Oldtimers

Author
Discussion

PigottBE

Original Poster:

19 posts

171 months

Sunday 13th September 2015
quotequote all
Hi,
Just arrived in Belgium and can not afford the tax for a decently powerful sports car.
I am looking at importing a TVR (not sure what type yet) which is over 25 years old and
registering it as an Oldtimer. Are there any rules / regulations and pitfalls to be aware
of?

Thanks for any advice and looking forward to meeting up with some of you.

Cheers.
Ken.

bxlbaz

383 posts

158 months

Tuesday 15th September 2015
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good to see you again Ken, welcome back to the fold
Barrie

67Fox

452 posts

118 months

Thursday 17th September 2015
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Hi PigottBE,
I'm in the same boot. smile
Where are you based in belgium?
Do you already own a TVR? I guess so from your profile.
But your Chimaera 4.0 is from 1994 that means you will need to wait another 4years? no?
Nice to have contact with others over here smile
Cheers
Simon

PigottBE

Original Poster:

19 posts

171 months

Friday 18th September 2015
quotequote all
Cheers Barrie,

Hi Simon.

To cut a long Story short, I had a Chimaera but sadly sold it, now looking for an oldtimer.

I just heard some very disturbing news the the government are looking to
change the age of an oldtimer from 25 to 30 years.

Has anybody else heard about this?

NCE 61

2,409 posts

288 months

Saturday 19th September 2015
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Ken

During a conversation with Pascal from Passion Engineering he mentioned that the old timer status was changing from 25 to 30 years, but not sure when.

Trying to register my Tuscan S here now and that is proving a long/expensive process.


PigottBE

Original Poster:

19 posts

171 months

Monday 21st September 2015
quotequote all
Thanks for the info Nick,

Looks like I'll be going back in time to my Wedge days.
Anyway, good luck with getting the Tuscan S on the road in Belgium.

67Fox

452 posts

118 months

Friday 25th September 2015
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Sound's like the Begium goverment is going to follow the Dutch. They changeed there rules about oldtimers a couple of years ago form 20-25 to 30 years. frownfrown

Not good news if belgium follows.
Simon

PigottBE

Original Poster:

19 posts

171 months

Friday 25th September 2015
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BAD

TopVpowerRoadste

211 posts

124 months

Wednesday 30th September 2015
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NCE 61 said:
During a conversation with Pascal from Passion Engineering he mentioned that the old timer status was changing from 25 to 30 years, but not sure when.
Hi Nick,

Have you had your car serviced at Passion Engineering? Feedback please?

Thank you and best regards,

Geoffrey

NCE 61

2,409 posts

288 months

Thursday 1st October 2015
quotequote all
TopVpowerRoadste said:
Hi Nick,

Have you had your car serviced at Passion Engineering? Feedback please?

Thank you and best regards,

Geoffrey
Geoffrey I have not had my car serviced there yet, but would not hesitate to do so as the workshop is well equipped, even has a rolling road and Pascal seems to be very knowledgeable on TVR's. Have seen some very nice TVR's in there including a stripped out racing Sagaris with a 4.3 litre engine and an immaculate yellow Sagaris.

I am taking mine in there next week for some items to be attended to prior to the Autokeuring inspection. I will let you know how I get on.

Regards Nick

ecurie

388 posts

209 months

Thursday 1st October 2015
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At present a car is still an oldtimer when it has reached the age of 25, altough it will probably change to 30 years.
What will happen to cars that are between 25 and 30 years old and currently profit from the lower road tax is not yet clear.

To answer your question, it is pretty easy to import and register a 25 year old car in Belgium.
You have to present the invoice and registration documents to customs and pay € 0,40.
After that you go to the technical inpsection station where they will check over your car. After that you can register it. here you have 2 options :
1) register it as an oldtimer. You pay a only about €36 in road tax. The only limits are that you cannot use the car for work or school trips.
2) register it for daily use. You still get the low road tax but you can use the car for work. But : you're car will have to go to the technical inspection every year and will be tested as a modern car.

PigottBE

Original Poster:

19 posts

171 months

Saturday 3rd October 2015
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Thanks ecurie, that's really useful information.

TopVpowerRoadste

211 posts

124 months

Sunday 25th October 2015
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Hi Nick,

Thank you for your message.
I look forward to receive your feedback.

Best regards,

Geoffrey