Jump to content
SAU Community

Recommended Posts

Hi all,

Firstly I no nothing about skylines, period.

1) Currently living in Japan and thinking of importing a car on my own. I've read around and haven't yet come across someone who has imported a car alone without going through a dealer or an auction. Can it be done? Why can't I just buy it drive it to the port and off she goes? (of course after the necessary paperwork)

The prices here in Japan are far cheaper than what the cars go for in Australia.

2) If I do import I'll most likely go for a R34, but I may consider a V35. If I get the latter, where could I get insurance for it?

I'd appreciate any assistance.

Chris

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/102269-diy-import/
Share on other sites

Are you talking about a personal import or a SEVS import? There's two different ways you can import an R34 or V35 for example.

Personal imports have to have been owned by the importer in another country continuously for a year, with evidence to prove this (purchase docs, service books, insurance invoice etc). You must also be coming back to australia with the intention of settling down, not just visiting, and again, you need to supply evidence of this. You still have to pay taxes and for compliance, however the taxes aren't as high, and the compliance is a lot more lenient.

SEVS cars have to have import approvals given prior to the car even getting on a ship, the import approval is issued in australia. If a car was to arrive in the country without an import approval then its either re-exported or destroyed. Import approvals can only be applied for SEVS cars by RAWS workshops on behalf of the customer.

Its one thing buying and loading a car onto a ship, the uphill battle is when the car lands in Australia with the paperwork and the regulations.

Its also here that the costs of an import blows out. You have to pay taxes and duty on the car, then you have to have the car complianced, meet roadworthy standards and finally registered for road use. All that can add anywhere between $5000 and $10000 to the FOB price + shipping costs (depending on the cost of the car, and the compliancer). Then you have the dealership put their profit margins on it.

To answer your second question, most insurance companies here can cover V35's, and if they don't, they usually have a sibling company that handles collectible, rare and sports cars.

A user by the nick "Rezz" on the forum I believe brought back his R32 as a personal import when he moved back from Japan. You might want to ask him how he went about it and his experiences.

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/102269-diy-import/#findComment-1875527
Share on other sites

Thanks for taking the time to reply. I'm talking about a SEVS import. I plan on arranging for compliancing in Australia through a RAW workshop, then just buy the car myself here in Japan and ship it.

The price differenece on cars bought via auctions and what not is quite significant. So since as you said the compliacing costs are so high, I thought it best I save as much as I can by organising what I can myself.

Thanks, I'll PM him!

Chris

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/102269-diy-import/#findComment-1876382
Share on other sites

  • 2 years later...

hello all

i current own a mitsu mirage (pathetic i know lol)

i am looking at importing a r32 gts-t or an r33 gts-t.

from what i know, i can save alot of money from not using an agent and doing it myself.

from what i have read on the RAWS website, a car can be imported as long as it is not manufactured anymore here in australia.

i was wondering if anyone had any tips for me?

price, time, etc

thanks

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/102269-diy-import/#findComment-3698645
Share on other sites

hello all

i current own a mitsu mirage (pathetic i know lol)

i am looking at importing a r32 gts-t or an r33 gts-t.

from what i know, i can save alot of money from not using an agent and doing it myself.

from what i have read on the RAWS website, a car can be imported as long as it is not manufactured anymore here in australia.

i was wondering if anyone had any tips for me?

price, time, etc

thanks

Mate, you'd be better buying one locally, there are 1000's to chose from at the moment. The money you save getting one from Japan you'll spend on time and mucking around if you do it yourself. Its not like you want a GTR. GTST's are cheap enough here now and you can check it out yourself and go for a test drive, something you can't do if the car is in Japan :)

Link to comment
https://www.sau.com.au/forums/topic/102269-diy-import/#findComment-3698977
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now


  • Similar Content

  • Latest Posts

    • There is a way, but it's not with the same cars. You need to find the same vintage of car, that we had. Realistically, that was an affordable car with aftermarket parts around. So what people need to find is a car that had a decent base in its day, and can be modified. They're looking for a car year make of 2010 to 2015 really... Aus could have done it if Holden didn't fold as V8 commodores were cheap, and if Ford didn't get expensive thanks to COVID, then you could cheaply play with FG Barras. Realistically, those are just a bit heavier, four door skylines. I'm sure the US and UK have similar cars they could find.
    • Haha I do that.. thats when it chirps..The bit point for me is almost non-existent. Otherwise I stall it. But yes, in terms of performance, the clutch is solid af.
    • Greg speaks wisdom. These dirty old Datsuns are only value when they are cheap. When they are not cheap, there is no value. Sounds contradictory, but it's true. We are now 20 years past the hey day of modifying cheap 90s JDM cars for small amounts of money. This is a different world. If you are rich and can afford not to care about what is effectively wasting money on an old Datto shitter, then I have no reason to argue against it. But if you are wanting to experience what we all experienced back in 2005 (and I bought my car last century!) then there is no way to do it.
    • Short answer: No. Medium answer: No, because you still need to conjure the things out of thin air to bolt them to a NA to make it a NA+T. Long Answer: No - The things you need to conjure - meaning a turbo, intercooling, manifolds, exhaust, intake/manifold/piping, clutch, injectors, fuel pump, AFM (?), ECU + Wiring (woo, N/A loom fun) have to come from somewhere. You could have many scavenged these things from an OEM car that someone had upgraded from and use some of these. This will be cost prohibitive now, especially so in the USA. You'd probably pay the same for newer, upgraded components that are better than old OEM stuff from 25-30 years ago. None of these big ticket items are re-usable for the N/A car. Why not buy new and upgrade while you're there? The only real consideration is turbo and fuel sizing and determining whether you want to stay within the bounds of the OEM engine or get into rebuild territory. These limits ARE lower with a N/A motor and especially N/A gearbox at the starting point. And if you're gonna upgrade those then you may as well consider having them built to begin with. Because everyone here knows you're never far from that next engine rebuild once you start making the power you want... The cars you see on the internet and SAU etc have been built over decades. If you're really clued in... you would sell your US car to somebody for what you paid for it. You would then scour AU JDM pages or SAU and buy a car like Dose's on this forum with your powerful American Dollar. This will save you so much money in the long term. Importing it could be tricky. Or it might not because USA. I have long said the only reason 90's Japanese stuff took off was because a) Japanese people had Japanese cars so that is what they used b) Australians could import these cars to Australia with very minimal changes and use them on the road here c) Neither country had well-priced access to US or EU Sports Cars. I don't believe the JDM scene would have taken off in Australia at all if we had EU priced EU BMW M offerings, or more especially the AUS V8 Scene would never have existed if we had the multitude of US cars like Camaros, Mustangs, Corvettes at the prices you folks do. After all - Do the math. I would say put a V8 in your R34 and that's the smart way forward. It is. I did it. I know this from my own experience. But at that point there's no reason to simply not buy a C5 or C6? It would be simpler and easier and cheaper and bette-
    • Reading all this... hurts lol. I have an ENR34 5MT and I paid an inflated USA price for the car alone, had to do tons of preventative maintenance past that, and so I'm over $30K USD into the car already and haven't even touched power.  I wanted to +t it. Not even trying to make GTR numbers, I'd be happy with 250hp.  Can I get away with paying much less to make that happen?
×
×
  • Create New...