Sign up / Sign in
Buy
Sell
Reviews
Browse over 9,000 car reviews
Family focused reviews and advice for everything family car related.
Off-road for beginners and the experienced, plus camper trailers, caravans and motorhomes
Utes, commercial vehicles and tow tests
We make it easy to compare design, practicality, value and more
Buying used? Here’s what to look out for and buy smart
Buying guides
Our experts pick the top models
News
What’s happening in the automotive world
Get to know the personalities behind the team every week
The stars of the latest big events
The most interesting hints of what’s to come
What’s been recalled and why. Are you affected?
The latest and future car tech from around the world
Advice
We’re here to help you with any car issues
Looking for tips on how to carry or travel with your family?
How To, off-road tips and adventure travel destinations
Not just utes. Detailed advice for you – the tradie – on what car is right for you and your job
Looking for an answer? Our automotive experts are here to help
If you’re wondering, we’ve probably got the answer
Unsure of your car’s maximum towing capacity? We’ve listed all relevant models here.
Wondering how much air to put in your tyres? Our database has the answer
Everything you need to know to keep you and your family as safe as possible
Helpful advice before you finance your next car
Tips for getting the right insurance and how to make a claim
Everything you need to know when sizing up your new car
adventureguide
Browse over 9,000 car reviews
adventureguide
evguide
familyguide
tradieguide
urbanguide
Browse over 9,000 car reviews
If you want to get your hands on a car that was never sold new in Australia by the manufacturer, there is only one way to get it: you have to import it. We Aussies missed out on a lot of cool cars as our market was too small for the manufacturer to go through the time and expense of sending specialty vehicles all the way to us.
However, enterprising souls realised in the late 1990s that importing cars to Australia in small batches was possible. Japanese used cars were particularly attractive given how cheap many examples sold at their local online auctions, and Japan’s close proximity to Australia for shipping.
This opened the door to high-performance late-model Japanese cars like the Nissan Skyline GT-R, Toyota Supra, Mazda RX-7, Nissan 180SX, Mitsubishi 3000GT, twin-turbo Nissan 300ZX, and Toyota Chaser. All of these cars featured excellent build-quality and reliability, individuality, and scintillating performance not found in regular Aussie cars of the time, and the costs for the Japanese to keep these cars after a certain age meant the car value were exceptionally cheap.
As the market for Japanese enthusiast car imports swelled in Australia, the number of other Japanese Domestic Market (JDM) models finding Aussie support also picked up as luxury people-mover vans and small quirky micro cars from Japan were available at bargain prices. A large industry grew around Japanese imports in Australia and Japanese cars for sale because, as an island nation, Australia imports many goods already and has plenty of company which can handle importing vehicles into Australia.
However, this all changed in the early 2000s when the federal government imposed restrictions on the types of cars Australia imports, making the process much more involved and expensive as a way of protecting the local new-car market and ensuring high-quality vehicles end up on Australian roads. Japanese imports were thought to be costing the new car business too much money, and Japanese cars for sale were rumoured to have been improperly imported.
While vehicles built before January 1, 1989 were practically a free-for-all to import (yay, Hakosukas for all!) things were very different for cars built from January 1, 1989. The Specialist and Enthusiast Vehicle Scheme (SEVS) prevented Australians from buying vehicles already on sale in Australia, but allowed Aussies to bring in certain models which were unique, or which were vastly different to the models on sale in Australia.
This was policed through listing approved cars on a Register of Specialist and Enthusiast Vehicles, and these could be imported and legally registered in Australia once they had been through a modification process at a Registered Automotive Workshop (or RAWS) that made them comply with Australian standards for cars.
The actual process for importing vehicles from Japan is nominally simple; you purchase a car in Japan (normally at a Japan car auction through an agent or representative in Japan), the vehicle is de-registered and prepared for shipping (normally done by the agent, and this includes paperwork required to bring the vehicle to Australia), it is then delivered to the docks where it can be shipped (in several ways depending on budget and which port it is shipping from).
Port workers in the destination port then unload the car and it goes through the checks from customs and quarantine departments (including cleaning), import duties and taxes are payable and once they’re paid the car is free to be collected and taken to the nominated RAWS site where it has various modifications done to the car to bring it in line with Australian standards. Normally this compliance work involves fitting Australian Standard seat belts, tyres, re-gassing the air conditioning, and sometimes fitting side-intrusion bars to the doors.
The RAWS will affix a special compliance plate identifying that the car has been properly imported and made legal to be registered for road use in Australia. This is important as there are various ways to import cars to Australia, and some of them cannot be registered for road use, or are only legally allowed to be in Australia temporarily (called a Carnet De Passage).
Low-volume enthusiast-oriented imports like Nissan’s legendary Skyline GT-R, or Toyota’s JZA80-series Supra were particularly popular imports back in the day as they offered genuine supercar performance for a fraction of the price of the latest Porsche or Ferrari, while smaller turbocharged four-cylinder imports like Nissan’s Silvia/180SX, Subaru’s Legacy GT and Mitsubishi’s RVR and Galant VR-4 provided a cheap entry point to fast turbo sports cars for young enthusiasts.
To start with, the single most important piece of paperwork you need is called a Vehicle Import Approval (VIA). Without this crucial sheet of paper from the Australian government’s Department of Infrastructure, you cannot legally import a road-going car. Once lodged, these take approximately 20 business days to gain approval, cost $50 and can be applied for online.
You need to apply for a VIA after purchasing your car in Japan, but before you book any shipping, and you shouldn’t buy an unregistered import car that doesn’t have a VIA as you might find you can’t register it. They’re fairly straightforward forms, which require scanned copies of your invoice for the car’s purchase, some ID numbers from the car (like the VIN), and your details.
Shipping and import costs will vary, depending on the cost of the car and how you choose to ship your car (roll-on, roll-off, or in a container, and direct port-to-port, or if the ship stops at ports along the way). You could safely budget for $5000 to import a small car from Japan to Sydney and up to $10,000 for larger vehicles, with compliance costs on top as these vary car-to-car.
For vehicles brought in under SEVS you’ll also have costs to pay once it hits the Aussie docks, including a cleaning fee, plus duties and GST which is calculated on the purchase and shipping prices together, before the vehicle is free to be picked up and taken for compliance work.
If this is all sounding confronting, convoluted and daunting, then the best option is to use a company like Iron Chef Imports or Import Monster, both of whom have been bringing awesome JDM cars and parts into Australia for decades, including for the Japanese car-obsessed guys from Mighty Car Mods. Marty and MOOG have been regular Japanese car importers to Sydney for over 10 years, and recently brought a rare Nissan March Super-Turbo in under the recently changed “classic car” import laws.
Import laws were relaxed following the closure of the Australian domestic car industry in 2017. The previous January 1989 date was scrapped for “classic” imports and a rolling 25-year structure was put in place, coming into effect on December 10, 2019. This means the car needs to be 25 years old in the year and month you apply for the VIA to import it, and it doesn’t apply to commercial vehicles.
The compliance costs for these 25-year-old imports are generally lower as they do not normally need to comply with current Australian Design Rules like a newer vehicle would under SEVS. However, with their age and reducing numbers, prices for “classic” 25-year-old or older Japanese cars are climbing, particularly as Americans are now free from their own import restrictions and can bring previously-banned models to the USA.
You can read more about the government requirements and processes for importing cars here. The outline of the overall SEVS programme can be found here and RAWS is explained at this link here.
You might think that when a brand offers a capped-price servicing plan, you,…
Volkswagen offers a capped-price servicing program for all of its current…
Toyota offers a capped-price servicing program for all of its current models,…
23 September 2022 · Matt Campbell
23 September 2022 · Tim Nicholson
22 September 2022 · Matt Campbell
21 September 2022 · Matt Campbell
27 September 2022 · Tim Nicholson
29 August 2022 · Justin Hilliard
27 August 2022 · James Cleary
15 August 2022 ·
13 October 2020 · Andrew Chesterton
18 September 2022 · Tom White
15 September 2022 · Richard Berry
12 September 2022 · Tom White
26 September 2022 · Emily Agar
17 September 2022 · Emily Agar
14 September 2022 · Helen Frost
14 September 2022 · Mark Oastler