When you donate a vehicle through Cascade Car Exchange in Oregon, your gift stays rooted in the community you call home. We arrange free pickup right from your driveway, apartment lot, farm, or workplace, and the proceeds support Heritage for the Blind’s work for people who are blind or visually impaired. From Portland neighborhoods like Sellwood, St. Johns, Alberta Arts, and Lents to Salem, Eugene, Bend, Medford, and beyond, we coordinate with local tow partners who know your streets and back roads.
Here’s how it works: you tell us where in Oregon the vehicle is located, and we match you with a nearby tow operator. In dense areas like downtown Portland, the Pearl District, or Corvallis near campus, we’ll plan around traffic and parking. In outlying communities like Forest Grove, Sandy, McMinnville, Grants Pass, or rural stretches off Highway 97 or I‑5, we allow a bit more time for routing. Either way, pickup is free, you don’t have to drive the car anywhere, and you receive a tax receipt for your donation. It’s a neighbor-friendly way to turn a car, truck, SUV, RV, or boat into local impact for Oregonians living with vision loss.
How to schedule your free local pickup
1. Tell us about your Oregon vehicle and location
Start by sharing your basic vehicle details (year, make, model, condition) and exactly where it’s parked in Oregon. Whether it’s in a Portland driveway, an apartment lot in Gresham, a farm outside Albany, or a storage yard in Roseburg, this helps us match you with the closest local tow operator and estimate the right type of truck for safe pickup.
2. Choose a pickup day that works for your schedule
We’ll contact you to arrange a convenient pickup time. In busier areas like Beaverton, Eugene, or Salem, there are often more appointment windows; in rural or coastal spots like Tillamook, Newport, or La Grande, availability may cluster on certain days. We’ll work around your work hours, school runs, and building rules so the handoff fits smoothly into your week.
3. Prepare keys, title, and access for the tow truck
Before your local tow operator arrives, clear personal items from the vehicle and have the keys ready. If you have the Oregon title, keep it handy so we can walk you through the signature area. Make sure gates, garages, and parking garages (in places like downtown Portland or Eugene) are accessible to a flatbed or wheel‑lift truck on the pickup day.
4. Meet the driver (or arrange a no-contact pickup)
On the scheduled day, your local driver will call or text ahead. In tight streets like NW Portland or older neighborhoods in Salem, they may ask you to move another car for easier access. If you can’t be home, we’ll explain how to leave keys and signed documents in a secure spot so the tow can be completed without you needing to be present.
5. Sign the donation paperwork and receive your receipt
The tow operator will confirm your donation on-site and finalize any necessary paperwork. After the vehicle is processed, Cascade Car Exchange issues you a written tax receipt. For most Oregon donors, this shows at least a $500 value; if it’s higher, you’ll also use IRS Form 1098‑C when you file. Proceeds then support Heritage for the Blind’s work for people who are blind or visually impaired.
6. Relax while your gift supports Oregonians with vision loss
Once your vehicle is on the truck, you’re done. We handle the rest—transport, sale, and forwarding proceeds to Heritage for the Blind. Your old car from Hillsboro, Springfield, Klamath Falls, or Pendleton becomes practical support for people who are blind or visually impaired, right here in Oregon and beyond, without any extra errands or repair hassles for you.
Local pickup gotchas
Tight parking, alleys, and downtown garages in Oregon cities
Tip: In places like downtown Portland, the Pearl District, Eugene’s campus area, or central Salem, low garages, one‑way streets, and alleys can limit flatbed access. Let us know if the car is in a garage, alley, or stacked parking so we can plan the right truck or ask you to move it to a nearby curb or surface lot before pickup.
Gated communities, HOA rules, and permit-only street parking
Tip: In suburbs like Lake Oswego, West Linn, Tualatin, or newer areas of Hillsboro and Wilsonville, gate codes and HOA rules can delay pickup. Share gate codes, guard instructions, or parking permit details ahead of time, and check if your HOA has preferred tow hours. This avoids last‑minute cancellations if our driver can’t legally access your vehicle.
Very rural or remote Oregon addresses
Tip: If your car is at a farm outside Prineville, a property off a gravel road near Sisters, or a remote coastal cabin, routing may take extra time. Tell us about steep driveways, seasonal mud, or narrow forest roads so we can schedule the right equipment and give you a realistic pickup window, especially during winter weather or wildfire season detours.
Missing title or paperwork confusion
Tip: Oregon title rules can feel confusing if the car has changed hands or the title is misplaced. While having the title is ideal, call us if you don’t have it. We’ll explain what’s usually needed for an Oregon donation and when it makes sense to contact Oregon DMV for a duplicate, so your pickup and tax deduction aren’t delayed.
If at-home pickup is tricky
If at-home pickup is tricky—maybe your car is buried in a busy downtown Portland garage, parked on a steep Eugene hill, or sitting at a shop off I‑84—you still have options. We can often coordinate with your mechanic, storage lot, or a friend’s driveway in a more accessible spot in Gresham, Beaverton, Keizer, or another nearby community. In some cases, donors choose to drive a still-running vehicle to a safe, tow-friendly location and meet our driver there. Talk with our team about your exact situation, and we’ll help you find the simplest Oregon-based solution.
Oregon pickup coverage
Cascade Car Exchange serves donors across Oregon (OR)—from Portland, Beaverton, and Gresham to Salem, Albany, Corvallis, Eugene, Springfield, Medford, Grants Pass, Bend, Redmond, and smaller towns like Hood River, Astoria, and Coos Bay. Urban pickups may be faster thanks to more local towing partners, while more remote areas in Central, Eastern, or coastal Oregon can require a bit more lead time for routing. For titles, Oregon donors typically sign the back of the title to release interest and remove plates or follow Oregon DMV guidance; because rules can change, we recommend checking current DMV instructions if you’re unsure.