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Cleared Customs!
Can you believe it? I've actually received the elusive customs clearance from HMRC this morning, May-13th. 84 days after sending-in my application on February-19th.
WHAT a palaver! The key to all this is getting the Customs & Excise NOVA (Notification of Vehicle Arrivals) reference number. DVLA can now pick-up and get confirmation of the clearance through the NOVA service by identifying the reference number. All I need to do now, therefore, is send-in a completed form V55/5 (Application for first vehicle tax and registration of a used motor vehicle) to the DVLA; together with
Then get the ol' gal MOT'd and road taxed. I'm hoping I might even be able to ride her up to the HUBBUK Meeting next month. :mchappy: |
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Wishing you a quicker solution so the ol' gal can be on the road again bier cheers Dooby |
I could do with some advice Keith1954
Hi Keith,
I'm not sure if you will see this as your thread was started a few years ago. I am possibly looking to import my 24 year old bike from Australia, where I have been living for over 12 months. While I know I will probably be VAT free and exempt from needing an IVA, I know I will need to do the catch 22 thing of getting an MOT before I can register the bike, and no doubt many other steps before I can ride her in the UK. I'm thinking I could really do with an import agents help. I know you had to pay VAT in the end, but would you recommend using an agent? Did it make the process any faster/ easier? How did you find the agent because I am not seeing very many come up when I search? I'm ideally looking for one on the South Coast. Anywhere between Devon and Kent would suit me fine. Were they involved in the shipping arrangements too, or did you organise that separately? Thanks for any info you or anyone else can give me! Poppalina (complete newbie so apologies if I don't know what I am doing) |
Who were the agents?
Hi Keith1954,
I read your thread with interest. I am about to move back to UK, from Canada, with my BMW, which I have owned since new 5 years ago. Please can you tell us who the agent was that you used in UK and whether you would recommend them? JT |
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re "Change speedo reading from kms to miles ...... £20" - things may have changed I suppose, however I didn't change the speedometer on the vehicle which has a Km/h speedometer and had no problem with registration and subsequent MOT tests. I had no problems re conformity - I didn't have a certificate for either vehicle however they just looked at the windows which have the conformity data stamped in them and accepted that. |
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Hi Jenny - the agent I used was: UK Import Services Ltd As I re-call, they were reasonably competent .. but that was 4½ years ago. Good luck with your move. :thumbup1: cheers Keith |
I imported a Harley to UK from NZ, where I was living as a dual (NZ/UK) citizen, in 2002.
I had owned the bike in NZ for about a year when I did this. The bike came into UK as the property of a returning UK resident (me) and I ran it around for a year on NZ plates. This was in the days of Norwich Union's Rider Insurance policy, so insuring an overseas vehicle was no probs. So easy back then! When the NZ registration expired, I got an MOT based on its VIN, not licence number - this is SOP. The test centre I used didn't care/notice that the speedo was Kms only, maybe I just got lucky? I then walked into a licensing office in Reading, Berkshire, got a UK licence plate for some fiddling fee, can't recall how much but it was way less than GBP100, no VAT, no import duty, nothing else. But you do need paperwork from HMRC proving that the bike came in to the country legally. This was supplied when it was released from the shipper as a returning resident's property. This was 18 years ago, mind, and shit might be different now. |
You don't need to use a specialist importer to import your personal vehicle into the UK, you can do it yourself via a transport company such as Motofreight. It's no different from riding it in off the ferry and you can use it on foreign plates for a period of time.
The requirements for re-registering are laid out here: https://www.gov.uk/importing-vehicles-into-the-uk Clearly there are some documents you'll have to provide so it's worth getting those in advance. There is no duty or tax to pay if it's a personal import and you own the vehicle for a certain amount of time before and after import, see here: https://www.gov.uk/government/public...de-the-eu#sec4 |
And having a KM speedo is not a problem, not an MOT or registration issue, I have registered two imported bikes with them.
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