
Jurgita Stanienė
Jurgita Stanienė is the Head of the Customs Compliance Department at UAB “Muita”, an experienced customs law and compliance expert. With over 16 years of experience in customs and 5 years in the State Tax Inspectorate, she offers businesses practical, reliable, and effective solutions.
Jurgita Stanienė advises businesses and individuals on customs compliance issues, helps manage risks, shares insights, and conducts training focused on real business needs and results.
Service: consulting, legal, training
Topics: customs law issues, customs compliance, legal regulation
Contact information
Content by Jurgita Stanienė
Customs data requirements in the EU - latest changes
The Union Customs Code and related regulations set out, among other things, the requirements for the data to be submitted to customs. Normally, these regulations are not often amended. However, this has not been the case recently, see ‘EU law news February 2024’. In this article, we provide an overview...
Used car parts - export of waste or goods for reuse?
Today, we often talk about circular economy goals and the ambition to reduce waste by extending the life of products through reuse, repair, refurbishment or recycling. The legal framework is still under development. For example, there are provisions in the EU Combined Nomenclature for certain waste and scrap and for...
One court case - two lessons: tariff quotas, invalidation of a customs declaration and potential risks
Tariff quotas mean less or no duty when importing goods. Most tariff quotas are allocated on a first come, first served basis; therefore, the timing of lodging a customs declaration might be crucial. What if, due to issues concerning customs IT systems, you are late and the quota is exhausted?...
Kaliningrad - Russia transit: are there any special simplifications?
Due to the war in Ukraine, the Kaliningrad Oblast is getting increased attention. We receive questions about the ‘Kaliningrad transit‘: whether there are any simplifications for the transportation of goods from Russia to Kaliningrad and vice versa or exemptions from sanctions? The exemptions have been introduced in the fifth EU...
Import into the EU: peculiarities of the end-use procedure
The end-use customs procedure can offer the benefit of an import duty relief when the goods are imported for a specific use, or it might be the only option to import certain goods. Let's look at the specifics of this procedure by answering the reader's question about the conditions for...
Popular articles
Customs data requirements in the EU - latest changes
The Union Customs Code and related regulations set out, among other things, the requirements for the data to be submitted to customs. Normally, these regulations are not often amended. However, this has not been the case recently, see ‘EU law news February 2024’. In this article, we provide an overview...
Used car parts - export of waste or goods for reuse?
Today, we often talk about circular economy goals and the ambition to reduce waste by extending the life of products through reuse, repair, refurbishment or recycling. The legal framework is still under development. For example, there are provisions in the EU Combined Nomenclature for certain waste and scrap and for...
One court case - two lessons: tariff quotas, invalidation of a customs declaration and potential risks
Tariff quotas mean less or no duty when importing goods. Most tariff quotas are allocated on a first come, first served basis; therefore, the timing of lodging a customs declaration might be crucial. What if, due to issues concerning customs IT systems, you are late and the quota is exhausted?...