Board Logo
Go To Bottom

Printable Version  
[ Total Views: 1827 | Total Replies: 6 | Thread Id: 110469 ]
Author: Subject:  importing a vehicle
Memberalansvw
Wolfsburg Wizard
***


No Avatar


Posts: 426
Threads: 138
Registered: May 6th, 2005
Member Is Offline

Location: St Ives NSW
Theme: UltimaBB Pro Blue ( Default )

posted on January 25th, 2016 at 04:29 PM
importing a vehicle


Just toying with the idea of importing a vehicle (kombi) from the USA, and was interested to know what the procedure is and rough costs?
Memberkathawkephotos
Seriously Crusin Dubber
**


Avatar


Posts: 112
Threads: 22
Registered: March 14th, 2013
Member Is Offline

Location: Northern Beaches, Sydney NSW
Theme: UltimaBB Streamlined2

posted on January 25th, 2016 at 11:41 PM



PM sent :)



Current daily: 67' squareback / previous daily: 71' squareback :smirk: / project: 61' "secret" ;)
Memberbeetlecab
Slammed & Awesome Dubber
**


No Avatar


Posts: 94
Threads: 31
Registered: December 29th, 2011
Member Is Offline

Theme: UltimaBB Pro Blue ( Default )

posted on January 30th, 2016 at 08:39 PM



The Australian dollar has thrown the idea out a bit. Depending on where the vehicle is the inland travel can cost as much as the usa to australia costs. The there is the choice of shared up and down container travel with possible damage. Then here we have port charges gst etc.. then the car can be knocked back by quarentine further charges for cleaning etc..
In my experience its only been worth it if you really want the car........ I was lucky with a 73 bug. no inland etc...i love the car
Membercwatts181
Casual Dubber
*


Avatar


Posts: 21
Threads: 4
Registered: February 1st, 2010
Member Is Offline

Location: Sydenham
Theme: UltimaBB Pro Blue ( Default )

posted on February 1st, 2016 at 08:47 AM



I brought a Type 181 into Australia after owning it for some time in Holland. The process is not difficult for importing if you use the Personally Imported Vehicle scheme, only major issue here is you have to have owner the vehicle for a minimum of 1 year in the location you are importing it from. Just paperwork and supporting documentation, once the certificate is issued you can ship, I think the certificate needs to be issued before the vehicle arrives, but shipping is not so difficult but its where the costs start to mount up. And when the vehicle arrives the port charges are outrageous and with older cars AQIS likes to steam clean them, of course for $$ - All up port costs are $7k to $10k + shipping + cost of car. Once you're through all that then there's rego and depending on age is either a simple blue slip process or depending on who you talk to can be engineering certification. 73 seems, in my understanding, to be when certain Aust Design Rules came in, such as 3 point harness seatbelts, as mine is a 73 it was unclear if I needed new seatbelts etc or the original lap sash belts were ok. And talking to RMS in NSW was no help what so ever, the first guy from the technical dept said get an engineering certificate - redo seatbelts and other things I can't remember. As i was living in the country at the time and the closest engineer was hours drive away the mechanic called back RMS to double check and spoke to a different guy who said don't worry about any of that just a blue slip would be fine. Loved that guy!

So is it worth it? buying a car overseas and shipping? Not sure if I would ever do it again or if I did maybe look at one of these car import type companies that do all that for you.
MemberCanni.
Wolfsburg Wizard
***


No Avatar


Posts: 471
Threads: 29
Registered: September 21st, 2003
Member Is Offline

Location: Melbourne
Theme: UltimaBB Pro Blue ( Default )

posted on February 6th, 2016 at 08:32 PM



There are plenty of companies set up that offer shipping for US to AU for a set price. I shipped from NZ to AU and costs are similar, it turned out to be more than I thought but due to the strength of the AUD at the time and the quality of the car I found it was a good deal, it did however take a lot of time and research and was a little stressful but I found a good company who did most of the hard work for me.

The low AUD may make it a bit $$$ - you'd have to find a really good deal to make it worth it and as most are LHD they just don't fetch the same price as a RHD should you resell.

The process -
Find a car you want, apply for a vehicle import approval (you have to do this before anything else), receive approval, arrange delivery to port, arrange shipping + insurance (container is the better option but you can do RORO), Dock fees for unpacking the container, customs and qaurantine and AQIS (I had a broker do all this for me), arrange delivery from dock, rego + roadworthy (mines not at that stage yet)




Heidi - 1960 White Beetle
'65 Kiwi Ghia
Memberalansvw
Wolfsburg Wizard
***


No Avatar


Posts: 426
Threads: 138
Registered: May 6th, 2005
Member Is Offline

Location: St Ives NSW
Theme: UltimaBB Pro Blue ( Default )

posted on February 22nd, 2016 at 09:05 PM



Thanks for the info.
Super Administratorhelbus
A.k.a.: Pete S
Super Administrator
Mad fabricator, paint and body
*********

Rank Avatar

Avatar


Posts: 7386
Threads: 312
Registered: September 1st, 2002
Member Is Offline

Location: In the garage chopping cars into bits
Theme: UltimaBB Pro Blue
Mood: In the thinking chair

posted on February 22nd, 2016 at 09:15 PM



With a Broker, using a Vihicle Import Approval, it should only cost about $6000





  Go To Top


Powered by GaiaBB, © 2011 The GaiaBB Group
(C) 2001-2024 Aussieveedubbers

[ Queries: 40 ] [ PHP: 1.2% - SQL: 98.8% ]