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The Best Destinations for Serious Shoppers
(Duty Free Shopping)
Article Provided by:
Frommer's Caribbean 2006
Because the U.S. government allows its citizens to take (or send) home more
duty-free goods from the U.S. Virgins than from other ports of call, the U.S.
Virgin Islands remain the shopping bazaar of the Caribbean. U.S. citizens may
carry home $1,200 worth of goods untaxed, as opposed to only $400 worth of goods
from most other islands in the Caribbean. (The only exception to this rule is
Puerto Rico, where any purchase, regardless of the amount, can be carried tax
free back to the U.S. mainland.) St. Maarten/St. Martin, which is ruled jointly
by France and the Netherlands, gives the Virgins some serious shopping
competition. It is virtually a shopper's mall, especially on the Dutch side.
Although the U.S. doesn't grant the generous customs allowances on St. Maarten/St.
Martin that it does to its own islands, the island doesn't have duty so you
still can find some lovely bargains.
Aruba: The
wisest shoppers on Aruba are cost-conscious souls who have carefully checked the
prices of comparable goods before leaving home. Duty is relatively low (only
3.3%). Much of the European china, jewelry, perfumes, watches, and crystal has a
disconcerting habit of reappearing in every shopping mall and hotel boutique on
the island, so after you determine exactly which brand of watch or china you
want, you can comparison shop.
Barbados: Local
shops seem to specialize in all things English. Merchandise includes bone china
from British and Irish manufacturers, watches, jewelry, and perfumes.
Bridgetown's Broad Street is the shopping headquarters of the island, although
some of the stores here maintain boutiques (with similar prices but a less
extensive range of merchandise) at many of the island's hotels and in malls
along the congested southwestern coast. Except for cigarettes and tobacco,
duty-free items can be hauled off by any buyer as soon as they're paid for.
Duty-free status is extended to anyone showing a passport or ID and an airline
ticket with a date of departure from Barbados.
The
Cayman Islands:
Goods are sold tax free from a daunting collection of malls and minimalls
throughout Grand Cayman. Most of these are along the highway that parallels
Seven Mile Beach; you'll need a car to shop around. There are also lots of
stores in George Town, which you can explore on foot, poking in and out of some
large emporiums in your search for bargains.
Curaçao: In the
island's capital, tidy and prosperous Willemstad, hundreds of merchants are only
too happy to cater to your needs. A handful of malls lie on Willemstad's
outskirts, but most shops are clustered within a few blocks of the center of
town. During seasonal sales, goods might be up to 50% less than comparable
prices in the United States; most of the year, you'll find luxury items
(porcelain, crystal, watches, and gemstones) priced at about 25% less than in
the U.S. Technically, you'll pay import duties on virtually everything you buy,
but rates are so low you may not even notice.
The
Dominican Republic:
The island's best buys include handcrafts, amber from Dominican mines, and the
distinctive pale-blue semiprecious gemstone known as larimar. The amber
sold by street vendors may be nothing more than orange-colored, transparent
plastic; buy only from well-established shops if your investment is a large one.
Other charming souvenirs might include a Dominican rocking chair (remember the
one JFK used to sit in?), which is sold boxed, in ready-to-assemble pieces.
Malls and souvenir stands abound in Santo Domingo, in Puerto Plata, and along
the country's northern coast.
Jamaica: The
shopping was better in the good old days, before new taxes added a 10%
surcharge. Despite that, Jamaica offers a wealth of desirable goods, including
flavored rums, Jamaican coffees, handcrafts (such as woodcarvings, woven
baskets, and sandals), original paintings and sculpture, and cameras, watches,
and DVD players. Unless you're a glutton for handmade souvenirs (which are
available on virtually every beach and street corner), you'd be wise to limit
most of your purchases to bona fide merchants and stores.
Puerto Rico: For
U.S. citizens, there's no duty on anything bought in Puerto Rico. That doesn't
guarantee that prices will be particularly low, however. Jewelry and watches
abound, often at competitive prices, especially in the island's best-stocked
area, Old San Juan. Also of great interest are such Puerto Rican handcrafts as
charming folkloric papier-mâché carnival masks and
santos,
carved wooden figures depicting saints.
St.
Maarten/St. Martin:
Because of the massive influx of cruise ships, shopping in Dutch St. Maarten is
now about the finest in the Caribbean, though you may have to fight the crowds.
Because there's no duty, prices can be 30% to 50% lower than in the U.S. Forget
about local crafts and concentrate on leather goods, electronics, cameras,
designer fashions, watches, and crystal, along with linens and jewelry.
Philipsburg, capital of the island's Dutch side, is the best place to shop.
Although it can't compete with Dutch St. Maarten, French St. Martin has been
becoming a more popular shopping destination, especially for goods such as
fashion or perfumes imported from France.
St.
Thomas: Many of
its busiest shops are in restored warehouses that were originally built in the
1700s. Charlotte Amalie, the capital, is a shopper's town, with a staggering
number of stores stocked with more merchandise than anywhere else in the entire
Caribbean. However, despite all the fanfare, real bargains are hard to come by.
Regardless, the island attracts hordes of cruise-ship passengers on a sometimes
frantic hunt for bargains, real or imagined. Look for two local publications,
This Week and Best Buys; either might steer you to the type of
merchandise you're seeking. If at all possible, try to avoid shopping when more
than one cruise ship is in port-the shopping district is a madhouse on those
days.
St.
Croix: This
island doesn't have the massive shopping development of St. Thomas, but its
merchandise has never been more wide-ranging than it is today. Even though most
cruise ships call at Frederiksted, with its urban mall, our favorite shops are
in Christiansted, which boasts many one-of-a-kind boutiques and a lot of special
finds. Prices are about the same here as on St. Thomas.
Source:
Frommer's Caribbean 2006
Author:
Darwin Porter
Pub Date: August 15, 2005
Price: $21.99
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