10% duties on cars. Also, was there not an issue too in the papers where the car incurred UK vat on being bought in the UK, and, vat in the ROI on import. I thought that was a topical issue in early January in the press?See this thread in the Brexit forum.
It's down to the registration dates. You will get hit with duty unless the car was registered in the North prior to January 1st.
10% duties on cars. Also, was there not an issue too in the papers where the car incurred UK vat on being bought in the UK, and, vat in the ROI on import. I thought that was a topical issue in early January in the press?
It's states customs charge 'if applicable'.See this thread in the Brexit forum.
It's down to the registration dates. You will get hit with duty unless the car was registered in the North prior to January 1st.
I'm talking about 2nd hand cars here.It's states customs charge 'if applicable'.
If it's registered in NI no matter what the date of that is then only vrt and nox should be charged. This was the brexit deal.
It's states customs charge 'if applicable'.
If it's registered in NI no matter what the date of that is then only vrt and nox should be charged. This was the brexit deal.
Yes. It's very vague. If anyone knows of a real example then please stick it on this forum.My understanding is the TCA only exempted goods from tariffs that originated in the UK and, given cars include a lot of parts that do not originate in the UK even if assembled there, it is a minefield whether they qualify for the tariff exemption, 2nd hand or new
It's states customs charge 'if applicable'.
If it's registered in NI no matter what the date of that is then only vrt and nox should be charged. This was the brexit deal.
I beg to differ. That applies for GB imported items. Not imports from NI.You misunderstand a very significant component of the Brexit deal, and that is duty free trade, but only for goods that can satisfy the Rules of Origin.
It's been well covered in the media, duty is payable.
I beg to differ. That applies for GB imported items. Not imports from NI.
Nothing deliberate and pointless you getting on the high horse about it. I know already that if it's imported correctly into NI from GB that no duties are expected when registered in Ireland.You seem to be deliberately choosing to ignore the details that you don't like.
If you read the reports and the supplementary Revenue [broken link removed], it states clearly that duty is supposed to be paid on export from GB to NI. However, the UK government implemented legislation to cut tax on car exports to NI (which is in breach of the NI Protocol). As a result, Irish authorities will now charge duty on cars coming from NI unless you can prove duties were paid on the move from GB to NI.
Nothing deliberate and pointless you getting on the high horse about it. I know already that if it's imported correctly into NI from GB that no duties are expected when registered in Ireland.
My original question was has anyone done that yet.?