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Canadians traveling to the United States will soon be able to bring home far more duty-free goods, now that the federal government has tabled a budget harmonizing this country’s limits with those south of the border.

Starting June 1, travelers returning from a 24-hour trip can spend $200 at the duty-free shop, four times the current $50 limit. Anyone coming home from a 48-hour absence can legally cross the border with $800 worth of goods, double the current limit. The seven-day exemption was bumped, too, but only by $50 to $800.

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Canadians make more than 30 million overnight trips outside the country, according to Thursday’s budget, which says “modernization” to the rules surrounding purchases is “long overdue.”

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The changes mark the most significant increase in duty-free exemptions in decades, speeding up cross-border travel and freeing up customs agents to focus on other, more consequential, border issues.