
More Car.
Same Budget.
Access thousands of auction vehicles from the USA and Canada — sourced, shipped and delivered to your door. Import smart. Drive more. Pay less.

A simple, honest process.
Five steps from your budget to your driveway — handled by people who care about the details.
Recently sourced.
A taste of what we find — everyday workhorses and luxury statements. Tell us what you're after and we'll send you live options.







Shipping handled. Clearing handled.
We coordinate ocean freight, duties and port clearing into Ghana. You get updates at every step — no guesswork, no surprises.
Before you ask.
Honest answers about timelines, costs and what it takes to land an auction car safely in Ghana.
How long does it take to import a car from the USA to Ghana?
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From the moment we win the bid, plan for roughly 6–10 weeks before you're driving the vehicle in Accra — about 4–8 weeks of ocean freight to Tema, then 1–2 weeks for GRA valuation, duty payment and clearing.
How much does it cost to import a car to Ghana?
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As a rule of thumb the landed cost is 1.7×–2.2× the auction hammer price for sedans and small SUVs, higher for luxury or large-engine vehicles. The total covers the auction price, US fees, ocean freight, GRA duty (CIF + engine size based), Tema port charges, clearing agent and DVLA registration.
Can I import any car age into Ghana?
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Ghana penalises vehicles over 10 years old at the time of import with sharply higher duties. Most importers focus on cars 1–10 years old to stay duty-efficient. We help you pick a year band that makes financial sense.
Do I have to fly to the USA to bid?
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No. The full process — bidding on Copart or IAA, payment, shipping, Tema clearing and door delivery — is handled remotely. We bid on your behalf with our dealer credentials and only commit once the price fits your ceiling.
Is it safer to buy clean-title or salvage cars?
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Clean-title cars cost more up front but are easier to insure, register and resell. Salvage cars can be excellent value when the damage is cosmetic or minor front-end — but you need someone who can read auction photos and condition reports honestly before you bid.
What documents do I need?
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Bill of Lading, original title (or salvage certificate), commercial invoice with the hammer price, your Ghana Card and TIN, and an Import Declaration Form (IDF). We handle the IDF and customs paperwork on your behalf.
Tell us your budget.
We'll find the best auction deals and handle the rest.
