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Portugal's used car imports triple due to high new car prices

vwImports into Portugal of used vehicles have more than tripled since the Troika arrived, according to the Automobile Association of Portugal.

Lower prices, coupled with tax advantages, explain the growth of this market that has seen imports of used vehicles increased 16.7% in 2018 to 77,241 units.

This number is more than three times the 23,145 used cars imported in 2011. Hence, the proportion of used imported cars has gone from 15% to 34% in the last seven years.

"People often choose to wait at least six months to buy a used car because they pay 20% or 30% less than buying a new one," said the CEO of Montepio Crédito, Pedro Gouveia Alves.

Five year old models are the favourites, added Vítor Gouveia, the president of the Portuguese Automobile Trade Association.

Pedro Gouveia Alves warned that older vehicles, "are riskier because they don’t have the manufacturer's warranty.”

"The Portuguese prefer to buy cars from the mid to low segments. Cars with lower carbon dioxide emissions, as well as lower engine capacity, are more interesting for the Portuguese market," says Gouveia, well aware that car prices in Portugal are impossibly high for most drivers.

The used car import market worries ACAP Secretary General Helder Pedro, "Due to the different tax levels between countries, we are witnessing the arrival of a large number of used vehicles, in proportions normally only seen in countries such as Romania and Poland," in other words, Portugal's new car prices are high due to the array of taxes imposed.

Helder Pedro points out that this situation has contributed to the advanced age of the nation’s cars. When the Troika rolled into town, cars were in average 10.1 years old; in 2018, five years after the "clean exit" from the Troika’s grasp, cars averaged 12.6 years old, hardly eco-friendly.

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Comments  

+1 #10 Barry Smith 2019-03-01 17:18
Get you... why can't you reply in a helpful manner, rather than being so sniffy.

Obviously you are the type of person who just accepts incorrect information as the norm. :lol:

Hi Liza,
CharlieDog is one of those brainwashed "liberals" who thinks it is more politically correct to criticise the person who points out the falsehood than the purveyor of the falsehood :-*
+2 #9 Barry Smith 2019-03-01 15:59
Maybe if the E.U. told the Portuguese government that for every 10 euros illegally taken from citizens for car imports 100 euros would be deducted from the the handouts and grants something would be done.

https://algarvedailynews.com/news/15760-portugal-100-billion-in-eu-grants-and-still-going-strong
0 #8 Liza 2019-03-01 15:12
Quoting CharlieDog:
Quoting Transit:
Quoting Tr:
Portugal was flouting the rules by charging VIA in addition to the other taxes but other than that it is not breaking any other rules,
Its just a popular expat myth


Before making fatuous statements about "expat myths" a little research wouldn't go amiss, it is totally incorrect to say that the Portuguese government only broke the rules by charging IVA on vehicles that had already had tax paid on them in other E.U. countries because in addition to the IVA they also had a variable rate tax based on an arbitrary and discriminatory depreciation rate for any imported vehicles which the E.U. judges said was illegal.

http://www.theportugalnews.com/news/view/590-22


Get you... why can't you reply in a helpful manner, rather than being so sniffy.


Obviously you are the type of person who just accepts incorrect information as the norm. :lol:
+4 #7 CharlieDog 2019-02-28 08:31
Quoting Transit:
Quoting Tr:
Portugal was flouting the rules by charging VIA in addition to the other taxes but other than that it is not breaking any other rules,
Its just a popular expat myth


Before making fatuous statements about "expat myths" a little research wouldn't go amiss, it is totally incorrect to say that the Portuguese government only broke the rules by charging IVA on vehicles that had already had tax paid on them in other E.U. countries because in addition to the IVA they also had a variable rate tax based on an arbitrary and discriminatory depreciation rate for any imported vehicles which the E.U. judges said was illegal.

http://www.theportugalnews.com/news/view/590-22


Get you... why can't you reply in a helpful manner, rather than being so sniffy.
-2 #6 Transit 2019-02-28 08:27
Quoting Tr:
Portugal was flouting the rules by charging VIA in addition to the other taxes but other than that it is not breaking any other rules,
Its just a popular expat myth


Before making fatuous statements about "expat myths" a little research wouldn't go amiss, it is totally incorrect to say that the Portuguese government only broke the rules by charging IVA on vehicles that had already had tax paid on them in other E.U. countries because in addition to the IVA they also had a variable rate tax based on an arbitrary and discriminatory depreciation rate for any imported vehicles which the E.U. judges said was illegal.

http://www.theportugalnews.com/news/view/590-22
-1 #5 Jacko 2019-02-27 18:31
Quoting mj1:
always puzzled in the "single market" ..if I go to spain and buy a washing machine and bring it here and use there is no additional tax why is a car machine different


Firstly, you don't need to matriculate a washing machine, so there is no record of it arriving in Portugal and secondly as it costs such a lot less than a car the tax on it would be hardly worth collecting anyway.
+3 #4 Tr 2019-02-26 23:11
Portugal was flouting the rules by charging VIA in addition to the other taxes but other than that it is not breaking any other rules,
Its just a popular expat myth
+5 #3 mj1 2019-02-26 12:07
always puzzled in the "single market" ..if I go to spain and buy a washing machine and bring it here and use there is no additional tax why is a car machine different
+3 #2 gudluk 2019-02-26 11:48
Last year I nearly bought an imported 2014 Renault Captur from a long established stand. The car had 85.000km on the clock, fortunately I checked its history with my UK dealer and was informed it had completed 225.000km on its last service a year earlier!
+13 #1 Brandon 2019-02-26 08:54
The Portuguese government is still flouting the E.U. ruling that their import tax on cars from other E.U. countries is illegal, the E.U.ruling below is from 2001 and has been followed by a number other which the Portuguese politicians have totally ignored and the E.U. has done nothing about it.

http://www.theportugalnews.com/news/view/590-22

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