Chrysler is one of America's original automakers — a brand that has survived depression, war, near-bankruptcy, and reinvention to remain a fixture of American roads for a century. It invented the minivan, rescued itself from collapse with the K-car, and built the 300 into one of the most recognizable and imposing American sedans of the modern era. When your Chrysler is ready to move on, donating it to Vehicles For Veterans puts its remaining value to work for American veterans charity programs across the country.
Call 1-855-811-4838 or fill out our vehicle donation form to get started today.
Chrysler vehicles attract a broad and motivated auction buyer pool — 300 buyers who prize its Hemi-powered American presence, minivan family buyers who know exactly what a well-maintained Pacifica or Town & Country is worth, and collectors who pursue classic Letter Series 300s and Imperials with serious financial intent. That range of buyer demand across the lineup drives competitive results that maximize proceeds for American veterans charity programs.
Every dollar your Chrysler generates goes toward the services that American veterans and their families depend on. Learn how your vehicle donation directly supports American veterans and their families through the programs we fund.
Car Donation Foundation d/b/a Vehicles For Veterans has donated over $196 million to worthy charities since 2010. Your Chrysler donation generates flexible funding for American veterans charity programs — organizations providing housing assistance, mental health support, adaptive equipment, service dogs, and community resources to veterans and their families nationwide.
We work with a wide range of American veterans charities across the country. View our full list of partner organizations to see who your donation benefits.
We accept most Chrysler vehicles in most conditions on a case-by-case basis.
The Chrysler 300 is the backbone of the modern Chrysler lineup — a full-size rear-wheel drive sedan with available Hemi V8 power and a presence that commands attention. Its combination of American muscle car DNA, genuine interior space, and imposing styling has built a broad and loyal buyer community. 300C and 300S trims attract buyers who want the full luxury or sport experience. The 300 SRT8 — with its 6.4-liter Hemi and performance suspension — draws performance sedan buyers who prize its combination of straight-line capability and practical four-door usability. Clean 300 examples with documented service history generate consistent, strong auction results from buyers who specifically seek out what only the 300 delivers.
The Pacifica replaced the long-running Town & Country as Chrysler's minivan flagship — and it arrived with a genuine innovation that no other minivan had attempted: a plug-in hybrid powertrain. The Pacifica Hybrid is the first electrified minivan ever produced, drawing efficiency-focused family buyers who want zero-emission capable daily driving without sacrificing minivan practicality. Standard Pacifica models attract practical family buyers who know the Chrysler minivan formula and trust it. Clean Pacifica examples in both hybrid and standard configurations generate solid auction demand from family-focused buyers who have done their research.
The Town & Country was Chrysler's premium minivan for decades — a vehicle that defined what a family hauler could be when it was given genuine luxury treatment. Its combination of leather seating, available entertainment systems, and the kind of practical sliding-door utility that families actually needed built an enormous and loyal buyer base. Clean Town & Country examples attract family buyers who know the model's reputation for comfort and practicality and pursue well-maintained examples with real intent.
The Voyager served as the entry-level minivan in Chrysler's lineup — a more accessible alternative to the Town & Country that delivered the same core minivan practicality at a lower price point. Its broad install base and accessible pricing attract budget-conscious family buyers at auction who want proven minivan utility at a practical cost.
The Sebring was one of Chrysler's highest-volume models — a mid-size sedan and convertible that found a practical buyer community during its long production run. Sebring convertibles in particular attract buyers who want open-air motoring at an accessible price point. Its broad install base means a steady practical buyer pool at auction for clean, well-maintained examples.
The PT Cruiser was genuinely unlike anything else on the road when it arrived in 2001 — a retro-styled compact with wagon utility and a personality that divided opinion sharply. That divisiveness created a devoted owner community that valued its distinctiveness precisely because not everyone shared it. PT Cruiser GT turbocharged variants attract buyers who wanted the retro styling alongside genuine performance. Clean examples find buyers who appreciate its unique character.
The Crossfire was a short-lived but genuinely interesting Chrysler — a two-seat sports coupe built on Mercedes-Benz SLK mechanicals during the DaimlerChrysler partnership era. Its combination of Mercedes engineering beneath distinctive American styling created a niche vehicle that attracts buyers who prize its unusual heritage. Crossfire SRT6 supercharged variants are particularly sought after by enthusiasts who appreciate the Mercedes-sourced supercharged inline-six and its genuine performance credentials.
Chrysler shares its Stellantis family with several other American brands — each with their own donation page. If you have a Dodge muscle car or SUV, a Ram truck, or a Jeep to donate, we accept those too — visit the relevant page for full details on donating your vehicle to Vehicles For Veterans.
The Chrysler 300 Letter Series from the 1950s — the C-300, 300B, 300C, and so on through the 300L — are among the most celebrated and collectible American cars ever built. These were the most powerful American production cars of their era, and documented examples in good condition command serious collector prices from buyers who understand their place in American automotive history. The Chrysler Imperial was the brand's ultimate luxury statement — a vehicle that competed directly with Cadillac and Lincoln for America's most discerning buyers, and one that attracts devoted collectors who prize its combination of period luxury and historical significance. The New Yorker, LHS, and Concorde sedans find practical buyers who valued their combination of interior space and Chrysler's luxury positioning. Earlier K-car era vehicles — the Dynasty, Fifth Avenue, and New Yorker of the 1980s and 1990s — represent an important chapter in American automotive survival and find niche buyers who appreciate their historical significance.
We evaluate every vehicle on a case-by-case basis. Here is what to know before donating an older vehicle.
Step One: Call 1-855-811-4838 or fill out our online donation form. We accept most Chryslers in most conditions on a case-by-case basis — our team is happy to answer any questions about your specific vehicle.
Step Two: We arrange free towing at a time that works for your schedule, whether your Chrysler is running or not. We come to you.
Step Three: After your vehicle sells, we mail your tax-deductible receipt reflecting the final sale value. Save it for tax time.
Your tax deduction reflects what your Chrysler sells for at auction — we do not estimate or promise a figure in advance. When your vehicle sells for more than $500, your deduction reflects that final sale price and we provide IRS Form 1098-C. If your vehicle sells for under $500, you may be able to claim fair market value up to that amount.
Chrysler's broad American buyer community and the added collector significance of its classic models mean motivated buyers pursue these vehicles with consistent intent — and that demand drives the strongest possible return for American veterans charity programs.
Of the 19.6 million veterans in the United States, many rely on the programs your donation helps fund — housing assistance for veterans in transition, mental health care for those carrying the invisible wounds of service, adaptive equipment that restores independence, and service dogs that change lives.
Chrysler has survived everything American history has thrown at it and kept building. Your donation carries that same resilience forward — for the veterans who gave everything in service to this country.
Donate your Chrysler today — call 1-855-811-4838 or fill out our vehicle donation form.
