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Moving to DR without residency (yet)

rgwsf

Dear All:  maybe I can get some advises/answers here :).  I have been leaving in DR for 1.5 years but yet to apply for the residency (not time no need... was).  However, my house in Los Angeles might be sold within a couple of months (we did not expect it to happen for at least another 6 months) and I have a dilemma: to ship my furniture (5 bedroom house with dinning and two living rooms, outside patio furniture, excessive decorations etc.) here or not.  Yes, I am aware of the 18 % taxes but how does DR customs do assessment of  a 15 years old bedroom?  Or old pots, linens, etc.?  Anyone had to go through this before?  Maybe you can recommend a custom duty agent to talk to and represent me?  The reason I am thinking to do it as I am about to finish a 6 bedroom villa in Punta Cana and trying to make a decision if I should furnish it from local stores (very expensive) or it would be wise to ship my things from Los Angeles.  Any advise or consult will be greatly appreciated.  Thank you in advance:)

Best wishes,

Anna

See also

Citizenship in the Dominican RepublicTraveling to the Dominican RepublicRetiring in the Dominican RepublicGetting married in the Dominican RepublicDeath in the Dominican Republic
ddmcghee

We used Arelis at as our customs agent. She knows the process well and can provide some insight into how valuations are done on used household items. We imported with residency, so we had full exoneration on the taxes on the household items and partial exoneration on our vehicle.


Another thing to consider is how well the furniture will work here - will the heat and humidity be an issue, does the style work with the new house, etc. If the furniture can be used here, then it will likely be cheaper in the long run to import it and pay the tax rather than having to liquidate in California and buy new here. But if the pieces are not what you would want in your new home, you might want to bite the bullet, take the loss and start fresh.

planner

They will assess everything at a value that works for them, not you.  That is the reality.  Please speak with a good broker or two. It's not just 18% that can be charged but also duty!

ondami

This may be a dumb question; however, if my partner is Dominican and has her cédula, do we still need a customs broker? 

planner

Yes you do!