If your California registration has expired, you can still donate your car to Rev Up Hope without renewing it or paying DMV back fees. For most donations, the key is that you have a valid California title in your name — not current tags or a smog certificate. We’ll accept your vehicle even if it’s been sitting for years in Los Angeles, Oakland, Bakersfield, or a driveway in Chula Vista. You get it out of your way, help Heritage for the Blind, and receive a tax-deductible receipt.
Here’s how it works in California: you sign the title over to Rev Up Hope, we arrange a free tow anywhere in the state, and once it’s picked up, the vehicle becomes our responsibility. You are not required to re-register it or clear past-due registration fees before donating. After pickup, you simply notify the California DMV that you’ve transferred ownership to protect yourself from future liability. From San Diego County to the Inland Empire to Sacramento suburbs like Elk Grove and Roseville, we handle the logistics so you don’t have to deal with the DMV lines, repairs, or smog tests on a car you no longer want.
How to get your free pickup scheduled
1. Check that you have a valid California title
You don’t need current registration, but you do need a California title in your name. Find your pink slip and make sure the name matches your current legal name. If the title is lost, we can talk you through the basic process of getting a duplicate from the DMV before donation.
2. Tell us about your car and expired registration
Complete our quick online form or call to share the basics: year, make, model, location, and that the tags are expired. Whether it’s in a San Jose apartment lot, a Pasadena garage, or parked on a Modesto street, we’ll confirm it’s eligible and schedule your free pickup.
3. Schedule free towing anywhere in California
You do not need to drive the vehicle or renew registration. Rev Up Hope sends a licensed tow truck to you at no cost, usually within a few days. We pick up non-running, unregistered vehicles from driveways, carports, and even side yards across the Bay Area, Los Angeles, San Diego, and beyond.
4. Sign the title at pickup and hand over the keys
At pickup, you’ll sign the title where indicated to release your interest to Rev Up Hope. Our towing partner will guide you line by line. You can also provide any keys, remotes, and documents you still have. Once it’s on the truck, responsibility for the car transfers to our charity partner.
5. Notify the California DMV of the transfer
After the tow, file a Notice of Transfer and Release of Liability with the California DMV (online or by mail). This step helps ensure future tickets, fees, or incidents are not tied to your name. Even with expired tags, this closes the loop on your ownership record in the state system.
6. Receive your tax-deductible receipt from Rev Up Hope
Within a few weeks of pickup, you’ll receive a tax receipt from Rev Up Hope benefiting Heritage for the Blind. Most donors can claim at least $500; for amounts above $500, you’ll use IRS Form 1098-C. Your unregistered car turns into support for people who are blind or visually impaired.
Potential complications to watch for
Title not in your name or missing signatures
Tip: If the California title still shows a previous owner, a deceased relative, or a lienholder, or if co-owners haven’t signed, the donation can be delayed. Gather any paperwork you have, and we’ll explain what the DMV generally requires so you can clear up ownership before we schedule towing.
Abandoned or impounded vehicles with expired tags
Tip: We typically can’t accept a vehicle that’s been towed by the city or is sitting in an impound lot with accumulating fees unless you’re able to release it. If your car is at risk of tow in places like San Francisco or Long Beach, contact us quickly so we can try to arrange pickup first.
Out-of-state titles on a car kept in California
Tip: If your car is physically in California but still titled in another state and the registration is expired, we may still be able to accept it. The exact process can differ slightly. Let us know which state issued the title so we can walk you through where to sign and what the tow driver will need.
Plates and personal items left on the vehicle
Tip: Before pickup, remove your license plates if you prefer, and always grab personal items from the glovebox, trunk, and center console. In California, some donors like to turn plates in to the DMV, but it’s not always required. Keeping personal items out avoids headaches after the tow truck leaves.