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HERE AT SVIS WE
KNOW HOW CONFUSING IT IS FOR PEOPLE WHO MOVED FROM
INTERSTATE TO FIGURE OUT WHAT TO DO TO GET NSW REGISTRATION.
YOU CAN NOW
UNWORRY ABOUT YOUR REGISTRATION.
ALL YOU HAVE TO DO IS BRING YOUR CAR OR A MOTORCYCLE TO US.
WE WILL DO
EVERYTHING FOR YOU.
RTA IS ONE
BLOCK AWAY FROM US. SO ONCE WE ORGANISE ALL PAPER WORK
REQUIRED FOR REGISTRATION YOU JUST VISIT RTA AND GET NEW
NUMBER PLATES AND REGISTRATION.
WHOLE PROCESS
CAN BE DONE WITHIN 1-2 HOURS. WE WILL ORGANISE ALL REPAIRS
IF ANY REQUIRED TO PASS THE INSPECTION INCLUDING TYRES.
Get rego for a
vehicle from interstate
If you have a vehicle that is currently registered
interstate, or has expired interstate registration, you will
need to register it in NSW.
You need to go to a motor registry, or send an authorised
representative, to register the vehicle.
What you need to provide:
-
Proof of
your identity, or, if you're registering the vehicle in
the name of a company or organisation, proof that the
company or organisation is a legal entity.
-
Proof of
entitlement to register the vehicle.
Note:
To be exempt Stamp Duty in NSW you must provide evidence
that you paid stamp duty in the State in which the
vehicle was previously registered. You
must
provide a current certificate of registration. If the
certificate has been lost, an RTA motor registry can
organise verification. (miniumum 48 hours required for
verification)
-
Proof of
your residential address in NSW.
-
A hard
copy green slip or CTP Policy Receipt with the number
plate section blank (except for trailers). The period of
cover must be 12 months for light vehicles.
-
A blue
slip from an Authorised Unregistered Vehicle Inspection
Station (AUVIS).
-
Evidence
of repairs if the vehicle is a repairable write-off.
-
An
engineer's certificate if the vehicle has been modified
beyond the owner-certified level, or is an Individually
Constructed Vehicle (ICV).
-
The
interstate number plates.
-
A
completed Application for Registration form, available
from the Registration Forms link below.
-
Evidence
of your eligibility for a pensioner or other concession
if you intend to claim one.
-
A
Representative's Authority if the vehicle is being
registered in the name of an organisation, or if you
send someone to register the vehicle for you.
-
For
a company, the Director or an authorised delegate
must complete and sign the Representative's section
on the Application for Registration form, or provide
a letter of authorisation on letterhead.
-
In
the case of an incorporated association, the Public
Officer must sign.
-
In
all cases, the authorised representative must
provide proof of their identity.
-
Payment
for fees, taxes and charges.
-
All
vehicles presented for registration (including
interstate and imported vehicles) may need to be
inspected by the RTA's Vehicle Identification Inspection
Unit (VIIU). There is an additional fee for this
inspection. If your vehicle needs a VIIU inspection, you
will be notified at the time of registration.
What you need to pay:
-
Registration fees.
-
Stamp
duty.
-
Number
plate fees.
-
Inspection fee (the blue slip).
-
Vehicle
identification inspection fee.
-
CTP
insurance premium (the green slip).
You can use our Rego
Calculator to work out costs for your vehicle.
Owner-certified
modifications
Owner-certified modifications are generally those
modifications which were optional equipment to the vehicle
concerned. Owner-certified modifications also include some
non-standard modifications of a minor nature which do not
affect the level of safety, strength, or reliability of
vital systems such as brakes and steering. These
modifications have little or no impact on the vehicle's
level of compliance with the Australian Design Rules. The
modified vehicle must be presented to an AUVIS or HVAIS. For
more information, see Vehicle
Standards.
Individually
Constructed Vehicle (ICV)
Vehicles built on specially constructed floorplans or
chassis structures are referred to as Individually
Constructed Vehicles (ICVs). Some extensively modified
production vehicles are also classified as ICVs. These
vehicles must comply with current design and safety
standards as well as meeting recognised standards for
strength and controllability. For more information, see Vehicle
Standards.
Interstate
vehicles issued a surrogate Vehicle Identification Number
(VIN)
Vehicles that have been issued with surrogate VINs by
interstate registration authorities can be identified, but
not restricted to, as having the characters
V97.
Surrogate VINs were issued to imported or illegitimate body
shells used to 'repair' wrecked or written-off Australian
vehicles. These body shells are in many cases from vehicles
imported to Australia without a Commonwealth Vehicle Import
Approval for legal road use and are not eligible to be
registered. Surrogate VINs were issued interstate as a
concession to re-register a written-off vehicle.
In NSW, rebirthed vehicles or vehicles imported for
dismantling are not acceptable for purposes of
registration. The matter of which a vehicle has been given
concession by another interstate authority to register the
vehicle does not mean the vehicle will be registered in NSW.
It has been a national requirement since 1988 for people to
obtain prior written approval from the Department of
Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development and Local
Government to import any vehicle into Australia.
If a vehicle
import apporval document cannot be provided for any vehicle
not fitted with an approved Compliance Plate, it is
considered that the vehicle was imported for dismantling and
as such it cannot be used for road transport.
Registering a
vehicle with cancelled or expired registration
You will need to re-register a vehicle if it has been
registered in NSW before and the previous registration was
not renewed within three months of the expiry date, or the
registration has been cancelled.
You need to go to a motor registry, or send an authorised
representative, to re-register the vehicle.
What you need to provide:
-
Proof of
your identity, or if you're registering the vehicle in
the name of a company or organisation, proof that the
company or organisation is a legal entity.
-
Proof of
entitlement to register the vehicle.
-
Proof of
your residential address in NSW.
-
A hard
copy green slip or CTP Policy Receipt with the number
plate section blank (except for trailers). The period of
cover must be 12 months for light vehicles.
-
A blue
slip from an Authorised Unregistered Vehicle Inspection
Station (AUVIS).
-
Evidence
of repairs if the vehicle is a repairable write-off.
-
An
engineer's certificate if the vehicle has been modified
beyond the owner-certified level, or is an Individually
Constructed Vehicle (ICV).
-
The
number plates (if available).
-
A
completed Application for Registration, available form
the Registration Foms link below.
-
Evidence
of your eligibility for a pensioner or other concession.
-
A
Representative's Authority if the vehicle is being
registered in the name of an organisation, or if you
send someone to register the vheicle for you.
-
For
a company, the Director or authorised delegate must
complete and sign the Representative's section on
the Application for Registration form, or provide a
letter of authorisation on letterhead.
-
In
the case of an incorporated association, the Public
Officer must sign.
-
In
all cases, the authorised representative must
provide proof of their identity.
-
Payment
for fees, taxes and charges.
-
All
vehicles presented for registration (including
interstate and imported vehicles) may need to be
inspected by the RTA's Vehicle Identification and
Inspection Unit (VIIU). There is an additional fee for
this inspection. If your vehicle needs a VIIU
inspection, you will be notified at the time of
registration.
What you may need to pay:
-
Registration fees.
-
Stamp
duty.
-
Number
plate fees.
-
Inspection fee (the blue slip).
-
Vehicle
identification inspection fee.
-
CTP
insurance premium (the green slip).
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