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steamboats

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Everything posted by steamboats

  1. @BunnyHutt when you purchase something onsite or online in Europe you definitely pay the VAT rate of the country of purchase. It's just that the VAT ist already included in the price tag. When I buy something online in the US the local sales tax is added (because I don't have an US address the sales tax of the point of sale is added like I bought it onsite). You can buy a bottle of wine in Italy and take it back home to the US but you pay the Italien VAT when you buy the bottle. It doesn't matter where and when you consume it. When you check the receipt it will show the VAT but the amount you pay is the amount shown on the price tag. steamboats
  2. The Moselle river is part of the Rhine/Main/Danube river system 😉 and they have the same problems there. I found a nice one on the Swiss Ruby from Saarbrücken to Stuttgart (or vice versa). Some rivers which aren´t that much in the focus of a river cruiser. Or from Bremen to Saarbrücken... steamboats
  3. @BunnyHutt in Europe we tax at the time of purchase and the tax rate is the one of the seller. So when I buy something in Spain online I do pay the Spanish VAT rate (which is 21%, reduced 10%) although I live in Germany (where the rate is 19%, reduced 7%). But the price tag does include the VAT by law. So the rate doesn't matter me. I may see it on the invoice that I paid 20% VAT but the price is still 49 Euro as written on the price tag. steamboats
  4. I´d say none... Rhine, Main, Danube rivers, Seine & Rhone/Saone rivers, Elbe river, Po river all have seasonal problems. I hardly hear anything about the Duoro river in Portugal. But it´s all weather related and therefore there is no guarantee when you are cruising on a river that everything goes as planned. But anyway most of the cruises do go as planned. Those are the ones we are not talking about ;-). steamboats
  5. Definitely don´t drive on your own with a rented car unless you want to block the whole traffic there!! steamboats
  6. But this is an EU VAT and not a US tax... And I was talking about how the VAT is handled in Europe. Your sales tax is handled different that EU VAT. When it comes to the EU VAT the purchase is the purchase of the package which is sold via Miami. So EU is not interested in this. By the time you consume a specific drink you are in EU but the price of the drink is 0 as you don´t pay anything when you consume the drink (you have prepaid the package) and 10% of 0 is still 0. At the moment of consumption you don´t buy anything as you have prepaid your drinks by buying the package. BTW, when you buy a package onboard an RCI ship in Barcelona when embarking you have to pay the 10% VAT on the price of the package. With RCI/Celebrity you don´t pay any VAT on a single drink when you have a package (of course you pay when you don´t have a package). So the way NCL is handling this VAT you could be taxed twice - for buying the package onboard and for every single drink you order. steamboats
  7. Yes, usually you have to pay it on the spot. steamboats
  8. Your DL might be o.k. at the port security (which is no governmental authority but a private security companay) for identification but your only legal document for traveling within Europe is your passport. Even the European DLs are no legal document for identification within Europe. The only legal documents for traveling in Europe are passports and for Europeans an ID card issued by the country. I quote @euro cruiser from the other thread: "Italian law requires everyone to carry a national ID at all times. The only national ID for Americans is a passport. Here is the relevant part of the law, translated by google: "3. The foreigner who, at the request of the officers and agents of public safety, does not comply, without justified reason, to the order to produce the passport or other document of identification and residence permit or other document certifying regular presence in the territory of the State is punished with imprisonment of up to one year and a fine of up to 2,000 euros." The full law can be read here: DECRETO LEGISLATIVO 25 luglio 1998, n. 286 - Normattiva The quote above is from Article 6, paragraph 3." steamboats
  9. I´d say no as this is not a legal document for traveling to the EU. It does not show your Schengen entry stamp (Visa Waiver Program). So just with the passport card you can´t prof that you are not an illegal alien. steamboats
  10. Usually with a cruise starting out of a Spanish port and with EU ports only the VAT applies for the whole cruise and not just within the Spanish ports. Just to get some facts straight: - it´s no Spanish tax but an EU tax and it applies for all EU countries (it´s just the rate which is up to the country - 10% reduced rate in Spain and 21% regular rate - you pay that extra in all shops onboard), it´s just that Spain enforced this. But I also had notes that the Italian VAT will be added to any purchase. - all other cruise lines do have to pay that tax too... All more European based lines (MSC, Costa, AIDA TUI Cruise) do include the tax in the price of the drink, while the US based lines (NCL, RCI, Celebrity...) add it to the price of the drink - that´s just how it is handled usually in those areas of the world. We all pay a VAT in Europe but our laws require it to be included in the price on the price tag. - it´s just NCL which is charging the 10% to every single drink of a package... RCI/Celebrity don´t do that. And I´d say that this (RCI/Celebrity) it totally correct regarding the tax laws. The VAT applies to the price of the package. That´s what the passenger has purchased. When you buy the package online you usually buy it outside of the EU (so maybe Maimi). Therefore the tax law of the country of purchase comes in (which would be US). That should be the same for an included package or Free at Sea package. You pay the package (included) with the cruise fare or you buy the Free at Sea package (and when you buy it with the cruise you didn´t buy it within the EU). So it´s only NCL interpreting the EU tax laws like this - meaning they have to add the 10% to each drink which is ordered with a package. steamboats
  11. Being from the US the only legal document is your passport. steamboats
  12. See post #5 in this thread 😉! steamboats
  13. Ready the other thread... Italy is doing random checks and the fine when you don't carry a legal document is hefty. steamboats
  14. As a European I do have my German ID card which is valid for travel within the EU. So for me there´s no need to carry my passport. But in Italy the law requires you to have a legal ID with you. And for non EU citizens this is the passport which also holds the Schengen stamp to proof that you are legally within the Schengen area. A DL is worthless within Europe and will only help you to get through the security to board the ship but not in a police control. steamboats
  15. The US DL is no valid photo ID in Europe. There´s a current discussion on the Italy board that the Italian police is doing random checks in trains and near tourist attractions. For those random checks they want to see your passport (with your Schengen stamp) as a proof that you are no illegal alien. steamboats
  16. We´re not talking about a check at port but a random check by the police in a train or in Italian cities. steamboats
  17. Some states in the US require an international DL Like Georgia. Florida had it for a couple of months but then skipped it. steamboats
  18. This is no legal ID in Europe. And the international DL here in Germany is just a piece of paper with translations - so pretty worthless. steamboats
  19. The engine control room is usually above the engine room. There´s no direct connection allowing a window. Definitely no! It depends on the cruise line... I´ve been on the bridge of the MSC Euribia plus the engine control room and the engine room. On the Silver Nova we visited all crew areas plus bridge, engine control room. laundry and more (time ran out otherwise we would have gone to the engine room too). For those who want to see some behind the scenes... here´s a video of my DH (of various ships, sorry no NCL): Narration is in German but there should be English subtitles. steamboats
  20. @-Lew- yes, a copie or photo of your passport might be helpful in case you need a replacement... just to prof your identity with the consulate/embassy. steamboats
  21. Being German I´m traveling Europe and especially Italy and Spain for my whole life (and that´s more than 50 years now). I never had anything stolen by pic-pockets (knocking on wood). Yes, I did watch them in Rome several times. Use common sense... Don´t wear a bag on one shoulder but cross body. Don´t wear a bag on the street side of the side walk but always to the side where the buildings are. Have a bag with a zipper and no open compartments. Don´t wear a brand bag but a cheap one. There are a lot of travel bags with steel cords and locks for zippers. For men: No way you should carry your wallet (or now also the phone) in the back pocket of your trousers. Always put those things in the front pocket where you can keep your hands on. I prefer to have my purse and documents in a belly bag. I can always put my hands on. And yes, it´s one of those theft proofed travel bags. I can lock the main compartment. The clasp is hidden and can´t be opened easily. The belt is having an additional steel cord inside so it can´t be cut easily. There are a couple of well known tricks to get your attention away from your valuables... like spreading some mustard/ketchup on your clothes and trying to help you to clean it up (while the other person picks your wallet). Holding a paper or map in front of you to get the second person a chance to grab something underneath... Today the cell phones are a main target... Never let your phone lay open on a table in an outdoor café... BTW when being in the US a police man might be o.k. with my German ID or DL just for identification (or to prove my age) but anyway I have to carry my passport with me to approve that I do have my Visa Waiver stamp and that I´m not out of my 90 days range. steamboats
  22. I wouldn´t subscribe that the passport card might be sufficent... As a non EU citizen you need to present a legal document showing that you are legally traveling within the EU. So they could insist on seeing your Schengen stamp in your passport. Driver licenses are not regarded as legal document in Europe. I have my German ID card which is valid for traveling within the EU and some other countries. But I also carry my passport with me - basically for check-in with the cruise line. So within EU I only take my ID card ashore. steamboats
  23. BTW it´s raining all day long here in the South... and this should last on for tomorrow. steamboats
  24. I´m not sure about Holler Grill, but the Parfümerie Kramer sounds familiar. It´s more than 40 years now I lived there. I love Federweißer ;-). steamboats
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