Sell an Abandoned Car for Cash
Got a car someone left behind? Each state has a process to claim and sell an abandoned vehicle — and we'll walk you through it.
Mechanic's lien, abandoned vehicle, and storage lien processes
If a car has been left at your shop, on your property, or in your driveway, your state offers a formal process to obtain title or authority to sell. We can usually point you to the exact form and recommend a local title service.
Towing companies, landlords, and property owners
We work with tow operators, landlords, property managers, and HOAs to clear abandoned vehicles legally and fast — usually within 30–60 days of starting the lien process.
Repair vs scrap — when does it stop making sense?
The rule most mechanics use: when a repair quote crosses 50–70% of the car's running value, scrapping wins. A blown engine on a 12-year-old sedan is usually a $4,500–$7,500 job (engine + labor + ancillary parts); a bad transmission rebuild runs $2,500–$5,500; a deployed-airbag claim on a 10-year-old car typically totals the vehicle outright because the airbag modules, clockspring, dash, and SRS sensors all need replacement.
Against those numbers, a clean cash offer from JunkUrCar — usually $300–$2,500 depending on year, weight, and parts demand — plus free tow and zero risk of the repair not holding is the rational play. You walk away with money in hand instead of pouring more into a car that's already past its useful life.
| Repair | Typical cost | Typical scrap value |
|---|---|---|
| Blown engine | $4,500–$7,500 | $300–$1,800 |
| Bad transmission | $2,500–$5,500 | $350–$1,600 |
| Frame damage | $3,000–$10,000+ | $250–$1,400 |
| Flood damage | Usually total loss | $200–$1,200 |
| Deployed airbags | $3,500–$6,500 | $400–$2,000 |
Why letting a junk car sit is a liability
A non-running car parked in your driveway, yard, or street is more than an eyesore — it's a slow-burning liability. Most states still treat the registered owner as responsible for anything that happens with the vehicle until the title is signed over, even if the car hasn't moved in years.
- Leaking fluids — motor oil, gasoline, coolant, brake fluid, and refrigerant slowly drain into your driveway, soil, and storm drains. Cleanup and EPA fines can run into the thousands.
- HOA & city code violations — most municipalities issue $50–$500 fines for inoperable vehicles visible from the street. Repeat tickets can lead to forced impound.
- Catalytic-converter theft — junk cars are the #1 target. A stolen cat costs the thief 60 seconds and costs you your single most valuable scrap component ($150–$1,200 lost).
- Pest infestation — rodents nest in seats, headliners, and wiring harnesses, creating fire and odor hazards that spread to nearby garages and homes.
- Insurance & registration costs — every month you keep plates and minimum insurance on a car that doesn't run, you're paying $30–$150 to maintain a depreciating asset.
- Deployed airbags & pyrotechnics — undeployed airbag modules in wrecked cars are pressurized explosive devices. They need professional removal, not DIY teardown.
Selling the car to a licensed buyer transfers liability cleanly, gets the hazards off your property, and puts cash in your pocket the same week.
Three steps. No hassle.
From offer to cash in hand — most sellers are done in under a day.
- 1
Tell Us About Your Car
Enter your year, make, model, and ZIP code to get your instant offer.
- 2
Get Your Instant Offer
We'll give you a guaranteed cash offer in seconds — no haggling.
- 3
Get Paid at Pickup
We tow your car for free and pay you cash on the spot.
Common questions
- How long until I can legally sell an abandoned car?
- It varies by state — typically 30–90 days after proper notice. We can help identify your state's exact timeline.
- Do I need a title to sell this car?
- In most states yes, but many allow no-title sales with registration + photo ID, especially on older vehicles. Tell us your situation when you get your quote — we'll walk you through your state's exact requirements before pickup.
- How long does pickup take?
- Most pickups are scheduled within 24–48 hours of accepting the offer. Same-day pickup is often available in metro areas. The flatbed driver arrives in a 1–2 hour window, completes paperwork, hands you cash, and tows the car — usually under 20 minutes on-site.
- Will I get paid in cash at pickup?
- Yes. The driver hands you the full agreed amount in cash (or a same-day-clearing check if you prefer) before the car leaves your property. The offer you accept online is the exact amount you receive — no last-minute deductions, no tow fees.
- What if the car has been sitting for years?
- No problem. Flat tires, dead battery, locked-up engine, four flats, rusted to the ground — flatbed tow handles all of it. Long-sitting cars are most of what we buy, and they're often worth more than people expect because the catalytic converter, drivetrain, and body shell are all still intact.
- Do you buy cars without keys?
- Yes. Missing keys, lost keys, or no keys at all is fine — we tow with a flatbed, so the wheels never need to turn under their own power.
- Will my offer drop when the tow truck arrives?
- No. Our offers are guaranteed: the cash number you accept online is what the driver hands you at the curb. The only exception is if the vehicle description is materially wrong (e.g., you said it had an engine and it doesn't) — and even then we'll re-quote on the spot rather than walk away.
- What paperwork do I need ready?
- Title (if you have one), current registration, and a government-issued photo ID matching the title or registration name. Some states also need a notarized bill of sale — we'll let you know in advance based on your ZIP code.