If your car is sitting in Midtown, Cordova, or out in Olive Branch with no keys and no title, you can still donate it to Rides for Pride and support Heritage for the Blind. Missing keys are not a donation dealbreaker as long as a tow truck can safely reach the vehicle. The one thing Tennessee law really cares about is the title. Once you have a duplicate title in hand, we can take care of the rest and you still receive a tax-deduction receipt.
Here’s how it works in the Memphis Metro. First, you request a duplicate or replacement title from your state DMV (often $10–$25 and about 1–4 weeks, depending on where the car is registered—Tennessee, Mississippi, Arkansas, etc.). While that’s processing, you make sure a tow truck can access where the car is parked in places like East Memphis, Bartlett, or Southaven. When you’re ready, we schedule a free pickup with a flatbed that can load a vehicle without keys. You sign the duplicate title over at pickup, we handle the paperwork, and the proceeds help Heritage for the Blind provide services for people who are blind or visually impaired.
How to get your free pickup scheduled
1. Confirm your car’s location and tow access in Memphis Metro
Before anything else, make sure a tow truck can physically reach your car. Whether it’s in a Midtown alley, a South Memphis driveway, an apartment lot in Germantown, or a storage yard in West Memphis, we just need clear access for a flatbed. Note any gates, height limits, or tight turns. You’ll tell us this when you schedule so we send the right truck.
2. Apply for a duplicate title from your state DMV
The title is the critical piece. Without it, we usually can’t complete the donation. Apply for a duplicate/replacement title with the DMV where the car is registered (Tennessee, Mississippi, Arkansas, etc.). Expect roughly a $10–$25 fee and 1–4 weeks processing. Keep the mailing address current so the new title doesn’t get lost.
3. Keep the car put until the duplicate title arrives
While you wait for the duplicate title, leave the vehicle where a tow truck can reach it—driveway in Whitehaven, carport in Raleigh, or a lot near Downtown. You don’t need keys for us to plan pickup, but moving it to a harder-to-reach spot will slow things down. Gather any old registration or documents to help confirm ownership if needed.
4. Contact Rides for Pride to schedule your keyless pickup
Once the duplicate title is in your hands, reach out to Rides for Pride. Tell us clearly that the vehicle is missing keys so we can dispatch a flatbed or appropriate equipment. We’ll set a pickup window that works for you anywhere in the Memphis Metro—Frayser to Collierville, Arlington to Southaven—and confirm what paperwork you’ll sign at pickup.
5. Sign the title at pickup and we tow it free
On pickup day, you hand the driver the duplicate title and sign where indicated to transfer ownership. No keys are needed; the flatbed can load a non-running, locked, or keyless vehicle as long as we can reach it. Pickup is always free. Then we handle the processing, sale, and donation of proceeds to Heritage for the Blind.
6. Receive your tax receipt and finish your donation
After the car is sold, you receive a tax receipt. Many donors can claim a deduction of at least $500; for amounts over $500, you’ll use IRS Form 1098-C when you file your taxes. Keep your receipt with your records. Your headache car is gone, you’ve freed up space, and you’ve helped support services for people who are blind or visually impaired.
Potential complications to watch for
The car title is in someone else’s name or has a lien
Tip: If the title was in a relative’s name or a finance company is still listed, the DMV may not issue a duplicate until that’s cleared. Gather death certificates, lien release letters, or power-of-attorney paperwork before you apply. This can add time, so start the DMV process as early as possible.
Car is blocked in or not safely reachable by a tow truck
Tip: A flatbed can load a car without keys, but we still need safe access. Low garages, narrow alleys, locked gates, or tight apartment lots can complicate pickup. If you can, arrange gate codes, move other vehicles, or talk with property management before scheduling so our driver doesn’t have to leave empty-handed.
DMV mail delays or incorrect address information
Tip: If your DMV records show an old address in Memphis, DeSoto County, or Crittenden County, your duplicate title may be mailed to the wrong place. Update your address with the DMV before applying, and watch your mail closely. If the title is returned or lost, you may have to restart the process, adding extra weeks.
Trying to donate before the duplicate title arrives
Tip: We can talk through your situation anytime, but in most cases we cannot finish the donation or tow the car away for good until the duplicate title is in your hands. Use the waiting period to confirm tow access, clear out personal items, and gather any prior paperwork so pickup goes smoothly once the title arrives.