From downtown Kissimmee and the Lake Toho waterfront to Buenaventura Lakes, Celebration and Poinciana, we buy junk, wrecked and storm-damaged cars in every Kissimmee neighborhood. Free towing, a firm offer up front.
Tell us the year, make, model and condition. We give you a number that holds when the truck shows up.
Kissimmee is the seat of Osceola County — about 80,000 people on the shore of Lake Tohopekaliga, just south of Orlando and the Disney attractions. The city runs from the historic downtown along Broadway and the lakefront out through Buenaventura Lakes (BVL) to the West 192 tourist corridor, Celebration near the Disney edge, and the sprawling Poinciana communities to the southwest. We cover all of it. A car that died in a BVL driveway and one parked behind a hotel off 192 are both Kissimmee pickups to us, and both get the same deal: a free tow and cash in hand.
Central Florida sees its share of flood and storm damage, so we buy a lot of water-damaged and storm-beaten cars — the sedan that took on water, the trade-in that never ran right, the work truck rusting behind a shop. Those are exactly the cars we want. You do not clean it, fix it, or move it. We bring the truck to you.
Most of the city gets same-day pickup when you call before noon, with quick access off US-192, the Florida’s Turnpike and Osceola Parkway. We tell you the window straight when we book it — no all-day mystery gaps.
And if the title is a problem, it usually is not a dealbreaker. Florida gives you real options for older cars and lost titles, and we know which form fits. More on that further down.
Tap your zip for local pickup details. Do not see your exact zip? We still cover it — call and we will confirm.
Florida gives you options. If the car is 10 years or older, FLHSMV Form 82137 (Derelict Motor Vehicle Certificate) lets you sell without the original title. If the title is just lost, Form 82101 gets a duplicate — the Osceola County Tax Collector handles it. We walk you through which one fits your car.
Kissimmee is one of several Osceola County communities we serve. See the Osceola County overview › for Kissimmee, St. Cloud and the rest of the county, or the Florida statewide page ›.
Yes. Florida Statute 319.22 requires you to file a Notice of Sale (Form HSMV 82050) within 30 days of selling or junking the vehicle. It releases you from liability for the car once it leaves your hands. You can file at the county tax collector or online through FLHSMV; when we buy the car we point you to the form.
Donating can give a tax deduction, but for a low-value junk car the deduction is often small and only helps if you itemize. A cash sale puts money in hand the same day with no paperwork wait. We can give you a firm cash number to compare against the likely deduction before you decide.
Often yes. A car 10 years or older can use FLHSMV Form 82137; a lost title is replaced with Form 82101 at the county tax collector. We walk you through it.
Just the keys and whatever title paperwork you have. If the title is missing we will tell you the form to file. We handle the rest.
There is no Florida $3,000 rule for junking a car — it is a personal-finance guideline (roughly: if a car needs more than about $3,000 in repairs a year, it is usually time to let it go). For actually selling the car, what matters in Florida is the title or, for older low-value cars, the Form 82137 derelict process. If repairs have passed that point, a firm cash offer and free tow is the simpler exit.
Anywhere in our coverage area. Tell us your ZIP and the car’s year, make, model and condition, and we give a firm offer with free local towing. We are expanding across Florida, so if your town is not listed yet, call and we will confirm coverage.
Most Florida junk cars bring $200 to $1,500 depending on year, make, model and condition, plus the catalytic converter and current scrap demand. You get a firm number up front.
No. The figure quoted on the phone is what you get at the curb, assuming the car matches what you described. We do not lowball on arrival.