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  • International Travel

    Posted by Mike Cohen on June 28, 2013 at 1:43 am

    We have not had a thread on this for a while. Some say to get a Carnet others say just a document showing serial numbers is enough for customs. And it seems getting back to the US is a bigger issue than getting into other countries with video gear.

    Anyone care to share recent non-journalism experiences? Do news crews have it any easier than the rest of us?

    Mike Cohen

    Peter Rummel replied 12 years, 10 months ago 2 Members · 1 Reply
  • 1 Reply
  • Peter Rummel

    June 28, 2013 at 8:08 pm

    It depends on what countries you’re going to. Not all are signatories to the carnet agreement. If memory serves, most Latin American countries don’t use carnets. On a shoot in Argentina years ago we had a letter from their tourism board, on letterhead, inviting us to shoot there. We talked our way through customs with that, although technically we should have been using a local company for short term import-export of the gear.

    I’ve been doing European shoots for a company about once a year since 1999. The Producer there has tremendous experience in international travel. Last year was the first year they didn’t purchase a carnet. The producer reasoned they were expensive, a hassle, and MOST of the time the customs folks didn’t seem too thrilled to have to deal with them. He thinks that most of Europe is OK without a carnet.

    And that’s the point – customs has a great deal of latitude in how they deal with you. Are they having a good day? Bad day? Maybe they’re busy and don’t want to deal with the carnet paperwork? Maybe they’ve just been given directions to crack down on TV crews? If I was producing, I’d have a carnet any time I was traveling to shoot in a signatory country. I just have a low tolerance for uncertainty.

    As for getting back in to the US (if you don’t have a carnet), back in the day when I used to commonly have shoots in Canada I used a Certificate of Registration. This was a (free!) US customs form I filled out with all the gear info, then I had it stamped by US customs on my way out of the country. If there was any questions about the gear when returning I had paperwork showing that I hadn’t bought it overseas. On a quick google search I found this – https://forms.cbp.gov/pdf/CBP_Form_4455.pdf – which looks different than the old form but seems to do the same thing. I would suggest having a friendly chat with US customs to make sure this is the right form to use.

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