I bought my bike in Poland before we moved back to the UK (good deal on the KRS and CS, including loads of extras).
I rode it here as sold for about 8 months, not least cos Polish plates help keep your licence clean.
This was during winter so mostly riding at night. The LHD light did not seem to bother other drivers that much and if you are just going for hols abroad with a UK bike I wouldn't bother doing anything.
However, it would not get me through the SVA test.
Since I researched this thoroughly, I can add to the above:
- it is asymetric
- it cannot be adjusted by the dealer, daft I know for an adventure, globe-trotting bike
- you have to buy the whole unit. Costs about 200 quid. I sold the LHD one on e-bay and recouped about half of that
FWIW, the only other thing you have to do on import is change the speedo. Basically there are 4 choices:
1. Change the whole instrument unit, costing about £300 or so plus fitting. Also daft for an adventure, globe-trotting bike
2. Change just the speedo, I think about £100, but the computer thingy will still be in km
3. Buy a gizmo to put on the speedo cable (there are several on the market in the region of £30) to convert the speedo to read mph where it is printed as kph. You need to ensure that the "k" at the start of "kmh" printed on the dial is blacked out
4. Black out the "k" on the dial and just carry on as before in the knowledge that they the SVA does not involve calibrating the speedo. The cost is a small blob of black paint
Guess which one I chose.
Other than that, you only have to pay for the SVA test, about £70.
Given the significant savings you can make by buying on the continent, the tiny inconvenience of having dials in km and spending a few quid and an hour or so on the SVA seems worthwhile.
The warranty is the same, the system logs you for any recalls and BMW is happy to provide insurance (for me, within a few quid of ebikeinsurance and a huge saving on CN)
Just a thought.
Hope this is helpful.
Cheers
Andy