International courier from Jodhpur to Ireland. Free home pickup.
Pickup from your Jodhpur door, packed and documented, into the DTDC International network. 7–9 working days door-to-door for express; from ₹1,400 per kilogram before fuel surcharge and GST.
Five steps from your Jodhpur door to an Irish address.
Pickup, Jodhpur.
Free at 5 kg+. We bring tape, bubble wrap and the international airway bill — pickups across Blue City localities (Sardarpura, Ratanada, Paota, Shastri Nagar, the old city, Salawas handicraft cluster).
Pack & document.
Commercial invoice, KYC, content declaration. Done at our office before handover.
DTDC handover.
Same evening into the DTDC International facility; air movement to the Ireland gateway via Delhi or Mumbai.
Irish customs.
Clearance at Dublin (DUB), Shannon (SNN) or Cork (ORK), often via a Schengen-EU trans-shipment from Frankfurt, Amsterdam or London-Heathrow. Revenue Commissioners are among the most efficient in the EU — clean parcels usually clear in 24–48 hours.
Doorstep delivery.
Last-mile in Dublin, Cork, Galway, Limerick or anywhere else. POD on WhatsApp the same day.
Starting rates. Real pricing depends on weight.
Final price depends on actual or volumetric weight (whichever is greater) plus the international fuel surcharge in force on your booking date. GST is extra.
Starting per-kg rates
- Express (7–9 days, door)from ₹1,400 / kg
- Economy (10–14 days, door)from ₹1,050 / kg
- Min billable weight0.5 kg
- Pickup from JodhpurFree at 5 kg+
Volumetric formula: (L × W × H cm) ÷ 5000.
Worked example
A 2 kg parcel — say a couple of antique-replica swatches and brass hardware samples for a Dublin auction-house buyer:
- Express, 2 kg × ₹1,400≈ ₹2,800
- + fuel surcharge (~25%)≈ ₹700
- + GST 18%≈ ₹630
- Approx total, express≈ ₹4,650
Indicative only. Fuel surcharge and rate cards change. Antique-replica furniture itself ships as freight, not air-courier — we route those separately.
What you’ll need at pickup.
Customs paperwork is the most common reason an international parcel stalls. We’ll walk you through it before pickup so it doesn’t.
KYC of the sender
One photo ID for the person whose name is on the AWB — Aadhaar, passport or driving licence. We photograph it at pickup; not stored beyond DTDC’s record.
Commercial invoice
For commercial goods, a printed invoice listing items, quantity and value. For gifts, a written declaration suffices but value still must be stated. Ireland is in the EU — items above €150 attract VAT and possible duty under TARIC, and B2B consignments need the recipient’s EORI number.
Recipient PPS / EORI
For personal shipments, a recipient PPS Number on file helps Revenue clear the parcel quickly. For business shipments — including antique-furniture-replica B2B — an EORI number is required. Medicines fall under HPRA regulation — prescription copy mandatory.
What Ireland doesn’t let in.
Ireland is in the EU and follows TARIC rules, but as an island it also runs its own biosecurity controls (DAFM) — stricter than mainland Europe on plant material and animal products. These are real Revenue and DAFM rules, not our caution.
Don’t even try
- Drugs and narcotics — Ireland’s penalties for trafficking are severe; no exceptions.
- Weapons, replicas, knives — including air pistols, decorative swords and martial-arts items.
- Aerosols and pressurised containers — universal courier rule on the air leg.
- Lithium batteries above 100 Wh — restricted on the air leg.
- Counterfeit goods — fake-branded apparel, accessories and electronics are seized at Dublin.
- CITES-listed wildlife items — ivory, certain skins, shahtoosh, rare-wood handicrafts without permit.
- Untreated wood, plants, seeds, soil — Irish agricultural biosecurity is strict; antique-replica wood components must be ISPM-15 / heat-treated and declared.
- Meat, dairy, raw animal products — restricted under EU and DAFM rules.
- IRA-glorifying or paramilitary-themed media — sensitive given Northern Ireland history; avoid.
Allowed with care
- Textiles, sarees, block-print fabric, papier-mâché, leather (treated) — declare a fair value; treated leather goods need clear treatment notes.
- Books and printed material — any topic; declare title and value.
- Sealed dry sweets and namkeen (factory-packed) — declare ingredients and allergens; fine in small personal quantities, but no homemade food.
- Prescription tablets — sealed strip, doctor’s prescription, no injectables, no controlled substances.
- Non-precious jewellery — declare make and value; no gold bars or unhallmarked precious metals.
- Small electronics — phones, headphones, smartwatches; declare make, model, value.
Antique-furniture-replica B2B, handicraft, leather, decorative arts.
Antique-furniture-replica B2B samples to Dublin auction houses
Jodhpur is India’s antique-furniture-replica hub — the lanes around Salawas and the old city run hundreds of workshops producing reproduction colonial, Mughal-revival and Rajasthani heritage furniture. Sample swatches (wood, finish, carving), brass hardware kits, fabric upholstery samples and catalogues ship to Dublin and Cork auction houses, dealers and interior-design studios who source furniture from Jodhpur. The bulky furniture itself ships as sea freight on a separate lane — DTDC handles the paperwork-light air-courier samples and follow-up documentation.
Handicraft & decorative arts
Block-print fabric, dohars, cushion covers, papier-mâché, brass and copperware, marble inlay items. Shipped to Dublin and Cork design boutiques. Declare titles, materials and a fair value.
Treated leather goods
Jodhpur’s leather cluster (jutis, bags, journals) ships to Irish boutique buyers. Treatment certificates accompany the consignment to clear DAFM scrutiny.
Wedding & festival outfits
Sarees, lehengas, sherwanis, dupattas, jewellery boxes (non-precious). Shipped ahead of weddings and Diwali to Indian-Irish families in Dublin, Cork, Galway and Limerick.
Diaspora parcels
Indian-Irish families in Dublin (Lucan, Tallaght, Sandyford, Citywest, Adamstown), Cork, Galway, Limerick. Sweets, sarees, kids’ clothes, festival hampers. The Indian-doctor cohort at HSE hospitals and the IT cohort at the Dublin tech cluster are recurring recipients.
Returning-traveller baggage
Irish buyers and tourists who shopped in Jodhpur — picked up from the hotel, packed, shipped before they fly home. Common after Rajasthan tours and antique-buying trips.
AWB on WhatsApp. Track on dtdc.in. POD when it lands.
The moment the parcel is booked into DTDC International, we send you the AWB number on WhatsApp. Type it into the public tracker at dtdc.in any time. When delivery happens we forward the POD — signed slip or photo — within the hour.
Asked most often.
We supply antique-replica furniture to Dublin dealers — can you handle our sample documentation?
Yes, this is a recurring use case on the Jodhpur lane. The bulky furniture itself ships as sea freight on a separate lane (we route those formally), but DTDC International handles the supporting documentation — sample swatches, brass hardware kits, finish samples, catalogues, B/L copies, COO certificates. Make sure the recipient has an EORI number on the invoice (B2B Ireland requirement), and that any wood components are declared as treated / ISPM-15 compliant. Dublin auction-house buyers and Cork interior-design studios are familiar with the format.
Treated leather goods to Ireland — what documentation do they need?
Jodhpur leather (jutis, bags, journals, decorative pieces) ships to Ireland with a treatment note from the manufacturer confirming the leather is processed (chrome / vegetable-tanned) and not raw. EU-DAFM scrutiny is on raw / untreated animal materials; treated leather clears without issue when documentation is on the parcel. We help draft a one-line treatment-confirmation note for the invoice — that’s usually all that’s asked for.
How fast does Irish customs at Dublin actually clear a parcel?
Among the fastest in the EU. Revenue Commissioners run a streamlined operation at Dublin Airport and most paperwork-clean DTDC parcels clear in 24–48 hours. The only delays we see are when the consignee’s PPS Number / EORI isn’t on the invoice for higher-value items, or when factory-sealed snacks attract a DAFM look-up. Both are usually resolved with a quick email from the consignee to Revenue.