When you donate a vehicle through Nordic AutoGift in Minnesota, your gift starts right at your own driveway. We arrange a free pickup at your home, work, or storage lot and send a local towing partner to collect your vehicle. There’s no cost to you, and the proceeds help fund Heritage for the Blind’s programs for people who are blind or visually impaired. It’s an easy way to turn an unused car into real support for neighbors across Minnesota.
We serve the entire state — from Minneapolis and St. Paul neighborhoods like Uptown, Northeast, Frogtown, and Highland Park, out to suburbs such as Bloomington, Maple Grove, Eagan, Woodbury, and Eden Prairie, and farther into communities like Duluth, Rochester, St. Cloud, Mankato, Moorhead, and Brainerd. In dense city areas, pickups are usually scheduled around parking and alley access; in more rural parts of Minnesota, timing can depend on distance and weather. Either way, our goal is simple: a hassle-free, local pickup that supports Heritage for the Blind’s mission close to home.
How to schedule your free local pickup
1. Tell us about your Minnesota vehicle
Start online or by phone with a quick form. Share your Minnesota location, vehicle year, make, model, and condition, plus whether it runs. Let us know if it’s in a driveway, garage, alley, farmyard, or ramp. This helps us match you with a local tow operator in areas like Minneapolis–St. Paul, Duluth, Rochester, or your outstate community for a smooth pickup.
2. Choose a convenient local pickup time
We’ll contact you to schedule a free pickup window that fits your Minnesota routine. In busy urban neighborhoods like Uptown, Dinkytown, or Lowertown, we’ll work around rush-hour and parking rules. In suburbs or rural townships, we coordinate days when our partner trucks are already nearby to reduce wait times while still keeping everything free for you.
3. Prepare keys and title (if available)
Before your tow truck arrives, locate your Minnesota vehicle title and keys. If you can’t find the title, let us know in advance so we can explain common Minnesota options. Remove personal items and plates if you prefer, and make sure the car is reasonably accessible so the driver can safely load it onto a flatbed or wrecker when they arrive.
4. Meet the driver or arrange access
On pickup day, a local towing partner comes to your address in Minnesota — whether that’s a downtown Minneapolis street, a St. Paul alley, a Bloomington apartment lot, or a farm near Willmar. You can often authorize a no-contact pickup if paperwork is signed in advance. The driver will handle the loading and basic paperwork so you don’t need to visit any office.
5. Complete your donation and tax receipt
After your vehicle is sold, Nordic AutoGift sends you a tax receipt, typically reflecting at least a $500 deduction value; if the sale exceeds $500, you may use IRS Form 1098-C with your return. The net proceeds go to Heritage for the Blind, helping provide services to blind and visually impaired people across Minnesota and beyond, turning your local donation into lasting community impact.
Local pickup gotchas
Tight alleys and downtown Minnesota parking
Tip: In dense areas like downtown Minneapolis, North Loop, or St. Paul’s Lowertown, wide flatbeds can’t always fit in narrow alleys or tight ramps. Tell us in advance about height limits, one-way streets, or alley access so we can send the right truck and plan a safe pickup spot nearby, avoiding last-minute rescheduling.
Gated communities, ramps, and HOA rules
Tip: If you live in a secured building or HOA community in places like Edina, Maple Grove, or Eagan, tow drivers may need gate codes, parking passes, or HOA approval. Share any instructions, security contacts, or parking restrictions when scheduling so the driver can enter, load the vehicle, and exit without tickets or delays.
Very rural or seasonal Minnesota roads
Tip: Outlying areas and cabin country — from the Iron Range to lake country near Bemidji, Alexandria, or Grand Rapids — can mean gravel roads, snow-packed driveways, or weight-limited bridges. Let us know about steep drives, soft ground, or winter access. We may adjust timing or equipment to keep everyone safe and still complete your free pickup.
Vehicles blocked in or buried in snow
Tip: Cars trapped behind other vehicles, shed contents, or snowbanks are hard to load quickly. Before your Minnesota pickup day, try to clear snow, move other cars, and remove flat tires from deep ruts if possible. While our tow partners are experienced, some basic access prep on your end helps avoid cancellations or extra trips.
If at-home pickup is tricky
If standard at-home pickup is tricky for your situation, we can usually improvise a local plan. Some Minnesota donors choose to meet a tow truck at a wider street corner, a nearby public lot, or their workplace where access is easier. In a few very remote or off-road locations, you may be able to drive or tow the vehicle to a more accessible spot in town so our partner can safely load it. Talk with us about your exact Minnesota address and obstacles — together we’ll find the simplest way to turn your vehicle into support for Heritage for the Blind.
Minnesota pickup coverage
Nordic AutoGift serves donors across Minnesota, from Minneapolis, St. Paul, and the greater Twin Cities suburbs (Bloomington, Woodbury, Coon Rapids, Lakeville, Plymouth) to regional centers like Duluth, Rochester, St. Cloud, and Mankato, plus smaller towns throughout the state. Pickups in the metro often happen sooner because trucks are nearby; rural and North Shore, Iron Range, or southern farm communities may need a bit more scheduling time. In Minnesota, you’ll typically sign your MN title over to complete the donation; you can remove plates before the tow and check with the Minnesota DVS about any registration or plate-return questions for your situation.