‘74 E3 for sale on Facebook in BC

CSteve

Well-Known Member
Site Donor $$
Messages
3,804
Reaction score
1,295
Location
Bucks County, PA
Haseeb, hard to say without lots more photos. But given the distance from you in NJ and shipping costs and the hassle and expense of bringing it in from Canada I would look for something closer. Google BMW Bavarias for sale. There are dozens and dozens out there. I know because I just googled them with a vague eye towards maybe/perhaps purchasing one. Although prices have gone up along with all the other classics, they are still a bargain for what you get. I have owned four over the years. Love them.

Steve
 

bluecoupe30!

Well-Known Member
Site Donor
Messages
2,148
Reaction score
1,298
Location
Delta, British Columbia, Canada
Hi Haseeb, yes it looks like you need another car, and probably one , say 4000 km away, that requires customs stuff, transportation and so on. o_O Umm, like Steve has mentioned, way easier to find something closer. It is always amazing what pops up, once you start combing all the local sites. Good luck!
 

billpatterson

Well-Known Member
Site Donor
Messages
512
Reaction score
240
Location
Edmonton, Alberta, Canada
Hi

The hassle to import is minimal; most shipping companies manage it for you. Plus advantage of USD to CAD conversion. I'd ask the seller for more pics and go from there. Way cheaper to buy a car with minor rust issues than one that needs proper rust repair.

Regards
 

Dick Steinkamp

Well-Known Member
Site Donor $
Messages
2,460
Reaction score
2,891
Location
Bellingham, WA
The hassle to import is minimal;

I've imported two vintage cars (1962 and 1967) from Canada (BC). Super simple for me since I live near the BC border.

I go with the seller to the local ICBC office. They prepare the docs I need to import the car (no charge IIRC), I load the car on my trailer. Stop at the US side of the border. An agent comes out and verifies the VIN against the paperwork (no charge). I'm on my way. I go to my local WA State Department of Licensing. Present my docs. Pay the sales tax and registration fee. I'm given a title and plates.
 

GolfBavaria

Well-Known Member
Site Donor $$
Messages
1,800
Reaction score
713
Location
Coeur d'Alene, IDAHO
Looks like it sold for $8.5K. 2.5L Slushbox from Canada (no guts)...save your money like everyone else said and hold off for US car. Not worth the import unless very rare E3.
 

Tony.dreamer

Raider of the lost parts
Site Donor $
Messages
770
Reaction score
193
Location
Edmond , Oklahoma
I've imported two vintage cars (1962 and 1967) from Canada (BC). Super simple for me since I live near the BC border.

I go with the seller to the local ICBC office. They prepare the docs I need to import the car (no charge IIRC), I load the car on my trailer. Stop at the US side of the border. An agent comes out and verifies the VIN against the paperwork (no charge). I'm on my way. I go to my local WA State Department of Licensing. Present my docs. Pay the sales tax and registration fee. I'm given a title and plates.
And if you plan on driving the car you need to stop at tagagency or some local agent , in my case local pharmacy or CVS and buy a transit 30tag. Otherwise you can not drive the car as it’s not registered ! at the border I had to show my bill of sale and pay 2% custom fees, unless the car was Originally made in USA.
 
Top