Tobacco duty limits were reduced to 50 cigarettes, or a 50g, from November 1, 2014. Photo / Supplied
Tobacco duty limits were reduced to 50 cigarettes, or a 50g, from November 1, 2014. Photo / Supplied
Almost 4 tonnes of tobacco was abandoned at New Zealand airports since duty free limits were dropped last November.
Nearly 500kg of tobacco products per month were dumped at the border in the first few months of the lower limit being introduced, Customs Minister Nicky Wagner said today.
That figuredropped to just over 250kg in September, she said.
Tobacco duty limits were reduced to 50 cigarettes, or a 50g, from November 1, 2014.
Since then 3.8 tonnes of tobacco products have been dumped in Customs bins at international airports across the country - enough to fill a 20ft shipping container.
"Travellers have got the message," Ms Wagner said.
"I'm pleased the duty free change is deterring travellers from bringing tobacco through the border - this contributes to reducing the harm caused by smoking and the Government's goal of making New Zealand smoke-free by 2025.
"Hundreds of kilograms of tobacco sent by mail also end up as unclaimed cargo if importers don't pay the duty. This all adds to the significant quantity of tobacco that Customs destroys on a regular basis."