exchange!


          • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

          But avoid


          • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

          • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

          To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




          draft saved


          draft discarded














          StackExchange.ready(
          function ()
          StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2ftravel.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f138604%2fdo-i-need-to-declare-official-laptop-and-other-electronics-at-uk-customs%23new-answer', 'question_page');

          );

          Post as a guest















          Required, but never shown





















































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown

































          Required, but never shown














          Required, but never shown












          Required, but never shown







          Required, but never shown







          Popular posts from this blog

          Club Baloncesto Breogán Índice Historia | Pavillón | Nome | O Breogán na cultura popular | Xogadores | Adestradores | Presidentes | Palmarés | Historial | Líderes | Notas | Véxase tamén | Menú de navegacióncbbreogan.galCadroGuía oficial da ACB 2009-10, páxina 201Guía oficial ACB 1992, páxina 183. Editorial DB.É de 6.500 espectadores sentados axeitándose á última normativa"Estudiantes Junior, entre as mellores canteiras"o orixinalHemeroteca El Mundo Deportivo, 16 setembro de 1970, páxina 12Historia do BreogánAlfredo Pérez, o último canoneiroHistoria C.B. BreogánHemeroteca de El Mundo DeportivoJimmy Wright, norteamericano do Breogán deixará Lugo por ameazas de morteResultados de Breogán en 1986-87Resultados de Breogán en 1990-91Ficha de Velimir Perasović en acb.comResultados de Breogán en 1994-95Breogán arrasa al Barça. "El Mundo Deportivo", 27 de setembro de 1999, páxina 58CB Breogán - FC BarcelonaA FEB invita a participar nunha nova Liga EuropeaCharlie Bell na prensa estatalMáximos anotadores 2005Tempada 2005-06 : Tódolos Xogadores da Xornada""Non quero pensar nunha man negra, mais pregúntome que está a pasar""o orixinalRaúl López, orgulloso dos xogadores, presume da boa saúde económica do BreogánJulio González confirma que cesa como presidente del BreogánHomenaxe a Lisardo GómezA tempada do rexurdimento celesteEntrevista a Lisardo GómezEl COB dinamita el Pazo para forzar el quinto (69-73)Cafés Candelas, patrocinador del CB Breogán"Suso Lázare, novo presidente do Breogán"o orixinalCafés Candelas Breogán firma el mayor triunfo de la historiaEl Breogán realizará 17 homenajes por su cincuenta aniversario"O Breogán honra ao seu fundador e primeiro presidente"o orixinalMiguel Giao recibiu a homenaxe do PazoHomenaxe aos primeiros gladiadores celestesO home que nos amosa como ver o Breo co corazónTita Franco será homenaxeada polos #50anosdeBreoJulio Vila recibirá unha homenaxe in memoriam polos #50anosdeBreo"O Breogán homenaxeará aos seus aboados máis veteráns"Pechada ovación a «Capi» Sanmartín e Ricardo «Corazón de González»Homenaxe por décadas de informaciónPaco García volve ao Pazo con motivo do 50 aniversario"Resultados y clasificaciones""O Cafés Candelas Breogán, campión da Copa Princesa""O Cafés Candelas Breogán, equipo ACB"C.B. Breogán"Proxecto social"o orixinal"Centros asociados"o orixinalFicha en imdb.comMario Camus trata la recuperación del amor en 'La vieja música', su última película"Páxina web oficial""Club Baloncesto Breogán""C. B. Breogán S.A.D."eehttp://www.fegaba.com

          Vilaño, A Laracha Índice Patrimonio | Lugares e parroquias | Véxase tamén | Menú de navegación43°14′52″N 8°36′03″O / 43.24775, -8.60070

          Cegueira Índice Epidemioloxía | Deficiencia visual | Tipos de cegueira | Principais causas de cegueira | Tratamento | Técnicas de adaptación e axudas | Vida dos cegos | Primeiros auxilios | Crenzas respecto das persoas cegas | Crenzas das persoas cegas | O neno deficiente visual | Aspectos psicolóxicos da cegueira | Notas | Véxase tamén | Menú de navegación54.054.154.436928256blindnessDicionario da Real Academia GalegaPortal das Palabras"International Standards: Visual Standards — Aspects and Ranges of Vision Loss with Emphasis on Population Surveys.""Visual impairment and blindness""Presentan un plan para previr a cegueira"o orixinalACCDV Associació Catalana de Cecs i Disminuïts Visuals - PMFTrachoma"Effect of gene therapy on visual function in Leber's congenital amaurosis"1844137110.1056/NEJMoa0802268Cans guía - os mellores amigos dos cegosArquivadoEscola de cans guía para cegos en Mortágua, PortugalArquivado"Tecnología para ciegos y deficientes visuales. Recopilación de recursos gratuitos en la Red""Colorino""‘COL.diesis’, escuchar los sonidos del color""COL.diesis: Transforming Colour into Melody and Implementing the Result in a Colour Sensor Device"o orixinal"Sistema de desarrollo de sinestesia color-sonido para invidentes utilizando un protocolo de audio""Enseñanza táctil - geometría y color. Juegos didácticos para niños ciegos y videntes""Sistema Constanz"L'ocupació laboral dels cecs a l'Estat espanyol està pràcticament equiparada a la de les persones amb visió, entrevista amb Pedro ZuritaONCE (Organización Nacional de Cegos de España)Prevención da cegueiraDescrición de deficiencias visuais (Disc@pnet)Braillín, un boneco atractivo para calquera neno, con ou sen discapacidade, que permite familiarizarse co sistema de escritura e lectura brailleAxudas Técnicas36838ID00897494007150-90057129528256DOID:1432HP:0000618D001766C10.597.751.941.162C97109C0155020