I get all the costs involved and when duty and vat are applicable
But is the day of driving a car home from the uk over? Do you have to use a 3rd party to ship it over and do the paperwork for you?
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I get all the costs involved and when duty and vat are applicable
But is the day of driving a car home from the uk over? Do you have to use a 3rd party to ship it over and do the paperwork for you?
You can drive it back over yourself - but it needs all the paperwork in order before it arrives in Ireland. Again, you can also do the paperwork yourself - assuming you're used to doing it. A clearance agent is around €85 for providing the service though - so you'd want rocks in your head to attempt it yourself for the sake of that amount of cash.
https://www.bell.ie are the crowd my brother reached out to for clearance services when my brother was looking at importing
I haven't looked in to the fine detail yet, but from what I can see the only change in process is that you need to make a Customs Declaration before the car is presented for VRT inspection, etc. It can be done online and I think there is no impediment to bringing the car here first (as you'd have done before) as long as the entire Customs and VRT transaction is completed within the usual 30 days limit. If the declaration hasn't been made then you won't have the reference number that the VRT folks will now ask for as part of a UK import documentation and procedure.
The transport company my brother was in touch with said that the car will not get out of the port without the customs paperwork being all in order
Edit -
Not sure on how rigidly that could be policed (since you could drive in through NI) but seems like it should be compliant before entering Ireland
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Importing a vehicle from Great Britain (GB)
From 1 January 2021 vehicles imported from Great Britain are liable to:
customs duty, if applicable
Vehicle Registration Tax (VRT)
VAT at the current standard rate.
An electronic customs declaration will be required in advance of the vehicle arriving in the State.
I can understand that if the car is being imported commercially and back until 1993 when the single market came in to effect and VRT was introduced the car had to be declared at the port of arrival and couldn't be removed until all duty, VAT, etc. was settled and the paperwork stamped.
Here - https://www.revenue.ie/en/importing-...e-from-gb.aspx there's a comment:
"Where a customs declaration is required in respect of a vehicle brought into the State, the vehicle will be liable to seizure if the customs declaration is not completed and, or the vehicle is not registered within 30 days of its arrival in the State."
Who knows in reality - although if you're required to provide the ferry ticket it would make it pretty simple. Theres quite a bit in the link on the revenue site about requiring a customs declaration for the car to be loaded on a ferry.
From revenue.ie -
Before registering vehicles imported from GB after 31 December 2020
If you import a vehicle from GB into the State, you must complete a customs declaration. You must also pay customs duty, if applicable, and Value-Added Tax (VAT) on the import value of the vehicle. This must be done prior to importation of the vehicle. It will not be possible to register the vehicle in the State without having completed the necessary customs declaration. You can obtain more information on filing in Customs declarations.
I have the joy of reading legal docs every day - (imo) that part after the 'and' is a second clause, the 30 days bit does not refer to the first clause. The revenue site has more detail on it - in particular that any items entering the country without this clearance are immediately liable to be forfeited.
That's probably down to a level of profiling. If it was a car with a lone driver and no passengers (primarily male) then the likelihood of getting attention going through the port would be a lot higher I suspect, whether for Customs/VRT purposes or other things of interest.
Was on the phone to a customs clearance company earlier - in relation some something interesting I'll hopefully update with later - however - in relation to a standard importation of a car:
VAT and Duty must be paid before the car enters the state. Revenue can seize the car if its not done. Revenue can also instruct you to take the car out of the state prior to providing clearance for you.
I always wondered do revenue ever check donedeal, there are hundreds of undeclared UK registered cars for sale privately. Surely that would be like shooting fish in a barrel for them?
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