Monday, February 21, 2011

What does it cost to ship a car to Costa Rica?


In October of 2009, we found a used Geo Tracker for sale in Tonto Basin. We wereleaving in a few days for Costa Rica but knew this was the car we would eventually want down here. So, we bought it anyway and let it sit in the barn in Arizona till we returned.

Finally this Fall I began in ernest to find the best way to get the car to Costa Rica. I contacted 4 different companies who specialize in shipping vehicles worldwide who provided me with a wealth of information. And, a quote, of course. I found out that the safest way to ship your car is in a container. Depending upon your needs you can have a full container or part of one. This also allows you to ship additional items, preferably "used" as the container and its contents will go through customs and be taxed accordingly. This is also the more expensive option. There is also a "ro-ro" option which I think means "ride-on ride-off." Using this method, your car will be driven onto a ship and driven off at the port of entry. This is for the car only - you can not have additional items in you car using this method. If there is anything left in the car there is very little chance it will still be there when you see your car again.

We really had nothing else of value to ship so we opted for the ro-ro method. All of the quotes we received included transportation from Arizona to Florida. They ran ran between $1,000 and $1,200 for that segment. Well, I had never seen East Texas, New Orleans, Mississippi, Alabama or the Gulf Coast of Florida and couldn't see why I should pay to have my car see it before me. We chose to drive the car to the port in Tampa, FL ourselves.

Cost for driving from Arizona to Florida including gas, food and hotels for 8 nights came to about $800. Plus we had a great road trip.

The shipping agent we selected was Ship Your Car Now and our agent was Rich Lawson(www.shipyourcarnow.com, 1-888-532-8805). The cost to ship the car from Tampa to Limon, Costa Rica, was $875. This did not include the $20 for 2 "safety vests" we were required to buy at the port in order to drive our car down to the dock. They are beautiful and I am sure we will wear them often!

The actual shipping company was Sea Central Shipping (www.seacentral.net, 888-538-3545). We were contacted by them and they recommended a bilingual customs agent in Limon that we could work with.

Our customs agent in Limon was extremely helpful. Fabio Madrigal (8813 85 85 (cell) or office 2758 48 40) took our car through customs, brought the car to the required inspection (Retivie), secured the insurance (Marchamo), provided an attorney for submitting the title and registration into the National Registry and handled all of the paper work for us. Fabio also showed us the web sites where you could check in advance to see what your import duty would be on a car. This is something I had been trying to find out on my own for some time. The site at http://www.hacienda.go.cr/autohacienda/Autovalor.aspx

Import duities for our 1995 Geo Tracker, 2x4 manual transmission, with the inspection, insurance (for the year), legal fees, Fabio fees, etc. came to about $2,060.

Would we ship another car. Absolutely. As you can see from the photo, our little red car loves the beaches already!

4 comments:

Allan said...

Vehicle transportation is always an issue if the route is long enough for you to not drive safely. Your post is good and I will really go for good car shippers this time. :)

Regards

.A-

Unknown said...

Please do yourself a favor and DO NOT USE ShipYourCarNow. Read the reviews first and steer clear of this company. I had a really bad experience with them and that is the reason why I am writing this comment, so hopefully I will save someone else from a nightmare, dealing with the crooks at ShipYourCArNow.

Anonymous said...

I'd check with A-1 Auto Transport, Inc., as I know they ship cars to pura vida land.

Tontoricans said...

It is important to do your homework when selecting a shipping company and be completely comfortable with the selection you make. Some people may have a great experience but there are just as many horror stories. I'd suggest perusing Costa Rica Ex-pat forums online for input and comparisons.