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iPad UK Pricing Confirmed; Apple UK Tax Applied

The iPad will be available in the UK and eight other countries from 28 May 2010; both models will be available for pre-order on 10 May. Reader marcopolo007uk adds a note from iPad-Review.co.uk with pricing: "WiFi Models: 16GB / 32GB / 64GB — £429 / £499 / £599. 3G versions: 16GB / 32GB / 64GB — £529 / £599 / £699. These are a little higher than some had guessed... The Apple Tax stings the UK consumer again." At the current exchange rate, these prices are right around 150% of those offered in the US.

9 of 248 comments (clear)

  1. The OP forgot VAT. by Dzimas · · Score: 5, Informative

    Someone can't do math. The numbers are actually really close. Let's look at the base 16GB model. It's £429 in the UK, which equals about $630 according to xe.com. Take off the 17.5% VAT, and we get £353.93. That equals $520 US. What's the problem again???

    1. Re:The OP forgot VAT. by tk77 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What's the problem again?

      VAT

      And how is this Apple's problem?

    2. Re:The OP forgot VAT. by MoonBuggy · · Score: 5, Informative

      Also, since the summary presents the UK price as a percentage of the US one, here are the actual figures:

      Wifi
      16GB 32GB 64GB
      108% 104% 107%

      3G
      16GB 32GB 64GB
      105% 103% 106%

  2. EU/UK vs. American Pricing by tlhIngan · · Score: 5, Informative

    Let me guess - in Europe, you'd pay exactly those prices listed? No sales tax added on?

    So you'd pay £429 / £499 / £599 / £529 / £599 / £699 for an iPad and not a penny more in sales/VAT?

    That's one thing we have in North America - the prices listed ($499/$599/$699/$629/$729/$829) are sans sales tax. So add anywhere from 0% (a few states), to 5-10% to the actual price that Americans pay. Or in Canada, anywhere from 5-15% in sales taxes.

    In the UK, the prices tend to be all inclusive - you pay what you see, so all the hidden consumption taxes get built in. VAT of nearly 20%, plus other import taxes and duties and the like. I'm guessing the price gap is a lot smaller than you think.

    It's just that governments have used built-in taxes to hide how much taxes are really on products. Happens on this side of the pond with stuff like gas when you actually break down the price.

    For example, the 16GB WiFi iPad - £429 is around $630 US. $500 US for the same iPad, plus taxes will probably mean one pays $530-$550 in the US. If we assume the total tax load is (VAT+importation taxes plus duties) 20% for the UK, that $500 iPad becomes $600 instantly.

  3. Re:£429? ... Ouch by Flipao · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yes but this is an unbelievable, magical, amazing, revolutionary, gorgeous device. Surely that's gotta be worth something.

  4. Re:Maybe if you were a little more efficient by evilbessie · · Score: 5, Funny

    At least we didn't change ours because the person who wrote the dictionary didn't like the spellings.

  5. Re:£429? ... Ouch by dintech · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Steve Jobs is writing a new story. "The Emperors New Computing Device"

  6. I'm quite sure by spleen_blender · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apple is glad to see such free advertising! This is consumerism crap, not slashdot-worthy "stuff that matters" content...

  7. But your U.S. prices do not include tax by SuperKendall · · Score: 5, Informative

    £429/1.175=£365.11, which is approximately $537.80. The mark up from the US prices seems to be around 8%.

    Unless you factor in that you have to pay sales tax in most places in the U.S - which coincidentally for my area is 8%, so basically the exact same price in the end.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley