From the downtown waterfront and El Cid to Northwood, Palm Beach Lakes and the western suburbs, we buy junk, wrecked and storm-damaged cars in every West Palm Beach 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.
West Palm Beach is the seat of Palm Beach County — about 120,000 people set along the Intracoastal Waterway, across the water from the island of Palm Beach. The city runs from the downtown high-rises and the historic El Cid and Flamingo Park neighborhoods out through Northwood and Palm Beach Lakes to the newer golf-community suburbs in the west. We cover all of it. A car that died in a downtown condo garage and one parked behind a house off Okeechobee Boulevard are both West Palm Beach pickups to us, and both get the same deal: a free tow and cash in hand.
This is hurricane country, so we see a lot of flood and storm-damaged cars — the sedan that took on water in a tropical storm, the trade-in that never ran right after a flood, 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 I-95, Okeechobee Boulevard and Florida’s Turnpike. 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.
We pick up in every West Palm Beach zip code, grouped here by part of the city. Neighborhood pages are rolling out. Do not see your exact zip? We still cover it — call and we will confirm.
The city center, the Flagler Drive waterfront, and the historic neighborhoods just south — El Cid, Flamingo Park and Grandview Heights. Condo garages and tree-lined streets, all routine for us.
Northwood, Pleasant City and the Intracoastal neighborhoods running north toward Riviera Beach.
The Palm Beach Lakes corridor, the I-95 spine and the neighborhoods near Palm Beach International Airport.
The newer residential and golf communities out west toward the Turnpike, Ibis and the county's western edge.
Selling a junk car in West Palm Beach should take one phone call, not a week of runaround. Here is how ours works:
1. You tell us about the car. Year, make, model and rough condition — does it run, is it wrecked, does it still have the catalytic converter and wheels. A few quick questions. You do not need to know what it is worth; that is our job.
2. We give you a firm number. Based on the car and current South Florida scrap and parts demand, you get a real offer on the spot — not a vague range, not a "we will see when we get there." The number on the phone is the number at pickup.
3. We tow it free and pay you. We pick a window that works for you, show up with a truck, hand you the cash, and haul the car. A downtown condo garage, a Northwood driveway, or a yard out west — the tow is always on us.
No fees pulled out at the curb, no surprise deductions, no waiting on a check.
Florida handles junk cars under specific FLHSMV rules, and the right paperwork depends on your car. Here is how it actually breaks down:
You have the title. Simplest case. You sign the “Transfer of Title by Seller” section over to the salvage buyer and you are done.
The car is 10 years or older and you have no title. Florida lets you use FLHSMV Form 82137, the Derelict Motor Vehicle Certificate and Request to Cancel Title, instead of chasing the original.
You lost the title but the car is newer. File Form 82101 for a duplicate, then transfer normally. The Constitutional Tax Collector serving Palm Beach County handles this at service centers around the county.
For the official process, the Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles publishes the junk-vehicle steps, and the Palm Beach County Tax Collector processes the tag and title work locally.
Outside the city line? We cover all of Palm Beach County and the rest of Florida.
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.
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.
The highest offer usually comes from a buyer who recovers value from both scrap weight and reusable parts, and who tows free so nothing is deducted. We price on the year, make, model, condition, the catalytic converter and current scrap demand, then hand you that number in cash — no pickup-day deductions.
None. The tow is free and there are no fees pulled out at pickup. The number we quote is the cash you are handed.
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.
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.
Yes. Much of West Palm Beach is HOA or gated, and we handle those pickups regularly. Just tell us the gate or access setup when you call.
If the car still runs and has clean paperwork, a private sale may net more. Once it is non-running, wrecked or not worth fixing, selling it to a junk-car buyer is usually faster and nets more than a scrapyard, because we count reusable parts on top of scrap weight and tow it free.