This is how Customs Determine the cost of clearing your imported vehicle.

Car is one of the fastest moving import commodities in Nigeria & that's not changing anytime soon. Import a Corolla today, any year (from 2005), upload on Jiji, IG, Nairaland, etc, & you'd see.

I want to highlight the following first.

1. Shipping Method

2. The condition of the car

3. The model number & year of manufacture

4. The formular

1. Shipping Method: There are 3 main types.

a) RORO (Roll on, Roll Out) - Here, your car is driven into the ship at the port of loading, car is driven out of ship at port of landing.

b) Container Shipping Method - Here, the car is loaded into containers. This is adviced mostly where the car is used. A 40ft contain can take upto 4 or 5 sedans. The 20ft container takes upto 2 or 3 sedans. Most times, using containers can be cost effective. Note that you'd pay container deposit which is refundable when you return the container to the shipping company.

c) Aircraft Carrier Method - This is for the big boys. Often used when the car is expensive & needs to be delivered on time - typically within 24-48hrs.

PS: The shipping method will determine charges like terminal landing charges, destination shipping invoice & its customs valuation cost.

Condition of the Imported Car.

This is one of the major factors that determine the cost of the clearance in Nigeria. The Harmonized Systems (HS) Code % of each car type is determined whether the car is new or used. The HS code for imported cars starts from 8702101110 to 8704909000 on the Nigeria Customs Server https://customs.gov.ng. This will determine whether the importer will pay levy or any other fee to clear the car at the port.

Imported New Cars Percentage:

Import Duty – 35% of CIF

Levy - 35% of CIF

Port Surcharge – 7% of Import Duty

ELTS - 0.5% of CIF

CISS - 1% of CIF

VAT - 5%

Imported Used Cars Percentage:

Import Duty – 35% of CIF

Port Surcharge – 7% of Import Duty

ELTS - 0.5% of CIF

CISS - 1% of CIF

VAT - 5%

The Model Number & Year of Manufacture.

Any car manufacture year ie. more than 15yrs can't be imported. Each model number alongside the year of manufacture attracts Customs CIF benchmark. As an importer, you'd need to discuss your cars shipping with both freight forwarding company & Custom Agents in Nigeria - assuming you don't want to do it yourself.

Formular:

1. Import Duty – 35% of CIF for each car: This is the percentage value of HS code of the product or the items. It will be use with CIF (the Cost of the goods, insurance value on the goods and Freight and shipping cost of the item from country of supply to country of destination.

2. Levy Duty on Products - 35% of CIF: For new car(s)

3. Port Surcharge – 7% of Import Duty: This is paid to Nigeria Ports Authority (NPA) or Federal Aviation Authority of Nigeria (FAAN).

4. ELTS (ECOWAS Liberation Trade Scheme) - 0.5% of CIF: This is paid to ECOWAS Trade community.

5. CISS (Comprehensive Inspection Supervision Scheme) - 1% of CIF: this is charged by customs services and other agencies for examination of the product, goods and cars at the ports.

6. VAT (Value Added Tax) - 5% of CIF, Import Duty, Levy (if applicable), Port Surcharge, ELTS, CISS value of the cars.

Finally, please note that clearing is fast when you have all your documentations in place. Hope you learned a thing.

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