Importing or Exporting an Aircraft? Here’s What Will Blindside You.

Anyone who has ever moved an aircraft across borders knows the same truth: the metal isn’t the hard part—paperwork, timing, and bureaucracy are. On paper, importing or exporting an aircraft looks straightforward. In reality, it’s a maze of sequencing, compliance traps, and hidden costs that can stall a deal, rack up fees, or leave your aircraft stranded in the wrong jurisdiction.

Here’s what blindsides owners, buyers, and operators far more often than they’d like to admit.

1. Deregistration and Registration Have Their Own Timelines—Not Yours

One of the biggest misconceptions is thinking you can “just” deregister an aircraft one day and re-register it the next. Every country has its own bureaucratic rhythm, and they rarely sync with your delivery schedule.

A few common headaches:

Some civil aviation authorities take days (or weeks) to process a simple deregistration.

Missing or incorrect documents can push you to the back of the queue.

The receiving authority won’t issue a new registration until the old one is fully cleared.

If timing slips, the aircraft can be grounded in limbo—literally unable to fly.

If you think your delivery timeline is firm, the registry will quickly prove you wrong.

2. Taxes, Duties, and VAT Regulations Are a Minefield

This is where people get hit hard. You can do everything right on the aviation side and still get crushed by tax rules you didn’t know applied.

Hidden financial traps include:

Import duties tied to where the aircraft physically lands first

VAT assessments even when the aircraft never stays in the country

State-level taxes layered on top of federal rules

“Temporary importation” rules that expire faster than you expect

Countries that treat test flights or repositioning flights as taxable events

There is nothing worse than being slapped with a six-figure VAT bill because someone assumed a free-trade agreement magically covered aircraft.

3. Title and Liens Don’t Magically Disappear at the Border

A common assumption: “We’re exporting the plane, so whatever is on title won’t matter.”
Wrong.

Foreign buyers and their lenders care deeply about:

Unreleased security interests

Past financing not properly closed

Missing lien releases from maintenance shops

Ownership chains that don’t match FAA records

If anything is unclear, the aircraft won’t enter service in its new country. It just sits, burning time and money, until the issues are resolved.

4. Maintenance Compliance Isn’t Universal

Different countries interpret maintenance standards in different ways. An aircraft that’s perfectly legal in one jurisdiction may be non-compliant the moment it crosses the border.

Surprises include:

Required inspections that weren’t needed in the US

Foreign authorities that don’t accept certain STCs

Maintenance programs that must be transferred or revalidated

Logbook entries that don’t meet the receiving country’s format

Incomplete records that were “good enough” before but now cause grounding

You don’t want to hear the phrase “We can’t accept this aircraft as-is” after arrival.

5. Hidden Costs Pile Up Faster Than Owners Expect

Importing and exporting comes with a long list of unplanned expenses:

Ferry permits

Export CofA

Local handling fees

Customs inspections

Storage while documents are corrected

International insurance adjustments

Legal review fees

Additional maintenance to meet the receiving authority’s standards

None of these are huge by themselves, but together they can turn a “simple” export into a very expensive project.

6. The FAA Export CofA Isn’t the Finish Line

Owners think obtaining the Export Certificate of Airworthiness means the deal is practically done.
It isn’t.

Foreign authorities can still require:

Additional documentation

Supplemental inspections

Verification of component times

Proof of compliance with local modifications

Adjustments to maintenance tracking

The Export CofA only states the aircraft met certain conditions at a moment in time. It doesn’t guarantee acceptance on the other end.

7. Logistics Get Messy When You Assume They Won’t

Repositioning, crew availability, weather, customs hours of operation, and ferry routing all have a way of creating complications.

Examples that happen constantly:

Customs offices that close earlier than posted

Technical stops that require advance clearance no one applied for

Insurance that doesn’t cover the intended route

Weather delaying an export delivery into the next tax period

Ferry pilots unable to depart because of paperwork delays

When timing matters, logistics become the silent deal-breaker.

8. Liability Doesn’t End When the Aircraft Leaves Your Country

If deregistration, export documents, and sale paperwork aren’t handled in the correct order, you may still be legally tied to the aircraft after it leaves your airspace.

Residual liability risk includes:

Accidents or incidents before new registration

Violations during the ferry flight

Fees or taxes triggered by incorrect deregistration dates

International regulatory conflicts

Insurance coverage gaps that leave former owners exposed

Once again, sequencing is everything.

Bottom Line

Importing and exporting an aircraft looks simple from the outside. Then the paperwork, timing, taxes, and registry requirements hit you all at once. The owners who get blindsided are always the ones who assume the process is just bureaucracy.

The owners who stay out of trouble understand one thing: a successful cross-border transaction is 90 percent documentation and timing, and 10 percent flying the airplane.