If your vehicle is in Ohio and you want the tax deduction this year, the key date is your pickup date. With Buckeye Auto Gifts, as soon as our licensed tow partner arrives and you sign the title over on or before December 31, the IRS treats that as your donation date—even if the car sells in January. Start now: fill out our quick 2‑minute online form or call us, schedule a free pickup, sign at the curb, and your deduction is locked in for this tax year.
We partner with Heritage for the Blind, a trusted 501(c)(3) nonprofit (EIN 58‑2164446), to turn your Ohio car, truck, SUV, or van into support for people who are blind or visually impaired. We serve the entire state—Columbus neighborhoods like Clintonville and German Village, Cleveland suburbs like Lakewood and Parma, Cincinnati areas like West Chester and Hyde Park, plus Toledo, Akron, Dayton, Youngstown, and beyond. Your car doesn’t need to run, pass inspection, or even have current registration. Our Ohio coordinators work Monday–Saturday to get most metro pickups scheduled same‑day or next business day. Start the process right now—December pickup slots fill up fast.
Your year-end donation timeline
Start your donation in 2 minutes
2 minutesFrom anywhere in Ohio, complete the short Buckeye Auto Gifts form or call us. Share your contact info, plate or VIN if you have it, and where the vehicle is located—driveway, street, or lot. Non‑running cars, missing emissions, and expired registration are all okay to donate.
Get a fast callback to schedule pickup
Within 1–2 business hours on weekdaysAn Ohio donation coordinator for Heritage for the Blind will call you back, usually within 1–2 hours on weekdays, to confirm details and offer you the earliest free tow times. In December, ask specifically for a pickup date on or before December 31 to secure this year’s tax deduction.
Free licensed tow at your Ohio address
Same-day or next business day in most metro areasIn and around Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, Toledo, Akron, Dayton, and other metro areas, we can often dispatch a licensed tow truck the same day or next business day. They meet you at home, work, or a shop—no need to drive the car anywhere. Towing is always 100% free to you.
Sign the title at pickup and lock in the year
5–10 minutes at the curbWhen the tow truck arrives, you hand over the keys (if available) and sign your Ohio title over to Heritage for the Blind. That physical pickup and title transfer date—if it’s on or before December 31—is what the IRS uses as your donation date for this tax year’s deduction.
Vehicle sale and your tax receipt
Receipt within 30 days of saleYour donated vehicle is transported and sold. Once sold, Heritage for the Blind mails you a written acknowledgment or IRS Form 1098‑C within 30 days of the sale. You’ll use this document when you file and itemize your deductions on Schedule A for your federal tax return.
Year-end tax deduction facts
Dec 31 pickup = this year’s donation date
For IRS purposes, your donation date is when you actually transfer the vehicle—when the tow arrives and you sign the Ohio title over. If that happens on or before December 31, the deduction applies to this tax year, even if the vehicle sells early next year.
IRS Form 1098-C for larger deductions
If your vehicle sells for more than the IRS threshold, you’ll receive Form 1098‑C from Heritage for the Blind. This form states the gross sale price and is what you or your tax preparer will use to substantiate your charitable vehicle deduction on your federal return.
Deduction generally equals sale price
In most cases, your federal deduction for a donated car is limited to the amount the charity receives when it sells your vehicle, not the Kelley Blue Book value. Your acknowledgment or 1098‑C from Heritage for the Blind will list the sale price that you can typically claim.
You must itemize on Schedule A
To claim a car donation deduction, you generally need to itemize deductions on Schedule A of your federal tax return. If you take the standard deduction instead, you usually cannot claim an additional deduction for your donated vehicle, regardless of its value.
30-day acknowledgment rule
Heritage for the Blind will mail you a written acknowledgment or Form 1098‑C within 30 days of your vehicle’s sale. Keep this with your records. The IRS expects you to have this written documentation in hand before you claim the deduction on your tax return.