If you’re staring at a car in Albany with no keys and no title, you can still donate it through Capital Wheels. Both problems are fixable. The key issue is the title: New York State needs a valid title before we can complete your donation. Missing keys, however, are rarely a dealbreaker. As long as a tow truck can get to the vehicle, we can usually pick it up on a flatbed and you still receive a legal tax-deduction receipt.
Here’s how it works in the Capital District and across New York. You’ll first request a duplicate or replacement title through the NYS DMV—typically a small fee and about 1–4 weeks of processing. While that’s in motion, we’ll help you think through tow-truck access in places like Pine Hills, Loudonville, Delmar, Colonie, or the Warehouse District. Once your replacement title arrives, you sign it over, we schedule free nationwide pickup (at no cost to you), and proceeds support Heritage for the Blind’s programs for people who are blind or visually impaired. Your problem vehicle leaves your driveway, and you gain a clean slate and a deductible donation.
How to get your free pickup scheduled
1. Confirm you’re the legal owner in New York
Before anything else, make sure the old title was in your name and that the car is registered or was last registered to you in New York. If you’re in Albany, Schenectady, Troy, or nearby, this usually means checking old registration cards, insurance documents, or DMV mail. Being the titled owner (or heir with proof) is what lets you request a duplicate title from NYS DMV.
2. Apply for a NY duplicate title with NYS DMV
Next, request a replacement title from the New York State DMV. The fee is usually around $10–$25 and processing often takes 1–4 weeks. You can start online or via mail, or visit a local DMV office like the one on South Pearl Street in Albany. This is the critical step—until that duplicate title is issued, no donation program can legally transfer your car.
3. Call Capital Wheels and tell us: no keys, title on the way
Once you’ve submitted the duplicate title application, contact Capital Wheels. Let us know your car has no keys and that you’ve already applied for a replacement title. We’ll note your situation, answer questions about the NY process, and tentatively plan for pickup timing around areas like Guilderland, East Greenbush, or Clifton Park so you’re ready once the title arrives.
4. Make sure a tow truck can reach the keyless vehicle
While your title is processing, check access to the car. Can a flatbed tow truck reach it from the street, driveway, or parking lot? Is it blocked in a backyard, garage, or tight alley in Center Square or Arbor Hill? If access is tight or the wheels don’t roll, tell us up front so we can send the right truck and equipment for a keyless, non-running, or stuck vehicle.
5. Receive your duplicate title and sign it over to donate
When your duplicate NY title arrives, sign it according to the instructions (usually on the back) to transfer ownership for donation. If you’re unsure how to fill it out, we’ll walk you through it over the phone. This is what officially turns your problem vehicle—keyless or not—into a charitable gift that can be sold to benefit Heritage for the Blind.
6. Schedule free pickup and get your tax-deduction receipt
With the signed duplicate title in hand, we finalize your free pickup anywhere in the Capital District. Our towing partner arrives with a flatbed that can load the car without keys, even if it doesn’t start. You pay $0 for towing. After the vehicle is sold, Capital Wheels sends you a tax receipt so you can claim a deduction, typically using IRS Form 1098‑C for donations over $500.
Potential complications to watch for
The DMV application name must match the old title and registration
Tip: If your name changed since the car was last titled (marriage, divorce, etc.), NYS DMV may need supporting documents before issuing a duplicate. Check your old registration or insurance card for the exact name and address used, and bring proof of any name change so your title request isn’t delayed.
Co-owners, estates, or liens can slow down title replacement
Tip: If the car was titled to two people, a deceased owner, or had a loan on it, NYS DMV may require extra paperwork. Try to locate any lien release letters, death certificates, or power-of-attorney documents before you apply. Tell us the situation when you call—knowing this early helps us guide you through special DMV requirements.
Blocked-in or immobile cars need special towing arrangements
Tip: A missing key plus flat tires, locked steering, or a tight parking spot in downtown Albany or a crowded apartment lot can complicate loading. We can still often take it, but we must know in advance. Describe exactly where the car is, whether it rolls, and what’s around it so we can dispatch the right type of flatbed or winch.
Out-of-state titles follow that state’s rules, not New York’s
Tip: If the last title was from another state—say Massachusetts or New Jersey—you usually must request a duplicate from that state’s DMV, not New York. Each state has its own forms, fees, and timelines. Track down where it was last titled, start their duplicate process, and we’ll coordinate pickup once that replacement title is in your hands.