In Virginia, you can absolutely donate a car with expired or lapsed registration. You do not need to stand in line at the DMV, pay back fees, or renew your plates just to give it away. For AutoHeritage Donate and Heritage for the Blind, what matters is that you have a valid Virginia title in your name—not current tags or inspection. Whether your car is sitting in an Alexandria condo lot, in a driveway in Chesterfield, or off the road in Roanoke, we can still accept it.
Here’s how it works in Virginia: you sign your title over to Heritage for the Blind through AutoHeritage Donate, we schedule a free tow truck pickup anywhere in the Commonwealth, and you receive a tax receipt for at least $500 (or the sale price if higher). The vehicle does not need to run or be safe to drive—our towing partner handles everything. Once the tow driver takes possession, the charity is responsible for the vehicle. You simply notify the Virginia DMV of the transfer so you’re not liable going forward. From Tidewater and Virginia Beach to Loudoun County and Charlottesville, donating a car with expired registration is straightforward when you know the steps.
How to get your free pickup scheduled
1. Confirm you have a valid Virginia title in your name
Expired registration is usually fine; the key is a clear Virginia title. Find your title and check that your name matches your driver’s license and there are no unknown liens listed. Even if the plates are long expired or turned in, as long as the title is valid, we can normally accept your donation anywhere in Virginia.
2. Start your donation online or by phone with AutoHeritage Donate
Provide basic details: year, make, model, VIN, whether it runs, and where it’s located in Virginia—Richmond, Norfolk, Fairfax, or anywhere else. Tell us the registration is expired so we can note it for the tow company. We’ll walk you through how to sign your Virginia title correctly for Heritage for the Blind.
3. Schedule your free Virginia pickup (no driving needed)
You do not need to make the car roadworthy or renew the tags. Our towing partners come to you—apartment lots in Arlington, townhomes in Manassas, rural driveways in the Shenandoah Valley, or beach-area homes in Virginia Beach. They’ll load the vehicle whether it runs or not, at no cost to you, with expired plates or no plates at all.
4. Sign over the title and hand off the vehicle
At pickup, you’ll hand the driver the signed Virginia title and any keys you have. The driver will verify the VIN and paperwork, then load the vehicle. Once the tow truck leaves, the car is under the charity’s control, not yours. Keep a copy or photo of the signed title for your records in case the DMV requests confirmation.
5. Notify Virginia DMV that you donated the vehicle
After pickup, report the transfer to the Virginia DMV to protect yourself from future tickets or taxes. You can typically do this online or via a form. If you still have the plates, ask about returning or canceling them. This step ensures that expired-tag notices or personal property tax issues won’t follow you after the donation.
6. Receive your tax receipt from Heritage for the Blind
Heritage for the Blind, a 501(c)(3), will mail you a tax receipt. You’ll receive at least a $500 receipt, and if the car sells for more, they’ll send an updated IRS Form 1098-C. Use this when you file your federal taxes. Your expired-registration headache in Virginia becomes a charitable deduction that supports people who are blind or visually impaired.
Potential complications to watch for
No title or title missing your name
Tip: An expired registration is usually fine, but we do need a valid title in the donor’s name. If the title is lost or still in a previous owner’s name, contact the Virginia DMV for a replacement or proper transfer first. Once you’re listed as the owner, AutoHeritage Donate can complete the donation even with expired tags.
Active lien listed on the Virginia title
Tip: If your title shows a lienholder and it’s not clearly released, the charity generally can’t take ownership yet. Check for a signed lien release section or separate letter. If the loan was paid off years ago, reach out to the lender or DMV for documentation. Clearing the lien ahead of time keeps your pickup and donation from being delayed.
Tickets, tolls, or taxes tied to the vehicle
Tip: Old parking tickets, tolls, or personal property taxes from when you owned the car may still be your responsibility, even after donation. Donating stops future issues, but it doesn’t erase past ones. Check with your city or county (like Fairfax County, Henrico, or Virginia Beach) about any outstanding balances so you’re not surprised later.
Vehicle stored in a restricted or tight location
Tip: If your car with expired tags is in a basement garage, backyard, barn, or HOA-controlled lot, the tow driver needs clear access. Let us know details when you schedule. Sometimes you may need to arrange gate codes, visitor passes, or permission from a property manager so the truck can safely reach and remove the vehicle on the first visit.