What is the fastest rally car in America?

What specific documents is needed to travel via car through central America?

  • me and my friend are planning to take a never ending road trip. i have a lot of questions but this is one main one What papers do you need to get a car through the whole central America for example Mexican border your going to need a tourist card and a Mexican insurance for the car but what happens when i leave Mexico what is the next country going to ask for. what about the car plates are they still going to be American plates if someone can run me tru the 411 on this

  • Answer:

    You need the title to the car (and a letter from the lien holder - bank - if you don't have the title outright), a valid driver's license and your passport. In Mexico and Nicaragua, you have to buy insurance before proceeding into the country (although I thought the Nicaragua insurance was a scam and didn't buy it ... the police let me off a couple of times when I promised to buy it in the next town.) The process is very similar at every border crossing. First you go to the immigration office of the country you're leaving. You have them validate your car's import license at the aduanas office (Aduanas is customs ... you stop there because you aren't paying duties on the car since you're passing through ... you need documentation that you're taking the car out of the country), you get your passport stamped at immigration, and then go through the border. At the country you're entering, you stop at immigration, get your passport stamped (some countries have a small fee ... never more than $10 USD,) and then go to the Aduanas office. At the Aduanas, you show your title and driver's license and there's nearly always a form to fill out (license plate number, registration, etc). There is a small fee ... except in Honduras which has a LARGE fee. About $40. Often you'll need to leave copies of your registration and/or title, passport photo page, and drivers license. If you have somewhere to keep copies nice and clean without wrinkles or smudges, carry about 20 photocopies of each document with you. If you're concerned about any of the procedures or the language barrier, there are people at each border who are willing to 'help' you... for a fee. If you're confident in your Spanish, then ignore them all. They can't actually do anything special for you. Enjoy the trip. It's definitely worth it!

Alejandro Barahona at Yahoo! Answers Visit the source

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Other answers

I don't know the answer to your question, but I do know that a regular car is not going to make it on these roads. The best of the roads will need a big SUV, or another car with AWD and a powerful engine. The worst of the roads will need a car that can go through deep water, and over big rocks.

Mary Contrary

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