If you’re in New York and searching “car donation near me,” Metro Wheels really does come to you. You don’t have to drive to a drop-off lot in Queens or find parking near Midtown. We arrange a licensed local tow operator to meet you right where the car sits—at home, work, or a storage spot—anywhere across the five boroughs and surrounding suburbs.
Whether your car is on a tight street in the East Village, in a garage in Flushing, parked in Brooklyn’s Park Slope, or sitting in Yonkers, New Rochelle, or Hempstead, we can usually reach it. You schedule by phone or online, we confirm your details, and a nearby New York–area driver is assigned. On pickup day, they handle the towing at no cost to you and you receive a tax receipt for your donation. All you need is the title in your name and a space the tow truck can safely access. No office to visit, no fees, and no need to get the car running.
How to schedule your free local pickup
1. Confirm we serve your exact New York location
If you’re in Manhattan, Brooklyn, Queens, the Bronx, Staten Island, or nearby areas like Jersey City, Yonkers, or Nassau County, we almost certainly pick up at your address. Use our online form or call Metro Wheels, share your ZIP code and where the vehicle is parked, and we’ll confirm coverage and basic details like condition, keys, and title status.
2. Share vehicle and title information
Have your New York title handy, plus basic info: year, make, model, and whether the car starts or has flat tires. We’ll walk you through where to sign the NY title and how to list Metro Wheels as the buyer. This is quick, but it helps us assign the right tow truck type—especially for underground garages or tight Manhattan streets.
3. Pick a pickup window that fits New York life
We’ll offer the earliest available date and a time window based on your borough and traffic patterns. Same- or next-day pickup is sometimes possible, but rush-hour and bridge/tunnel congestion can affect timing. Let us know if there are parking rules, meter times, or alternate-side restrictions so we can schedule a window that avoids tickets and street-sweeping conflicts.
4. Prepare access for the tow truck
On the day of pickup, please make sure the car is reachable: not fully blocked in, clear of snow in winter, and with enough space for a flatbed or wheel-lift to back in. For tight blocks in places like Washington Heights, Astoria, or Bay Ridge, moving another vehicle or reserving curb space can really speed things up. Leave keys and signed title where you agreed with the dispatcher.
5. Complete the handoff and receive your receipt
The driver will verify the VIN, load the car, and collect the signed New York title. You’ll receive an initial towing receipt on the spot or by email. After Metro Wheels processes and sells the vehicle to benefit Heritage for the Blind, we’ll mail your official IRS-compliant tax acknowledgment, typically reflecting at least a $500 deduction, and provide Form 1098-C details if required.
6. Remove plates and cancel your NY registration
Before or at pickup, remove your New York plates. After the car is gone, return the plates to the NY DMV or follow current DMV instructions, and notify your insurance company. While we’re not a law firm and can’t give legal advice, keeping your registration and insurance records in sync with the donation date helps avoid future fees or notices from New York State.
Local pickup gotchas
Tight New York streets and flatbed access
Tip: Many Manhattan, Brooklyn, and Queens streets are narrow, double-parked, or on hills. If a full-size flatbed can’t reach your exact spot, we may need a wheel-lift or to meet at a corner. Let us know about low bridges, steep driveways, or basement garages so we can send the right truck and avoid wasted trips and reschedules.
Permit, alternate-side, or metered parking rules
Tip: If your car is in a permit-only lot, a co-op/condo garage, or on a metered or alternate-side street, timing matters. Coordinate with your building, garage attendant, or HOA, and tell us your available window. In neighborhoods like the Upper West Side or Jackson Heights, a quick permission note or garage contact number can prevent ticket issues and towing delays.
Missing or mismatched New York vehicle title
Tip: We do need proper ownership documents. If your NY title is lost, still in a previous owner’s name, or shows an old address, that can slow scheduling. Contact the NY DMV about a replacement or correction before pickup, and ask us what we can accept. We’ll explain what’s typically required so we don’t send a truck that can’t legally complete the donation.
Very rural or outlying pickup distances
Tip: If you’re outside the dense metro—farther upstate beyond Peekskill, deeper into Suffolk County, or in less-traveled areas—route planning can take longer. We still strive for prompt service, but we may group your pickup with other trips. Sharing photos of where the vehicle sits and any access issues helps us send the right truck and set realistic timing expectations.
If at-home pickup is tricky
If at-home pickup is difficult—maybe your car is buried in a crowded Harlem lot, behind other vehicles in a Queens auto yard, or stuck in a tight underground garage in Midtown—we’ll talk through other options. Sometimes we can meet you at a nearby wider street, a public lot, or curbside during a garage’s loading hours. In a few complex situations, arranging a short private tow from your regular mechanic or garage to a more accessible spot can make the donation possible. Our team will help you weigh these local options so you can still support Heritage for the Blind without unnecessary hassle.
New York pickup coverage
Metro Wheels serves donors across New York City and the surrounding region—from Manhattan neighborhoods like Chelsea and Harlem, to Brooklyn’s Williamsburg and Flatbush, Queens areas like Astoria and Flushing, the Bronx, Staten Island, plus suburbs such as Yonkers, White Plains, New Rochelle, and many Long Island communities. Dense city areas may book up faster during rush hours, while outer counties can require more routing time. For New York titles, you’ll sign as the seller and remove your plates before or at pickup, then return them to the NY DMV and update your insurance after the donation is complete.