When you enter a country, you are supposed to declare anything you bring in, especially gifts. This is so that appropriate taxes can be applied. In fact, at customs, they may stop you and ask you if you are bringing in anything of value. For example, you could be bringing in a new computer, on which you may be asked to pay import taxes. However, if you can prove that it is yours, and you will take it back with you, you do not have to pay anything. In those rare cases the custom officer may fill out a form, so that you will be required to take that object back out with you.
This is the only case in which you may have to worry about paying import taxes if the object later breaks and you throw it out (unless you can prove it). Now this happens rarely, but this is how in theory it should work.
Of course, as others have pointed out, you should also make sure electronics is disposed properly, no matter where you are.
In general, this is no problem. The country may have environmental laws governing the recycling and disposal of electronics, which a tourist would have to comply with, but assuming they are disposed of properly, there is no problem, because most countries do not make any record of the typical electronic devices carried by tourists. If you didn’t register the goods with customs on the way in, there’s no way they know or care whether you’re taking them out.
Occasionally, some countries will be concerned about whether you’re really planning on taking electronics back out with you, as you would be required to pay duty if the goods are imported. If this applies to you, you’ll usually know about it, and it generally applies to valuable technical articles or excessive quantities of electronics (usually think professional broadcast gear or an unusual number of laptops, not just the typical laptop/smartphone/camera carried by a tourist). Such goods could be covered under the ATA Carnet scheme, which obliges you to re-export the goods within a year or pay the applicable duty. Without a Carnet, the country could impose a deposit or charge import duty, and you’d have to use whatever mechanism exists in that country to get a refund when you export the goods.
If any of that applies to you, and again, it would not as a typical tourist in most all places (if you’re going to, say, North Korea, there may be more scrutiny), throwing the goods away would mean that you wouldn’t get your deposit back, because you’re required to export the goods to do so. If this is the case, you’d likely need to hold on to the broken electronics.
In short, unless the goods underwent some kind of special registration when you imported them, nobody is going to know or care whether you export them or throw them out.
How would they know, unless they took an inventory of your luggage when you arrived?
There are a few caveats to this:
No one cares about the stuff you bring in to another country, as long as this stuff is legal. If you legally bring an electronic device to another country, no one cares about whether you will take it back or not and no one keeps track of it.
The only thing you should consider, as a citizen of world, is that it’s very much appreciated if you appropriately recycle your electronic devise instead of throwing it into the next trash bin, or even worse (God forbid) throw it into the streets.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
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