How the car donation process works
Start with the title you have
A clean, transferable title is preferred because it makes donation pickup and processing faster. If you have the Virginia title in your name and there is no active lien, you are usually in good shape. AutoHeritage Donate will confirm the vehicle details, your pickup location, and how the title should be signed over to Heritage for the Blind at pickup. Free towing is available across Virginia, including city streets, apartment lots, driveways, rural properties, and suburban neighborhoods from Fairfax and Henrico to Chesapeake and Newport News.
If the title is lost, call before you give up
A missing title does not automatically mean your vehicle cannot be donated. Heritage for the Blind can guide you through your state’s lost-title process and explain whether the vehicle can be accepted while replacement paperwork is pending. In many cases, the registered owner may need to request a duplicate title or provide state-specific documentation. Because rules vary by title state and vehicle history, the best first step is to contact AutoHeritage Donate with the VIN, your name on the registration, and where the vehicle is located in Virginia.
Clear any lien before donation
If a bank, credit union, finance company, or other lender is listed on the title, the lien must be satisfied before the donation can be completed. That usually means paying off the balance or contacting the lender for a lien release or corrected title. AutoHeritage Donate cannot accept a vehicle as a completed donation if someone else still has a legal ownership interest in it. If you are unsure whether a lien is active, send the title details when you call and Heritage for the Blind will help you identify the next step.
Sign the title over at pickup
When your pickup is scheduled, the tow driver brings the standard towing and donation paperwork. The title must be signed over to Heritage for the Blind at pickup, and you should avoid signing early unless AutoHeritage Donate has given you specific instructions. The correct signature matters, especially if there are multiple owners, a business name, a trust, or a name change. Once the title is properly handed off, most donors do not need a DMV visit just to complete the donation, though you should keep copies for your records.
Handle special ownership situations early
If the title is in a deceased spouse’s or parent’s name, you may need probate paperwork, executor documents, or an affidavit of heirship, depending on the state that issued the title and your family situation. If the title is from another state, that is often acceptable; AutoHeritage Donate will review it before pickup. Vehicles without titles can sometimes be accepted, but they must be discussed first. The simplest approach is to call with the title state, VIN, owner name, lien status, and where the vehicle can be picked up.
Key facts about car donation
A clean title is best, but a lost title may not automatically stop your Virginia car donation.
Any listed lien must be released or satisfied before Heritage for the Blind can complete the donation.
The tow driver brings pickup paperwork, and the title is signed over to Heritage for the Blind.
Out-of-state titles are commonly reviewed and may be accepted for vehicles picked up in Virginia.
Vehicles without titles can sometimes qualify; call AutoHeritage Donate before assuming yours cannot be donated.
For vehicles over $500, Heritage for the Blind provides IRS Form 1098-C when required.