Your Delaware registration may be months—or years—out of date, but you can still donate that car through First State Autos. Expired tags don’t block a donation. What really matters is that you have a valid Delaware title in your name. You don’t need to renew the registration, pay any back fees, or get the car through inspection at a DMV lane in Wilmington, Dover, or Georgetown before we can accept it.
Here’s how it works in Delaware: you sign your title directly over to First State Autos for the benefit of Heritage for the Blind, and we arrange a free tow from your driveway, garage, or a shop in places like Newark, Middletown, Bear, or Rehoboth Beach. The vehicle does not need to be running or road-legal, because it’s going onto a flatbed, not back onto the road. Once it’s picked up and the title is signed, responsibility for the vehicle shifts away from you. You should then notify the Delaware DMV of the transfer so they can update their records, which helps protect you from future tickets or tax notices tied to that car.
How to get your free pickup scheduled
1. Check that you have a valid Delaware title
Find your Delaware title and confirm your name matches your current legal name and ID. The registration can be long expired—that’s fine. What we need is a clear title with no unknown owners. If you’re missing the title, you may need to request a duplicate from the Delaware DMV before scheduling pickup.
2. Tell us about your car and the expired registration
Call or complete the quick online form with First State Autos. Let us know the car’s year, make, model, approximate condition, and that the registration is expired. We’ll confirm we can accept it for Heritage for the Blind and walk you through any Delaware-specific details, like where the title will be signed and what to have ready on pickup day.
3. Schedule free towing anywhere in Delaware
We arrange a free tow truck to meet you at your home, work, or a shop in Wilmington, Newark, Dover, Middletown, Milford, or anywhere else in Delaware. Since the car has expired tags, we recommend you do not drive it. The tow driver loads it onto a truck—running or not—so you avoid any risk of tickets or roadside issues.
4. Sign the title and hand over the keys
At pickup, you’ll sign the Delaware title over to First State Autos according to state requirements. Our towing partner will guide you where to sign but we can also explain it in advance. Once the title is properly signed and the car is on the truck, the vehicle is no longer under your control or care, even though the registration was expired.
5. Notify Delaware DMV and keep your tax receipt
After pickup, you should submit a notice of transfer or sale to the Delaware DMV and remove your plates, if still attached, to help avoid future liability. First State Autos will mail you a tax acknowledgment for your federal deduction—typically at least $500, and above that you’d use IRS Form 1098-C with your return.
6. Feel good knowing your problem car is helping people
Your once-headache vehicle—sitting in Trolley Square, Pike Creek, or near the beaches—turns into support for Heritage for the Blind, a 501(c)(3) helping people who are blind or visually impaired. You clear space, avoid back registration costs, and still receive a charitable tax deduction, all without putting the car back on the road.
Potential complications to watch for
No title or title not in your name
Tip: Expired registration is usually fine, but we do need a valid title in your name to accept the donation. If the title is missing, or still in a previous owner’s name, contact Delaware DMV for a duplicate or to straighten ownership first. That step can add a bit of time before we can schedule your free tow.
Existing Delaware liens or loan still open
Tip: If a bank or lender is still listed on your Delaware title and the loan hasn’t been satisfied, we normally can’t complete the donation yet. Check that your lien is released on the title or that you have a lien release letter. Clearing the lien with your lender ahead of pickup makes the donation paperwork smooth and fast.
Plates and DMV notification after an expired-tag donation
Tip: Even though tags are expired, the state can still link future notices to you unless records are updated. Remove your plates before or at pickup, return or recycle them per Delaware rules, and file a notice of transfer with the DMV. This helps prevent future tax bills or tickets from being tied to a car you no longer own.
Assuming you must pay back registration fees first
Tip: Many Delaware owners delay donating because they think they must renew registration or pay back fees for overdue tags. With First State Autos, that’s not required. Since the car is being towed for donation, not driven, you can skip renewal and let the title transfer close out your responsibility instead.