Ach Rolf-Dieter....!
This is not so difficult..., com'on!
If you want to export a car from a country like Canada and bring it to another country, let's say Germany, then it is the importing country's border that setups the burdens.
Or, with other words, if you want to import a car from anywhere in the world to Germany ... or let's better say the EU, those local laws there apply.
And that's also how you do the (Google) search:
Search for "
Import Oldtimer aus Kanada"
Search in the destination's language, not the departing country's language.
Doing so I got a lot of links, see here:
https://www.oceancar.de/de/zollrechner.htmlhttps://sclrotterdam.com/de/privatkunden/oldtimer-importierenhttp://www.tuev-oldtimer.de/import-oldtimerhttp://www.kanadischesrecht.de/fachartikel/wirtschafts-und-handelsabkommen-ceta/There is tons of material.
Especially the TUEV-oledtimer homepage is very very useful !
Generally:
If you want to export a car from Canada/USA to EU including Germany,
make sure that you have
- proof of ownership (sales contract, title, etc.)
- have a shipping company (ocean voyage to EU, Bremerhaven, Antwerpen or Rotterdam or so)
- you have to pay Customs (about 10% of the sales value or less, see comments in the link above) upon arrival
- you have to pay 19% VAT in the destination country (here: Germany)
It is absolutely unimportant whether your car is registered or not, running or not or whether the headlights are ... as you say... 'original'; US versus Europa headlights doesn't count for the transport and import into the destination country.
Thus...,
first of all you have to import the "goods" (a classic car is nothing else but (special) goods) to the destination country (DE for example), then you have to pay your duties: Customs and value-added tax...
and then...
you can go further.
The _registration_ of a car is another story....,
for that you have to provide:
- proof of ownership (title, etc.)
- certificate of non-objection frm Kraftfahr-Bundesamt in Flensburg (that your car is not stolen, etc.)
- test/certification of roadworthyness (generally referred to 'TÜV' in Germany)
- car insurance,
etc.
Getting the technical inspection approval (there is the TÜV and other organisations in Germany) for that
is basically as for any other car in Europe/Germany:
- safe, acccurate, every change written into the documentation (title, Fahrzeugbescheinigung),
some minor changes do apply to headlights (no US sealed beam headlight lamps allowed but EU-approved ones), sometimes additional Kilometer-numbering on your speedo...,
that's mostly it.
Importing a 1983 Mercedes into Germany means that the car is 37 years old, and based on age eligible to get the "Oldtimer status" (classic car exempt) if it is mostly "nice" and "original".
An expertise by a competent expert (STVZO § 23) is mandatory for this
in order to obtain the "H-number" (H = historic status on the registration plates and of course the accompanying paperwork, the registration):
Please see here:
https://www.auto-motor-und-sport.de/oldtimer/oldtimer-gutachten-so-bekommt-ihr-klassiker-ein-h-kennzeichen/"Ziel: Der Titel Kraftfahrzeugtechnisches Kulturgut nach § 23 StVZO "
The TUEV and ADAC homepages are a wealth of information for this.
I did exactly this with my SL which you personally know.
I bought my 230 privately 1995 in Seattle, organized a freight forwarding or shipping company ('Spedition') experienced with such a stuff (I tend to remember it was Hegeler in Bremen),
the car was picked up in Seattle from George (the preowner) by a trucking service, carried to the harbor in Los Angeles, loaded onto a freight ship (a German one...),
passed Panama Canal and arrived in Bremerhaven harbor 4 weeks later.
From there we picked it up with a trailer - until after the car cleared customs .... Don't underestimate these costs!Transport was roughly $ 1000 and Customs and VAT was about 1/3 of the car's actual value.
So, there is some considerable costs coming up to the private importeur.
There are.... some exempts, if you can prove it has been your car for an extended periold (at least half a year of so ??) when someone returns to his homecountry (here Germany)..., then there is no tax/customs or so ... but I am not sure about these details. It's worth asking the shipment agent for the details.
Best,
Achim