Someone please correct me, but seem to recall it'll be 10% import duty added.
Stupid not to have thought about it before but the wife wants to order a new car this weekend. Delivery is likely to be early next year. If there is no Brexit deal what extra duty is payable?
Someone please correct me, but seem to recall it'll be 10% import duty added.
You will need a good crystal ball for that.
Not even WTO conditions are settled yet so ????
Personally I would either buy something standing on the shop floor/pipe line allready or wait till the dust has settled. You can try make a fixed price deal with the dealer but would yoú??
Unfortunately the combination of colour and equipment she wants isn’t very mainstream. For example it must have auto folding mirrors so she can tell if she’s locked it from a distance. Dealer stock seems to have odd combinations of options but never everything she wants in red.
It is 10% i believe, which will be passed on to the end customer.
Back when brexit was supposed to be end of March, a few manufacturers said they would hold prices on orders placed before 1st of Feb, but after that you'd have to pay, or cancel for free. I've just ordered a skoda octavia on a lease deal, delivery in 10-12 weeks, so i'm hoping i wont get hit, or i'll just cancel and rethink
We've been promised that the UK will be the best country in the world to live in after Brexit. Boris said it. So hang tight and you'll be able to get a brand new Merc S class for £10k after Brexit.
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She would be paying cash unless the finance deal was on a lower price and she could end it early. I’Il suggest that she makes sure she can cancel. I guess she would loose her deposit if she did.
PS Would I be right in assuming that 10% is added the the pre tax price the other taxes are based on that?
Last edited by raysablade; 28th August 2019 at 13:13.
A pony and trap might be a better idea.
"Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time it's enemy action."
'Populism, the last refuge of a Tory scoundrel'.
Started out with nothing. Still have most of it left.
Rolex's aplenty though!
OP what brand or country of manufacture is one of the first things to consider.
If, in the unlikely event, of a no deal Brexit actually happening you can bet your bottom dollar on there being a trade deal struck by Mrs Merkel faster than a GT3 with Nitrous Oxide. The German auto industry cannot afford to lose their grip on the UK. The French and Italians will follow suit closely behind.
There maybe a few delays which might extend lead times but that’s probably about it to worry about.
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But but they need us more than we need them, don’t they....
Surely we are already paying the import Tarriffs on cars from Japan and Korea.
But if it warms the cockles, the money goes to the chancellor, so he can spend it really good stuff like the NHS, social services, policing. So it's not really dead money.
Or why not just buy a car made in the UK and avoid tarrifs. Good for UK jobs and the UK economy. Win win.
Whoever does not know how to hit the nail on the head should be asked not to hit it at all.
Friedrich Nietzsche
You are quite right. Membership of the EU prevents member countries signing its own trade deals. One of the reason why many UK folks wanted to leave :-)
However I image Germany along with France and Italy will move heaven and earth to try and get a trade deal (which includes cars).
Perhaps BMW will have to start shipping models made in the US or South Africa in the meantime, but tarrifs will apply unless the UK has a trade deal in place with these countries.
Whoever does not know how to hit the nail on the head should be asked not to hit it at all.
Friedrich Nietzsche
I suggest that you take whatever car is available today in the showroom.
If she later tries to say that it’s not red and doesn’t have automatic folding mirrors then tell her to stop promoting project fear and be more positive about her future relationship with the car.
And remember - the car needs her more than she needs it, so it will soon turn red of its own accord :-)
Take back control man!
Must it be brand new? nothing in the country at the moment in the right spec and colour demo model etc.
So i was looking to buy a new van for when the new 19 plates came out in march. While I was in the Citroen dealership looking at a Berlingo van, which judging by how many you see on the road is quite a popular van, the salesman said if I was considering one I should buy one imeadeately as if i waited until after Brexit they would likely to go up in price by as much as 25%. This was due he explained to having to pay import duty and the price of the pound falling against the Euro and the added costs of part etc etc. Now I realise most of this was sales talk to try and persuade me to make a decision there and then, but I said to him that if that were the case price wise that I would imagine the sales of not just Citroen but a lot of other european car manufacturers sales would suffer in the UK unless some kind of deal was done.
Seriously can anyone see manufacturers putting their prices up by as much as 25% due to Brexit ?
Buy something that is on the forecourt now.
The pound took another shunt vs the Euro today and it’s likely to go further if BoJo doesn’t get a deal.
That plus import duty will just keep making the choice more and more expensive.
Don't forget the bucket and spade,
"Once is happenstance. Twice is coincidence. The third time it's enemy action."
'Populism, the last refuge of a Tory scoundrel'.
We’ll feel right at home - Zee LINKY
Fas est ab hoste doceri
Isn’t that a bit European eating horse?
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They can try, but if you look at the RRP of cars they’ve increased quite significantly like for like over the years anyway.
I suspect that they would subsidise in order to cover additional duty anyway if the Germans and French don’t lobby for a deal on cars post Brexit.
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When car importing was at it's peak, one of the cheapest countries to buy was Denmark because their car tax was something like 100% so the manufacturers (German one's I dealt with at least) used to sell the Danes their cars at the lowest pre tax price in Europe to help counter the high domestic taxes to keep their market share.
Buying a UK spec Audi via a Danish dealer, then importing it to the UK, you only need add 20% VAT. I bought an Audi S3 there, in the UK list was c £26k and Audi dealers wouldn't discount. The same car (albeit with 2 years manufacturers warranty, not the 3 Audi UK offered), cost around £18,000 inc UK VAT.
I see a similar situation if anything skews UK prices upwards.
Just get a quote from carwow or coast2coastcars and ask the dealership to match it on a stock car that's a higher spec (so will have the options already) and forget the god awful red colour and avoid any uncertainty. Unlikely they will match the cheapest quote but will certainly give you a better price.
End of September is the end of the quarter and they will want to do a deal "today" on a stock car. They're not interested in factory orders. Also you always get a better deal on a stock car than you do on a factory order. Logic dictates that if you're happy to wait, you'll be happy to pay, and they're right.
I do totally agree about the auto folding mirrors. Trying to find a Polo with them for my mum at the moment and it's a nightmare.
No idea why anyone buys a red car though. Wouldn't touch one if you paid me unless it was a Ferrari.
You throw away quite a lot of money if you buy new - I have just bought a 10 month old BMW X1, an ex BMW staff car, from a BMW Dealer for £13,500 less than the list price - the car was like new, not a mark on it and with only 3,750 miles on the clock.
The above is quite normal and most Main Dealers will be offering similar discounts at the present time.
There is so much good value in the nearly new car market ......... I do not think that I would ever buy new
Ha ha😉
Try adding: easy to park in town, at least 125bhp, automatic, dual zone climate, heated seats, “good” lights and blind spot monitoring to the list. And under £25000. Bizarre but a Polo GTI is topping her list and she’s no spring chicken.
None of the used searches I’ve found include all of the things she wants.
The basic problem is that she likes to: pay cash, keep her cars for at least 5 years and that’s a long time to go without something you’ve had and enjoyed.
Waiting for the dust to settle and biting the bullet on a factory order seems sensible.