Quizzes & Puzzles7 mins ago
Buying i-pad abroad
5 Answers
Off to the USA next week and thinking about getting an i-pad as the latest toy. Can Ijust connect it to my BT Broadband wifi at home and to wifi when i am out and about or will i need a separate contract for it?
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Best Answer
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.An iPad purchased in the USA will be supplied with a power adapter fitted with a US plug, for connecting to a 120V mains supply (at 60Hz). You won't be able to use it with the 230V (50Hz) domestic power supply in the UK. So you'd need to buy a UK power adapter.
Since the iPad can function as a media player, it's likely that UK customs officials will charge Import Tax at 13.9%. Then there's 17.5% VAT to be added onto the total of the cost price and the Import Tax. So (based upon a retail price of $499 = £345), HMRC will charge you approximately £117 to import your iPad.
So, even before you consider whether you can actually connect a US iPad to the internet in the UK (not to mention the inconvenience of having things like a built-in dictionary which uses US spellings), you could well end up spending far more than if you purchased your iPad in the UK.
Chris
Since the iPad can function as a media player, it's likely that UK customs officials will charge Import Tax at 13.9%. Then there's 17.5% VAT to be added onto the total of the cost price and the Import Tax. So (based upon a retail price of $499 = £345), HMRC will charge you approximately £117 to import your iPad.
So, even before you consider whether you can actually connect a US iPad to the internet in the UK (not to mention the inconvenience of having things like a built-in dictionary which uses US spellings), you could well end up spending far more than if you purchased your iPad in the UK.
Chris
I have a US iPad and the power brick is universal voltage so you merely need a plug adaptor, in fact like all of Apple's recent power supplies the 'pin' section is removable so you can get the correct three pin adaptor and plug it straight into the wall. WiFi works fine on both home and hot-spot, be aware that you can't tether to an iPhone via bluetooth to use the phone's 3G connection as Apple have prevented this, there are workarounds but they require jailbreaking the phone. Dictionary seems to understand British spellings but I haven't exhaustively tested it. It really depends on the price you could get it for in the States, as Chris said you may get clobbered for customs and then a few other incidental costs, plug etc.
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