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Jeks89
9th March 2020, 09:18
Hey guys, just wondering what I should/need to do.. I had an old Suzuki FXR150 that was sitting in the garage for a couple of years with it’s licence on hold. I sold it the other month to a guy who wanted to convert it to a bucket racer so I didn’t even think about transferring the registration. I’ve now just received an email saying that my licence exemption has expired so I’ll either have to re-apply for the exemption or re-register the bike. I’ve looked into it a bit more and apparently NZTA will de-register any vehicle that hasn’t held a licence for 12 months. Is this true? If not, what can I do to get rid of the bike being under my name still?

caseye
9th March 2020, 16:38
Hey guys, just wondering what I should/need to do.. I had an old Suzuki FXR150 that was sitting in the garage for a couple of years with it’s licence on hold. I sold it the other month to a guy who wanted to convert it to a bucket racer so I didn’t even think about transferring the registration. I’ve now just received an email saying that my licence exemption has expired so I’ll either have to re-apply for the exemption or re-register the bike. I’ve looked into it a bit more and apparently NZTA will de-register any vehicle that hasn’t held a licence for 12 months. Is this true? If not, what can I do to get rid of the bike being under my name still?

Simple, change the ownership, forms at any VTNZ and then it's gone forever, up to the new owner what he does then, re regiters or writes off the road to become a track bike.
:killingme:killingme:clap:

scott411
9th March 2020, 18:15
Hey guys, just wondering what I should/need to do.. I had an old Suzuki FXR150 that was sitting in the garage for a couple of years with it’s licence on hold. I sold it the other month to a guy who wanted to convert it to a bucket racer so I didn’t even think about transferring the registration. I’ve now just received an email saying that my licence exemption has expired so I’ll either have to re-apply for the exemption or re-register the bike. I’ve looked into it a bit more and apparently NZTA will de-register any vehicle that hasn’t held a licence for 12 months. Is this true? If not, what can I do to get rid of the bike being under my name still?

either get the plates off the guy and surrender them, or do a change of ownership if you have the guys details to do it,

F5 Dave
9th March 2020, 19:01
You could actually call nzta and ask but they will deregister it if you haven't paid them any money .

russd7
15th March 2020, 17:04
no vehicle leaves my possession until i have completed at least the seller part of transfer, easily done online on a smart phone

F5 Dave
15th March 2020, 17:09
Of course the real answer was to race the bike yourself.

FJRider
15th March 2020, 18:11
Simple, change the ownership, forms at any VTNZ and then it's gone forever, up to the new owner what he does then, re regiters or writes off the road to become a track bike.
:killingme:killingme:clap:

A good plan.

But … ANY time your bike spends without CURRENT registration is attributable to you … as the registered owner at that time. A change of ownership will put the cost on to the NEW owner from the date of change of ownership ONLY.

Not a big deal you might think / say … BUT the bill for unpaid rego will not disappear forever. The powers that be want the money. So they pass the account onto a debt collection agency. They add their % onto the account and YOUR name is in THEIR books. And until YOU pay that account … it remains your problem.

No worries you say … maybe … well not really. until you get / need a credit check done on you.

And you fail it.

caseye
15th March 2020, 19:27
A good plan.

But … ANY time your bike spends without CURRENT registration is attributable to you … as the registered owner at that time. A change of ownership will put the cost on to the NEW owner from the date of change of ownership ONLY.

Not a big deal you might think / say … BUT the bill for unpaid rego will not disappear forever. The powers that be want the money. So they pass the account onto a debt collection agency. They add their % onto the account and YOUR name is in THEIR books. And until YOU pay that account … it remains your problem.

No worries you say … maybe … well not really. until you get / need a credit check done on you.

And you fail it.

True enough and not untought of when I offered my advice, but I did assume that the OP had only recently had this headache.
Assuming he's talking days not months, the damage will be minimal, but as stated, the problem does disappear, once any arrears are made good.:Oops:

ellipsis
15th March 2020, 19:53
...just paperwork...do it...ffs...

FJRider
15th March 2020, 19:53
True enough and not untought of when I offered my advice, but I did assume that the OP had only recently had this headache.
Assuming he's talking days not months, the damage will be minimal, but as stated, the problem does disappear, once any arrears are made good.:Oops:

Those other blights on you credit status can be unpaid power bills from the place you rented four moves ago. The one where you gave your new/old flatmate the money to pay outstanding the power/internet/rent bill that you never got around to sorting.

Those in doubt … get yourself checked out.