$6400 Owner's Manual?

sigh... Where do you guys get this garbage.

There is no HST on used items...
its a value added tax.. understand that term.

The tax on used bikes is not HST. Its a different 13 % tax. (that is meant to emulate the HST's rate)

PST was increased to 13% since introduction of HST, this is what we pay during a private sale.
 
I, like others in this thread, just agreed with the seller as to what we'd declare as the selling price (and typically, it was something ridiculous...not quite $1, but close to).

Been doing it for years.

No issues.

Ever.
 
PST was increased to 13% since introduction of HST, this is what we pay during a private sale.

You are wrong.

You pay retail sales tax. thats not HST, nor is it PST.
Again, its a different 13 % tax that is different from the HST.

its only HST if you purchase from a HST registrant, meaning a Dealership or a shop. otherwise its not HST.
 
it's cause of **** like this that the rest of us will eventually get screwed...

they will eventually catch on and then everyone WILL be paying tax on a "Blue book value"
 
it's cause of **** like this that the rest of us will eventually get screwed...

they will eventually catch on and then everyone WILL be paying tax on a "Blue book value"
There is no blue book value on bikes. That's the whole point.

Declare it for whatever you want. You don't have to make up stories, the MTO ladies don't give a ****. Throw out any letters you get in the mail.
 
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There is a blue book value for motorcycles, well red book anyway. When I brought my bike through CBP this week, the agent pulled out a red book to compare what I declared to what the value of the bike should be.
 
There is a blue book value for motorcycles, well red book anyway. When I brought my bike through CBP this week, the agent pulled out a red book to compare what I declared to what the value of the bike should be.
That's for import, not for private sale ;)

-Jamie M.
 
Did $1 last year.

If you guys think this is bad, you really need to see what accountants do LOL
 
I am going to buy a bike soon. My fear is that if the seller agrees to put something much lower on the bill of sale, they change their mind when they get that letter in the mail and then I'm done for!
 
I once went to the MTO with a friend of mine; I was buying his bike. The lady that was processing our transaction thought we were nice guys and listed the price of the bike as $1.
 
What does the owners manual have to do with it?
Because they only tax you on the vehicle. If the invoice listed separate charges for the bike and the manual, you'd only pay tax on the bike. So the bike is $1 and the manual is $6,399 ;)

You don't need to though, you can just put $1 for the bike and they accept it.

-Jamie M.
 
Tons of great info. Thanks guys. My question is though, when you declare a value of a motorcycle that you purchased does MTO always send that "letter" to ask the seller of the value of the bike or only in special circumstances like the $1 purchases?
 
No, it doesnt. But most of the times it does, but no biggie. Just let the seller/buyer know so in case they call him. I always go with 500$. You can say it was damaged badly bla bla. No wholesale value on bikes so why not take advantage of it.
 
I go with the "Frame" price argument. They want us to register a frame's serial number and if damaged, can never be put back on the road. So if it's the frame they care about, then everything else is parts! Agree with the seller or purchaser on a price for the "Frame" and everything else is good.

I've had the letter thing from the ministry, but like an earlier post, it simply goes away.
 
When I got my bike I said it cost 250 bucks. The lady looked at me and said 250 bucks this can't be legit. I said to her the bike is 02 and it's been crashed and abused. She was like o okay lol
 
i gave them a bill of sale for $1 for my gixxer, they dont care
 
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