Wondering what your car is really worth to donate in Massachusetts? Here’s the honest answer: for tax purposes, your deduction is based on what the charity actually sells your vehicle for. Velocity Vehicle arranges free pickup anywhere in the Commonwealth, the vehicle is sold, and Heritage for the Blind sends you written documentation of the sale price so you can claim a deduction the right way.
The IRS says your deduction is generally the lesser of the car’s fair market value or the charity’s actual sale price. Tools like Kelley Blue Book (KBB) or NADA, using the private-party value in your car’s current condition, give you a realistic fair-market estimate. If your vehicle nets less than $500, Heritage for the Blind issues a flat $500 acknowledgment. If it sells for more than $500, you’ll receive IRS Form 1098-C showing the exact sale price. Whether you’re in Boston, Worcester, Springfield, Lowell, New Bedford, or on the Cape, donating can save you the hassle of selling, potentially lower your tax bill, and support services for people who are blind or visually impaired.
How to move forward: step by step
1. Check your car’s fair market value in its true condition
Use KBB or NADA and choose the private-party value that matches your car’s mileage and condition—whether it’s a daily driver in Somerville, a rusty commuter in Brockton, or a non-runner in Pittsfield. This gives you a realistic expectation of value before you donate, even though the final deduction depends on the actual sale price.
2. Decide if donating beats selling or trading in Massachusetts
Compare your likely private-sale price to the time, repairs, and hassle of selling on your own in places like Cambridge, Quincy, or Worcester. If you’d rather skip advertising, showings, and RMV headaches—and you itemize deductions—donation through Velocity Vehicle may be cleaner, faster, and still financially worthwhile.
3. Start your donation online or by phone with Velocity Vehicle
Share your vehicle details, title status, and pickup address anywhere in Massachusetts—from Dorchester or Lynn to Framingham or Holyoke. We confirm basic eligibility, answer your value and tax questions, and schedule a free tow. There’s no cost to you, and most vehicles are accepted whether they run or not.
4. Get free pickup, sign the title, and hand over the keys
Our towing partner meets you at home, work, or a repair shop, from the North Shore to the South Coast. You sign the title as directed, remove your plates, and keep any RMV paperwork you need. The pickup is free, fast, and you’re done—Velocity Vehicle takes it from there on behalf of Heritage for the Blind.
5. Receive your written receipt or IRS Form 1098-C
After the vehicle is sold, Heritage for the Blind mails you an acknowledgment. If it nets under $500, you’ll receive a written receipt you can use for up to a $500 deduction. If it sells for more than $500, you’ll receive IRS Form 1098-C showing the exact sale price to support your itemized deduction.
6. Claim your deduction at tax time if you itemize
At tax time, you or your tax preparer use the written acknowledgment or Form 1098-C to claim your deduction. In most cases, the deduction equals the actual sale price. If you don’t itemize on your Massachusetts or federal return, you’ll still have cleared space and supported a 501(c)(3) helping people who are blind.
The honest decision framework
| Factor | Why donation wins | When selling wins |
|---|---|---|
| Your likely sale price vs. sale hassle | If the car won’t bring much more than $1,000–$2,000 in a private sale and needs work, dealing with ads, showings, and haggling in Boston, Lowell, or Fall River may not be worth it. Free pickup and a straightforward deduction can be the easier, cleaner choice. | If your car is newer, in great shape, and could sell quickly at a strong price in your local market, a private sale or dealer trade-in might put more after-tax cash in your pocket—even after accounting for a potential deduction from donating. |
| Whether you itemize deductions | If you already itemize deductions on your federal return, a properly documented vehicle donation can reduce your taxable income. The written acknowledgment or Form 1098-C from Heritage for the Blind gives you the proof your tax preparer needs to claim it correctly. | If you take the standard deduction and don’t itemize, you won’t get additional tax savings from the donation. In that case, donate because you value the cause and the convenience, not because you’re counting on a tax refund boost. |
| Vehicle condition and repair costs | If your car has high mileage, mechanical problems, or won’t pass Massachusetts inspection without expensive repairs, selling it can be tough. Donation lets you skip repairs, towing fees, and buyer negotiations while still potentially getting a deduction based on the eventual sale price. | If the car only needs a minor, affordable fix to command a much higher private-party price in areas like Newton or Andover, you might be better off repairing and selling it yourself rather than donating at a lower as-is sale value. |
| How fast you need it gone | If you’re moving, losing parking in Cambridge or Brookline, or just want your driveway back before winter, donation is fast. Free pickup usually happens quickly, and you avoid waiting for the “right buyer” to show up and negotiate. | If timing is flexible and you don’t mind showing the car on evenings and weekends, a private sale could eventually yield more cash than you’d recoup through a tax deduction—especially for higher-value, in-demand vehicles. |
| Support for a cause you care about | Your vehicle supports Heritage for the Blind, a real 501(c)(3) funding services for people who are blind or visually impaired. If that mission matters to you, combining support for that work with possible tax savings and free removal can feel like the best overall value. | If you don’t feel strongly about the mission, and your main goal is maximum cash in hand, you may prioritize selling. You can always donate a smaller cash amount directly and keep more from the vehicle by selling it yourself. |
Common concerns, answered honestly
“I want to know the exact dollar amount I can deduct.”
Until the vehicle is sold, no one can guarantee an exact deduction amount. The IRS ties your deduction to the actual sale price in most cases. You can estimate using KBB or NADA, but the final number comes from the sale and will appear on your receipt or Form 1098-C from Heritage for the Blind.
“I’m worried the deduction won’t be worth more than selling.”
Sometimes that’s true. If your car would sell high and fast privately, you may come out ahead in cash. Donation shines when the car is older, has issues, or you value convenience. You avoid repairs, ads, and buyer stress while still getting a documented deduction and supporting a Massachusetts-serving charity partner.
“My car isn’t running. Does that kill the value or deduction?”
Non-running vehicles are usually still accepted anywhere in Massachusetts. The free tow costs you nothing. The vehicle’s condition will affect its sale price—and therefore your deduction—but you avoid paying for towing, diagnosis, or repairs. You’ll still receive either a flat $500 acknowledgment or a Form 1098-C if it sells for more.
“I don’t fully understand the IRS rules and forms.”
You’re not alone. In simple terms: your deduction is generally the lesser of fair market value or actual sale price, documented by a written receipt or Form 1098-C for donations over $500. We walk you through the basics, and your tax preparer can use the documentation from Heritage for the Blind to file correctly.