
Goodwill
Goodwill Car Donation accepts vehicles in any condition — proceeds fund job training and employment placement programs in your community.
Vehicle donation is not just for late-model cars. Little Canada donors regularly give junk cars, salvage-title vehicles, motorcycles, RVs, and boats; receiving charities work through condition and title questions when scheduling pickup rather than ruling vehicles out upfront.
Ramsey County
County
10,546
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Skip the listings. Get the tax write-off and free towing — our charity of the week handles the rest.
Every charity listed for Little Canada is a pre-screened, IRS-qualified public charity that accepts vehicle donations.
Donors who itemize can deduct the Little Canada vehicle's qualifying value on their federal return. For most cars, that figure is the amount the charity nets when the vehicle is sold.
A Little Canada private sale means photographs, listings, and strangers talking the price down at the kerb. A donation skips all of it — the charity arrives, the title transfers, the vehicle leaves.
Vehicle donations routed to MatchingDonors.com receive prioritized handling — free towing, title transfer, and IRS Form 1098-C after the vehicle sells. Proceeds fund the matching platform that has connected over 15,000 registered donors with patients in need.
See how much your car could impact a charity.
Well-known 501(c)(3) charities serving Little Canada — local branches plus national organizations that accept car donations.

Goodwill Car Donation accepts vehicles in any condition — proceeds fund job training and employment placement programs in your community.
Accepts donated vehicles nationwide with free towing — proceeds fund adult rehabilitation centers, shelters, and disaster relief.
Their Cars for Homes program accepts donated vehicles in any condition — proceeds fund home builds and repairs for families working toward stable homeownership.
Accepts car, truck, motorcycle, RV, and boat donations — proceeds fund disaster response, blood services, and emergency aid nationwide.
Accepts donated vehicles with free pickup — proceeds fund food pantries, housing assistance, and direct aid to neighbors facing poverty.
For most donated cars, the deductible amount is whatever the charity nets when it sells the vehicle, reported to the donor on IRS Form 1098-C. If the vehicle sells for $500 or less, the donor may generally deduct the lesser of $500 or fair market value without a 1098-C.
Vehicles the charity puts to direct use rather than selling have different rules and may support a fair-market-value deduction. This is general information, not tax advice — confirm the specifics with a tax advisor.
A transparent, four-step process ensures a smooth transition from vehicle to impact. (The exact process may differ between organizations, these are the general phases)
Your charity will conduct a preliminary assessment of your vehicle's market value and suitability for donation.
Their team verifies clear title, runs the vehicle history, and prepares all necessary transfer paperwork.
The title is officially transferred to the charity. You receive IRS Form 1098-C for tax deduction purposes.
The vehicle is sold or put to use by the charity, and proceeds fund their mission.
An inherited car often arrives with paperwork the heir did not expect — registration to update, insurance to keep current, and a title that may take time to clear through probate. Selling it can mean those costs continue for weeks.
Donating an inherited Little Canada vehicle, once the title is clear, converts it into a charitable deduction and ends the upkeep in a single appointment — often the simplest resolution for a vehicle the heir does not plan to drive.
Straight answers on donating your car, the tax treatment, and what to expect.
Yes, it is a good idea. The information here is general, and a tax professional can confirm how a vehicle gift affects a specific deduction, income, and filing situation.
A charitable deduction only lowers taxes for filers who itemize. A donor taking the standard deduction still ends the vehicle's carrying costs and supports the chosen cause, but the deduction itself would not apply to that return.
Typically nothing. Towing is covered by the receiving charity, title transfer is handled by the charity, and there are no fees a donor should ever pay directly to a 501(c)(3) for accepting a vehicle.
The donor signs the vehicle title over to the charity at the time of pickup; the receiving charity files the transfer with the state and mails the IRS Form 1098-C afterwards. Specific signature requirements vary by state DMV.
Yes. Charities that accept vehicle donations contract with tow operators who are paid out of the eventual sale or use of the car. The donor pays nothing for pickup, whether the car runs or not.
Not for most vehicles. For donations valued over $5,000 that are not sold by the charity, a qualified appraisal and IRS Form 8283 Section B are generally required. For vehicles the charity sells, the sale price reported on Form 1098-C establishes the deduction — no appraisal needed.
Find vetted real-estate-accepting charities elsewhere in the country.