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Oct 24, 2025

Munich Customs Seize €69,000 in Gold from Returning Holiday-Makers, Issue Travel Advisory

Munich Customs Seize €69,000 in Gold from Returning Holiday-Makers, Issue Travel Advisory
As Bavarian schools head into autumn recess, Munich’s Hauptzollamt Rosenheim published an extraordinary enforcement bulletin on 24 October 2025 detailing recent seizures from holiday returnees. In three separate incidents, officers confiscated undeclared gold jewellery worth a combined €69,000 and levied €9,000 in duties and immediate-payment fines. One passenger had woven chains into her handbag lining; another stuffed bangles into socks concealed in luggage.

Customs officials used the cases to remind travellers that the duty-free allowance for arrivals by road is €300 per adult and €175 for children—figures many holidaymakers underestimate. They also warned that smuggling-related criminal records can jeopardise future visa applications and trusted-traveller programme membership.

Why it matters for global-mobility teams: assignees frequently combine home leave with shopping trips to Türkiye or the Gulf, then re-enter Germany via road or short-haul flights. An undeclared luxury watch or bullion coin can trigger criminal proceedings, putting residence permits at risk. HR should incorporate customs-compliance briefings into pre-vacation sessions and remind staff that fines must often be paid on the spot.

With the EU’s Entry/Exit System now collecting biometric data, repeat offenders are more easily identified. Travel managers may therefore see an uptick in secondary inspections at Munich, Stuttgart and Salzburg airports during the October–December holiday peaks.

Customs also published an English-language update of its brochure “Reisezeit—Ihr Weg durch den Zoll,” which relocation providers can distribute digitally. The leaflet includes QR codes linking to value-calculator apps that estimate duties on jewellery, electronics and tobacco.
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