Introducing LibraryLink: Helping Libraries generate revenue from their deaccessioned materials.
Wholesale & Sourcing
If you run a bookshop, charity shop, or online reselling operation in the United Kingdom, sourcing wholesale books at competitive prices is the difference between healthy margins and barely breaking even. The domestic UK wholesale market is concentrated — a handful of suppliers control most of the used book supply, and pricing reflects that lack of competition.
But there is an alternative that UK buyers increasingly turn to: sourcing wholesale books from North America. Canadian and American wholesalers process millions of used books annually, offering broader genre selection, lower per-unit costs, and the kind of volume that domestic UK sources cannot match. Better still, books imported into the UK under HS code 4901 carry a 0% import tariff — making cross-Atlantic wholesale surprisingly cost-effective.
This guide explains how UK buyers can source used books wholesale from North America, what the logistics look like, and how to evaluate suppliers before placing your first bulk order.
Key Takeaway
UK buyers can import used books from Canada at 0% duty (HS 4901) and 0% VAT on printed matter — making North American wholesale 40–60% cheaper per unit than domestic UK sources, even after freight costs.
0%
UK Import Duty on Books
40–60%
Cost Savings vs. UK Domestic Wholesale
12
Genre Categories Available to Order
The UK second hand books wholesale market is dominated by a few major players. World of Books processes around 20 million used books per year from their warehouse in Goring-by-Sea, West Sussex. They are the largest seller of used English-language books in Europe, serving both retail consumers and wholesale buyers. Their scale is impressive — but it also means they prioritise the most profitable titles for their own retail channels before making lower-grade stock available to wholesale customers.
Charity shops, another traditional source for UK book retailers, have shifted their pricing model. Organisations like Oxfam and the British Heart Foundation now price popular titles at near-retail levels, and many have moved their best inventory to online platforms. What remains on charity shop shelves is often picked-over stock that is harder to resell at a margin.
Smaller UK wholesalers like Awesome Books, Lowplex Books, and Books4People serve the trade market, but their inventory tends to skew toward children’s books or specific niches. For UK retailers who need broad genre coverage — from literature and fiction to history, biography, and self-help — the domestic supply chain has clear limitations.
The result: UK buyers looking for used books wholesale at scale often face a choice between limited selection and premium pricing. This is where looking beyond the UK’s borders becomes a genuine competitive advantage.
North America is the world’s largest market for English-language books. Canada and the United States generate an enormous surplus of used books every year. Public libraries deaccession hundreds of thousands of volumes annually. Thrift store chains process millions more. University textbook cycles create seasonal floods of academic and non-fiction titles.
This volume creates a wholesale market with fundamentally different economics than the UK:
The key question UK buyers ask is whether the savings survive the cost of international shipping. The answer, for orders at container or pallet scale, is yes — and a specific tariff code makes it especially attractive.
The logistics of importing used books from North America are more straightforward than most UK buyers expect. Here is what you need to know.
Books fall under Harmonised System code 4901 (“Printed books, brochures, leaflets and similar printed matter”). Under the UK Global Tariff, the import duty rate for HS 4901 is 0%. This means books imported from Canada, the United States, or any other country enter the UK duty-free.
Physical books in the UK are also zero-rated for VAT purposes, which means no VAT is charged at the point of import. Your landed cost is essentially the book price plus freight — no hidden tariff surprises.
Important Note
HS code 4901 specifically covers printed books. It does not cover audiobooks, e-readers, or digital media. Ensure your commercial invoice clearly describes the goods as “printed used books” to avoid classification disputes at customs.
For wholesale-scale orders, there are two primary shipping methods:
Most North American wholesalers quote FOB (Free on Board) or EXW (Ex Works). UK buyers typically arrange their own freight forwarding from the Canadian port. If you are new to international book sourcing, look for suppliers who offer CIF (Cost, Insurance, and Freight) to your nearest UK port — this simplifies your first order significantly.
Not all wholesale book suppliers operate at the same standard. When evaluating a North American supplier for your UK wholesale book needs, assess these four areas:
Does the supplier publish their grading criteria? Can you request sample boxes before committing to a large order? Reputable suppliers send sample pallets or provide detailed photographs of current inventory.
Can you specify the genre mix? A London bookshop wants different stock than a hospital book cart. Look for suppliers who offer genre-sorted inventory across categories like non-fiction, children’s books, and literature & fiction — not just undifferentiated mixed lots.
Container-scale suppliers typically have minimums of 5,000–10,000 books. Pallet-scale suppliers may work with minimums as low as 500–1,000 books. Ensure the MOQ aligns with your storage capacity and sell-through rate.
An experienced supplier handles Canadian export paperwork, provides accurate commercial invoices with HS codes, and ensures your shipment clears customs efficiently. Ask about their experience shipping to the UK specifically.
Here is how sourcing from a Canadian wholesale operation compares to the typical UK domestic options:
One advantage of sourcing from a large-scale North American operation is genre breadth. Zoom Books processes books across 12 distinct wholesale categories, all available for international orders:
This genre breadth means you can build a single wholesale relationship that covers your entire inventory need, rather than juggling multiple UK suppliers with limited catalogues.
Minimums vary by supplier. For pallet-scale shipping, expect minimum orders of 500–1,000 books. For full container loads, minimums typically start at 5,000–10,000 books. Contact our team for current minimums and pricing.
Ocean freight from a Canadian port to a UK port typically takes 2–4 weeks. Add 3–5 business days for customs clearance and last-mile delivery to your warehouse.
No. Books imported under HS code 4901 enter the UK at 0% duty. Physical books are also zero-rated for UK VAT purposes under Schedule 8 of the VAT Act 1994. Your landed cost is the book price plus freight.
Yes. Established wholesale suppliers like Zoom Books sort inventory by genre, allowing you to order specific categories — from children’s books to mystery & thriller — rather than receiving unsorted mixed lots.
Wholesale used books from reputable North American suppliers are graded. Standard grades include Good (minor shelf wear, fully readable), Very Good (light wear, clean pages), and Like New. Most wholesale orders contain a mix of Good and Very Good.
For very small orders, domestic UK sources may be more practical due to shipping minimums. International wholesale becomes clearly advantageous at 1,000+ books, where per-unit cost savings outweigh the freight cost. You can learn more about our process to see how bulk ordering works.
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