No obligation
Requesting a quote does not commit you to an offer or pickup.
Tell us what you have, where it is, and what condition it is in. A clear description helps a buyer assess the vehicle before anyone discusses pickup.
Requesting a quote does not commit you to an offer or pickup.
Year, make, model, condition, completeness, and location help prevent last-minute surprises.
A vehicle can still have parts or material value even when it cannot be driven.
The best outcome is not simply a fast pickup or a large headline number. It is a clear vehicle transfer with an understood payment, workable access, correct documents, and a buyer that can handle the actual condition.
Include the vehicle identification details you know, describe major damage honestly, list missing parts, and explain where the vehicle is parked. Photos of all four sides, the interior, and the engine area can help a buyer see what cannot be captured in a short form.
Ask whether pickup is included, how and when payment is made, which documents are required, and what could change the offer at pickup. A good quote should be understandable without pressure.
Say that speed and a clear pickup plan matter more to you than maximizing the offer. Even then, compare the total amount after any fees instead of assuming the first free-removal claim is the best option.
You can want the vehicle gone quickly and still ask for the net offer, payment timing, collector identity, pickup requirements, and transfer record before releasing it.
Read the consumer safety guidesNo. You can review the offer and pickup terms before deciding.
Yes. Explain why it does not run and whether it rolls, steers, has keys, and has accessible tires.
Not always. It can depend on distance, access, vehicle completeness, and local buyer policies. Confirm the total before booking.