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Importing Car into Canada from US

4497 messages, Last post on Nov 09, 2009 at 8:49 PM
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Replying to: verby (Jun 06, 2006 9:24 am) GM - "vehicle must be owned and operated in the United States for 6 months and 12,000 kilometres before being imported into Canada; otherwise, the warranty becomes null and void." ... that kind of sux |
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Replying to: knsgee (Jun 06, 2006 7:58 pm) As soon as I received the Vin certificate I called my insurance broker and insured it so I could pick it up in NY.
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Replying to: carlover10 (Jun 07, 2006 8:10 am) there should be no duty on the goohlander...it says: ALL 1991 TO 2006 PASSENGER CAR MODELS EXCEPT yjose below: 1991 CAMRY 1991 & 1992 COROLLA 1991 TO 1994 TERCEL/PASEO 2000 SC400/300 2000 TO 2005 MR2 2005 & 2006 SCION tC ******************** so I am bufled on the duties...better to check with Customs first.
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Replying to: ep123 (Jun 12, 2006 6:40 pm) |
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FYI... I am bidding on eBay for a 2-3 year old SUV made in NA. I will import to Ontario and save $12-15K CAD all in, depending on travel. The car will have missed a few harsh Ottawa winters. From conversations with US border officers, 14 Jun 2006: > Ogdensburg: Need the original title in your name 72 hrs ahead. Fax of title no longer accepted. No copies needed. Open 24 hrs for driving through. > Alexandria Bay: Need original title and copy of bill of sale 72 hours ahead. Fax of title not accepted. No title copies needed. And, for new cars need confirmation of no lien. Open 24 hrs. > Detroit Fort St. Cargo Facility (Ambassador Bridge): only need fax of title 72 hrs ahead. Open 24 hrs. US Ports - addresses/phone: http://www.customs.gov/xp/cgov/toolbox/contacts/ports/ Marcus
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I live in Ontario and most likely will be in the market for a new car in one year and probably wont have it paid off for five years from then. I am also contemplating a move to states in this time frame (perhaps one year into 5 year note) Does anyone have a list of lenders in canada who will let you take a vehicle still under finance (title with lien holder) to US? This is a hypothetical question since It is one of those what-if situations. When I moved to canada from US, GMAC had no problem in providing such letter of permission to show the customs along with copy of title. As I am doing my research, I am realizing that only domestics' (GMAC, Ford Credit, DCX credit) will do such and that too only for finance and not leases which is fine with me. Any others? I did call randomly Honda/Toyota/VolksWagen/Mercedes Benz etc and all were firm in saying that the vehicle will either have to be paid off or liquidated. They probably dont deserve my business but If I like a european car (not saab or volvo which come under gmac/ford credit) then I should be able to buy it notwithstanding the arrogant F/I. I have no clue regarding the banks and what their policies are though.. I am kinda apprehensive that my choice will come down to lender rather than the manufacturer/car itself. Anybody in the same situation? |
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Replying to: socala4 (Jun 06, 2006 11:34 am)
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Replying to: pkfolly (Jun 15, 2006 5:49 pm) -Since the car is staying in Canada, I guess that you'll be breaking the law by "importing" it. But whether or not you'll actually get caught is another matter entirely, a question that I can't answer. -One question: How will you re-register this car each year? If an inspection, etc. is required, you'll have to figure out how to keep it registered while the car remains out of state. (I would bet that you'd be violating Ontario law by driving a car that isn't properly registered if you allowed the registration to expire, but whether you'd actually be cited for this, I don't know.) -Your insurance company may also not like this, a US insurer won't likely insure for a car that has been unofficially exported. (Yes, US policies are fine while you're driving in Canada for a visit, but probably not for something like this.) If you have an accident, and they figure out that this car has effectively been exported, they may try to avoid honoring your policy. In any case, you may (or may not) need valid registration to keep your policy in effect. On the other hand, you should note that the RIV list indicates that your car would require extensive modifications to the bumpers and child restraints to be permitted for import. According to RIV, it must be performed by a MB dealer in Canada. Sounds as if this car could potentially create a small financial disaster if you were to import it legally. I'm not your attorney, but let's just say that you may have some serious expenses if you choose to comply with the law, so you'll have to decide what this means to you. At the very least, get an estimate from a Canadian MB dealer for the cost of conversion prior to importing it, so that you can make a rational decision.
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Replying to: socala4 (Jun 15, 2006 6:14 pm) |
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Hi everyone, I am considering importing a (new)nissan Pathfinder from Newyork into Quebec. The price difference is about 7k . I called Nissan Canada and inquired about the warranty, Their response was: we will honor what is written in the warranty manual of the vehicle including applying the restrictions. (?) Does anyone have any experience with warranty service from Nissan? Also, What method of payment do you use to purchase the vehicle? Are 2 trips to the dealer required (1) to purchase and pickup the title documents and invoice and a 2nd trip to go back and pickup the vehicle. TIA for your feedback this is a great forum.
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