What to expect if I import an amp and preamp from a Japan seller via US eBay


I can’t afford the cost of the amp and preamp I’d like to buy.  I’ve discovered I can pay just less than half what I’d pay at a dealer in the US.  But I haven’ t done this before.  I’m aware that I won’t have a guarantee and that I’ll need a step down transformer.    I willing to take the risk of no guarantee.  But I don’t know what to expect when my box hits CUSTOMS.  What can I expect?  What are my responsibilities?  How much is it likely to cost me?, I’ll be paying $7000 for the amp and the preamp..

128x128echolane

@2psyop There are many buyers of recognize the minimal value of all the "sleep-well-at-night" issues you bring up.  The OP obviously is one of them and willing to sleep fine without a warranty.  

I can't remember the last time I made a warranty claim but I do remember frustration over the years when warranty claims were difficult or denied.  I don't even like warranties on vehicles.  I'd light money on fire before I bought an extended warranty.

@2psyop I have bought a few things from outside the US.  As a consumer, you will be liable for very little duties.  I think I paid $30 on a $4500 amp once.  The key is the code that the shipper uses from the Harmonized Tariff Schedule.  Gooogle it and see how complicated it is.  Ask the seller what tariff code they use, look it up, and you'll see your import duty responsibility. That said, it may not quite match but mine was such a small number I just paid it and went on.

Jerry

 

Jerry

No offense, man.....but I'm not liking how this is sounding.

That being said, I would expect that if you get stuck at customs, you can probably plan on 10% of the declared value (that's about what it is for watches). I'd plan on it, actually, especially if they declare the actual value.

 

 

If you can find out the commodity code, you can figure exactly the import duties.

If you are talking about Accuphase there are dealers who convert 100v Japan units but I would be weary of that.