The short answer is yes, significantly lower. A 1969 Camaro and a 2020 F-150 are both American V8 vehicles, but their BIV tax treatment in Belgium is completely different. Understanding why requires understanding how the Belgian regional formulas handle vehicles that predate modern emissions data, and what happens when a car qualifies as an oldtimer.
This article assumes familiarity with the basic BIV structure and the regional formulas. For context on how BIV is calculated for modern American vehicles, including the CO2-based formula that makes trucks and SUVs so expensive to register, the BIV guide for high-emission vehicles covers that. What follows focuses entirely on pre-1997 cars and the oldtimer classification.
The modern BIV formula relies heavily on CO2 emissions data. That data comes from the vehicle's EU type approval certificate a document that records the vehicle's CO2 output in grams per kilometre under standardised testing.
Pre-1997 American vehicles do not have this data. They were never type-approved under any EU certification framework that would include CO2 measurements. The data simply does not exist in the format the standard formula requires.
This creates a structural problem for Belgian tax authorities: the standard calculation cannot be applied. The solution each region has developed is an alternative formula that does not rely on CO2 inputs.
For pre-1997 vehicles without CO2 data, Belgian regional authorities calculate BIV using:
Engine displacement (cubic centimetres)
Fiscal horsepower (calculated from engine power output using the Belgian administrative formula)
Vehicle age (older vehicles receive different rate treatment)
Fuel type (petrol/diesel distinction still applies)
Without the CO2 progressive brackets -- which are what push modern American trucks into BIV figures of EUR 5,000 to EUR 15,000 -- the formula produces dramatically lower results for the same engine size. A 396ci big-block Camaro is not penalised by a CO2 multiplier it was never engineered to meet.
Separate from the pre-1997 formula, Belgium recognises a formal "oldtimer" category for vehicles at least 30 years old. As of 2026, this means vehicles from 1996 or earlier. This threshold advances each calendar year -- confirm the current eligibility year at the time of purchase rather than relying on this article's reference date.
Oldtimer status is not automatic, it requires registration under the oldtimer classification rather than as a standard vehicle. The practical consequence for BIV is significant. Each region applies a reduced or simplified formula to oldtimer vehicles rather than the standard calculation.
One important clarification: confirm whether manufacture date or first registration date governs for your specific vehicle and region. For cars near the 30-year threshold, this distinction can affect eligibility. A customs broker familiar with Belgian vehicle registration can confirm the applicable rule for your specific vehicle before you commit to a purchase.
Flanders: Flanders applies a reduced BIV formula for oldtimers that is based on fiscal horsepower at a flat rate rather than the progressive CO2 schedule. The result is a BIV that is substantially lower than the standard formula -- often EUR 500 to EUR 2,000 for typical American classics rather than the EUR 4,000 to EUR 10,000+ that the standard formula would generate.
Wallonia: Wallonia applies its own oldtimer provisions with a different rate structure. In some cases, Wallonia uses a fixed minimum BIV for qualifying oldtimers rather than a percentage-based calculation. The Walloon oldtimer BIV is typically comparable to or slightly lower than Flanders.
Brussels: Brussels applies its own oldtimer provisions, and given the city's general tendency toward higher BIV for high-emission vehicles, the saving from oldtimer status in Brussels is proportionally larger than in the other regions. A vehicle that might face EUR 8,000 in standard Brussels BIV pays a fraction of that under oldtimer classification.
This is the point that makes classic American cars specifically attractive as import targets for Belgian buyers.
Two separate fiscal benefits apply simultaneously to vehicles 30 years or older:
Benefit 1: Reduced BIV under the oldtimer formula
Administered by the regional tax authority. Produces a substantially lower registration tax than the standard CO2-based calculation.
Benefit 2: 6% VAT instead of 21% on the import transaction
Administered under Belgian tax law for historic vehicles. The reduced VAT rate applies to the import transaction itself -- the difference between 6% and 21% on a EUR 60,000 vehicle is approximately EUR 9,000.
These are different instruments governed by different authorities. Both can apply to the same vehicle. Neither depends on the other. A qualifying vehicle benefits from both.
The combined effect is significant. For a EUR 60,000 Mustang fastback entering Belgium:
VAT saving (6% vs 21%): approximately EUR 9,000
BIV saving (oldtimer vs standard formula): approximately EUR 3,000 to EUR 8,000 depending on region
Total combined saving relative to a comparable modern vehicle: EUR 12,000 to EUR 17,000. That is why the Belgian collector market is disproportionately interested in pre-1996 American vehicles and why car shipping from the US to Belgium makes strong financial sense for this era of cars.
VAT rates and historic vehicle classifications are subject to Belgian legislative changes. Confirm the current applicable rate with a Belgian customs specialist or the relevant regional tax authority before making purchase decisions based on this figure.
The figures below are approximate illustrative estimates. They are not quotes. BIV formulas and rate schedules are revised by regional governments.
Always verify the current applicable BIV for your specific vehicle with the relevant regional tax authority -- VLABEL for Flanders, Service Public de Wallonie for Wallonia, or Finance.Brussels for the Brussels Capital Region -- or a licensed Belgian customs broker before making any shipping or purchasing decision.
The 1969 Camaro is 57 years old as of 2026. It qualifies comfortably for oldtimer classification in all three Belgian regions.
| Region | Approximate BIV (Oldtimer Formula) |
|---|---|
| Flanders | EUR 500 to EUR 1,500 |
| Wallonia | EUR 400 to EUR 1,200 |
| Brussels | EUR 600 to EUR 1,800 |
Compare these figures to a modern American V8 truck, which faces EUR 4,500 to EUR 15,000+ in BIV depending on region. The same engine displacement and similar power output produces a BIV that is 5 to 10 times lower under the oldtimer formula.
The 1971 Mustang is 55 years old. Like the Camaro, it qualifies for oldtimer classification across all three regions. The 351 Cleveland's displacement and fiscal horsepower are slightly lower than the big-block Camaro, which produces comparable or marginally lower BIV estimates.
| Region | Approximate BIV (Oldtimer Formula) |
|---|---|
| Flanders | EUR 500 to EUR 1,400 |
| Wallonia | EUR 400 to EUR 1,100 |
| Brussels | EUR 600 to EUR 1,700 |
The 1985 DeVille is 41 years old as of 2026 and has qualified for oldtimer status for over a decade. The DeVille's larger-displacement engine produces a higher fiscal horsepower input than the muscle cars above, but still without any CO2 penalty bracket.
| Region | Approximate BIV (Oldtimer Formula) |
|---|---|
| Flanders | EUR 800 to EUR 2,500 |
| Wallonia | EUR 700 to EUR 2,200 |
| Brussels | EUR 900 to EUR 2,800 |
The DeVille's BIV is higher than the muscle cars due to its engine specification, but still a fraction of what a modern vehicle with similar power output would face. And the 6% reduced VAT on import still applies in full.
The BIV and VAT structure makes pre-1996 American classics genuinely competitive as Belgium import targets in a way that modern American vehicles are not. A 1969 Camaro SS bought at a US auction for $55,000 can be landed and registered in Flanders for approximately EUR 59,000 to EUR 62,000 -- a range that reflects destination charge variability at Antwerp and the spread within the Flanders oldtimer BIV formula. For a full line-by-line breakdown of each cost component, the complete BIV and import cost guide shows the calculation in full for a comparable vehicle. The equivalent modern V8 performance vehicle from a European manufacturer costs significantly more to purchase and taxes are applied at the full rate.
WCS manages international classic car shipments from the US to Antwerp as part of its European shipping network -- the logistics for a 1969 Camaro or a vintage Cadillac are well within WCS's standard service.
The Belgium car shipping service covers current routes, freight rates, and the standard import process. For the complete worked cost example showing the full BIV, VAT, and freight breakdown for a 1969 Mustang versus a 2018 F-150, the complete BIV and import cost guide covers all three vehicle categories together.
A 1969 Camaro arriving at Antwerp deserves handling that reflects what it is. WCS has been managing international classic car shipments for over 17 years, and every Belgium-bound classic travels in an enclosed container rather than on an open deck. Container shipping is the appropriate method for collector vehicles where paint, interior, and condition represent a significant portion of the value.
Every WCS shipment is assigned a dedicated account manager who handles US export documentation and container loading, and coordinates with the destination agent at Antwerp for port clearance. For buyers who have confirmed that the BIV and total import cost works for their specific vehicle, WCS handles the freight side from US warehouse to Belgian port arrival cleanly and without third-party gaps.
Current rate from the NJ warehouse: New York to Antwerp at $1,100 with a 17 to 20 day ocean transit.
Freight rates are subject to change. Contact WCS for a current quote specific to your vehicle and departure location.
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