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Shipping a Car or Equipment From a US Auction Overseas: Step by Step

You won the lot — now what? A practical, end-to-end guide to exporting vehicles and equipment bought at US auctions, from yard pickup to delivery at the destination port.

SPCT

Seaway Project Cargo Team

Project Cargo & Heavy-Lift Specialists

January 21, 20268 min read

Buying from US auctions is one of the best ways to source value, but the logistics trip up first-time exporters. Here's the full sequence.

1. Before you bid

  • Confirm the title status. Salvage, non-running, or "bill of sale only" lots affect what some countries will admit and how the unit must ship.
  • Check the destination rules in the relevant country guide — age limits, valuation method, required inspections.
  • Estimate the landed cost with the Import Duty & Tax Estimator so the "bargain" stays a bargain after duty and VAT.

2. After you win

  • Pay and collect documents promptly — auction yards (see our auction directory) charge storage and have firm removal deadlines.
  • Arrange yard pickup to the load port. Inland transport from a remote yard is often a significant cost — factor it in.

3. Choose the method

4. Export and ocean transit

We handle the export documentation (and US export filing), book the sailing, and provide the bill of lading. Estimate the schedule with the transit-time estimator.

5. Destination clearance and delivery

Your consignee (or a broker we coordinate with) clears the cargo, pays duty and VAT, and arranges final delivery. Markets like Kenya and Nigeria value against their own databases, so budget from that figure, not your purchase price.

Have an auction win to move? Send us the lot location and destination and we'll quote the whole journey. Request a quote.

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