Importing a car from Japan sounds simple. Find a car. Buy it. Ship it. Done… right? Not exactly. The biggest mistakes happen before the car even leaves Japan — and they can cost you thousands.
This is where most beginners mess up. You'll see a car you love — R34, Chaser, Silvia — and immediately start thinking about price, mileage, condition. But none of that matters if the car isn't legally importable.
In the U.S., most imports rely on the 25-year rule. If the car isn't old enough, the process becomes significantly more complicated and expensive. Skipping this check can completely kill a deal before it even begins.
Legality is the very first filter — before you fall in love with a listing, verify the car qualifies under the 25-year rule. Everything else comes after.
Now you're browsing listings. At first it seems easy: pick a clean car, good mileage, good price. But here's the reality.
The cheapest car is almost never the cheapest import. Two cars might look identical online, but one could cost you $3,000–$6,000 more after it lands.
Auction sheets, photos, and listings do not tell the full story — unless you know exactly what to look for. I've seen high-grade cars with hidden issues and low-grade cars that were actually great deals. Buyers pass on good cars and overpay for worse ones every single day.
This step alone is where most money is lost. It's also where having someone experienced review listings makes the biggest difference.
Let's say you found a car for $10,000. That does not mean you're paying $10,000. There are layers of fees between the listing price and the car sitting in your driveway.
A "cheap" car can easily become $4,000–$6,000 more expensive by the time it reaches you. Knowing this upfront lets you budget correctly and compare options accurately.
You don't just click "buy now." There's infrastructure behind every purchase — and who handles it matters.
They handle purchasing the car, completing paperwork in Japan, and arranging shipping logistics. Choosing the wrong one can delay your car or cause serious paperwork issues when it arrives at the U.S. port.
Not all exporters are equal. Reputation, communication, and experience with U.S. customs documentation vary widely. This is a part of the process most buyers don't research carefully enough.
Once purchased, your car gets shipped across the Pacific. There are two main methods, and the right choice depends on your car and budget.
Most people go RoRo unless they have a specific reason not to — a pristine example, very low ride height, or extreme sentimental value. For daily imports, RoRo is the standard.
When the car arrives in the U.S., it doesn't go straight to you. It has to clear customs first. This is where delays — and fees — pile up if anything is out of order.
If anything is wrong or missing here — your car gets held, you pay daily storage fees at the port, and the process turns into a headache fast. Correct documentation from the start prevents this entirely.
Once customs clears, you have to get the car from the port to you. You can pick it up yourself, or arrange transport — most people go with transport.
Ports charge daily storage fees after a grace period. Once your car clears customs, arrange pickup or transport promptly — those fees add up faster than you'd expect.
Importing gets the car here. There are still a few steps before you can actually enjoy it.
This final phase is often underestimated. Build a small buffer into your budget for inspection, initial maintenance, and registration costs. After that — it's yours to enjoy.
Most money is lost at the listing stage — not during shipping. A bad pick can cost $3,000–$6,000 before the car even lands.
Buyers budget for the listing price and get blindsided by fees. The real number is always higher than you expect.
Missing or incorrect documentation at customs means storage fees, delays, and headaches that are entirely avoidable.
Auction grades don't tell the full story. A grade 4 car can have hidden issues a grade 3 doesn't — if you know what to look for.
An unreliable exporter creates problems that follow the car all the way to your port — delays, bad paperwork, and poor communication.
The process isn't hard — but every step has a way to go wrong. Experience is the difference between a smooth import and an expensive lesson.
Some people go fully DIY — and that's fine. But most clients come to me after realizing they don't want to review 20+ listings, risk a costly mistake, or figure out what's actually a good deal. That's what PAA is here for.