Unverified, confirm before publishing. The fee and its effective date below are reported by a single source, ChannelEngine. Verify the amount and the July 1, 2026 date before publishing or repeating them.
If you sell on Amazon Europe with cheap, low-ticket parcels shipped in from outside the bloc, a new fee is aimed closer to your business than you might think. In February 2026, EU regulators solidified a three euro customs fee on small parcels from Shein and Temu, effective July 1, 2026, according to ChannelEngine (Feb 25, 2026). It gets reported as a Shein and Temu story, so most brands assume it does not apply to them. But the model under attack is cheap parcels crossing the EU border, and plenty of legitimate brands run exactly that model on low-ticket items.
Three euros sounds trivial until you put it against a product with a thin per-parcel margin. If your margin is slimmer than the fee, the fee does not dent your economics, it erases them.
Why this is not just a Shein and Temu problem
The temu vs amazon framing makes it easy to file this under someone else's problem. The fee was clearly designed with high-volume, ultra-cheap cross-border sellers in mind (ChannelEngine, Feb 25, 2026). But regulation targets a shipping model, not a brand name. Any seller moving low-ticket parcels across the EU border pays the same fee, whether the logo on the box is a giant marketplace or your own.
So the real question is not whether you are Shein or the temu marketplace. It is whether your EU strategy depends on cheap parcels crossing the border with margins thinner than three euros. If it does, this is a business-model event for you too.
Run the math per SKU before July
The mistake is to react at the category level and either panic or ignore it. The right move is per-SKU. For every low-ticket product you ship into the EU from outside it, add three euros of cost and see what survives. Some SKUs absorb it fine. Some go from thin to negative. You want to know which is which before July, not after your first month of quietly unprofitable orders.
This is the same discipline that separates brands that sell on Amazon Europe profitably from those that assume the tide carries them. Know your true per-SKU economics, and the fee becomes a planning input instead of a surprise.
Two ways to protect your EU margin
There are two clean responses. The first is to localize fulfillment inside the EU so you stop paying per-parcel border costs on the affected products. If your goods sit inside the bloc, the small-parcel border fee stops being the thing that decides your margin. Understanding how to sell on amazon europe with local inventory is the durable fix, not a workaround.
The second is to move your low-ticket EU strategy up-market, where three euros is a rounding error rather than a margin killer. If a product cannot survive the fee at its current price and cannot be localized economically, it may simply not belong in your cross-border EU mix. Our Amazon growth team helps model both paths per SKU so you decide with numbers.
Do not wait for the deadline to reprice
The worst position is repricing under pressure on July 1 because you did not run the numbers in advance. The brands that come through this cleanly are the ones that treated February's confirmation as their signal to model the fee now. Decide which SKUs localize, which move up-market, and which get cut, and make those calls on your own timeline. If you want that folded into a managed EU expansion, a growth retainer keeps the per-SKU economics current as the rules keep moving.