Donate Plymouth: Vehicles Benefiting Local Make-A-Wish Kids
Plymouth was never about flash or pretense. From its founding in 1928 through its discontinuation in 2001, it built affordable, dependable vehicles for everyday Americans — the kind of cars that got people to work, carried families on road trips, and kept running long after anyone expected them to quit. Plymouth shared its DNA with its Chrysler siblings — Dodge and Chrysler — and that shared engineering gave its vehicles a reliability foundation that many owners still rely on today.
If yours is still on the road, donating to Wheels For Wishes gives it a final chapter worth having. Proceeds go directly to your local chapter of Make-A-Wish, supporting children facing critical illnesses right in your community. We coordinate free pickup, handle the paperwork, and make the process straightforward. Call 1-855-278-9474 or visit our car donation form whenever you're ready.
Plymouth Models We Accept for Donation
We accept most Plymouths in most conditions on a case-by-case basis.
Voyager — From One Family to Another
The Plymouth Voyager holds a special place in American automotive history — it launched alongside the Dodge Caravan in 1984 as one of the vehicles that invented the modern minivan segment. For the families who drove them through years of school runs, road trips, sports practices, and everything in between, the Voyager wasn't just transportation. It was the backdrop for the kind of ordinary moments that add up to a life well lived.
That family connection makes donating a Voyager to Wheels For Wishes feel particularly fitting. The families who drove Voyagers understand what it means to show up for the people who matter — and Make-A-Wish families are people who need exactly that right now. A donated Voyager becomes funding for a wish experience that a child facing a critical illness will carry with them forever. Find out everything that car donation makes possible for local children and for you.
Grand Voyager trims brought additional comfort and features to the lineup, and both standard and extended wheelbase models find practical buyers at auction who want proven minivan reliability at accessible prices.
Neon & Breeze
The Neon was Plymouth's most recognizable final-era model — a compact sedan that arrived in 1994 with genuinely expressive styling, a peppy twin-cam engine, and a price point that made it one of the most accessible new cars in America. Its "Hi." advertising campaign gave it a personality that matched its character perfectly. A well-maintained Neon finds practical buyers who want reliable compact transportation, and Sport and Expresso trim variants attract buyers who want a little extra character alongside the practicality.
The Breeze compact sedan brought a more conservative, family-oriented character to Plymouth's lineup — its smooth inline-four, comfortable ride, and practical interior made it a sensible choice that delivered exactly what it promised. Clean Breeze examples find buyers who want dependable used transportation at budget-friendly prices.
Valiant
The Valiant was one of Plymouth's most enduring nameplates — a compact sedan produced from 1960 through 1976 that built a reputation for mechanical durability that owners still talk about. Its slant-six engine — one of the most reliable American powertrains of its era — kept Valiants running through decades of hard use, and examples in good condition find buyers who appreciate both its history and its proven longevity.
Valiant Signet and Duster variants attract enthusiast interest alongside the practical buyer community — and any Valiant with a documented slant-six in good running condition has genuine auction value with buyers who know exactly what that engine means.
The Road Runner — Beep Beep
The Plymouth Road Runner arrived in 1968 with a simple mission: put serious muscle car performance into the least expensive package possible. Named and licensed after the Warner Bros. cartoon character — complete with a horn that actually went "beep beep" — the Road Runner stripped away the luxury options and focused entirely on going fast for as little money as possible. It was pure Plymouth philosophy applied to the muscle car formula.
The 426 HEMI-equipped Road Runner is among the most valuable American muscle cars in existence. But even six-cylinder and 383-equipped examples attract buyers whose enthusiasm for the nameplate runs deep. A donated Road Runner in any condition finds a buyer community that knows exactly what it is — and their bids reflect that knowledge generously. Older vehicles are more valuable than you might think.
Brief Mention — Barracuda, Fury & Classic Models
The Barracuda — Plymouth's pony car and eventual muscle car — is a legitimate American collector vehicle, particularly in 'Cuda form with its available 426 HEMI and AAR variants. Clean examples command serious collector prices. The Fury full-size sedan served Plymouth's mainstream buyers through decades of production and finds practical buyers alongside the collectors who remember them. The GTX muscle car, Satellite, and Sport Fury round out a classic lineup whose buyer communities remain active and motivated.
How to Donate Your Plymouth in Three Steps
Step One: Call us at 1-855-278-9474 or fill out our car donation form. We accept most Plymouths in most conditions on a case-by-case basis.
Step Two: We arrange free pickup at your convenience, wherever your Plymouth is located. We come to you.
Step Three: After your vehicle sells, we'll send your tax-deductible receipt reflecting the final sale value.
Plymouth Donation Value & Your Tax Deduction
Your deduction reflects what your Plymouth sells for at auction. When your vehicle sells for more than $500, your deduction reflects that final sale price, and we provide IRS Form 1098-C with everything needed at tax time. If your vehicle sells for under $500, you may be able to claim fair market value up to that amount.
Plymouth's discontinued status means a fixed supply — and muscle car models like the Road Runner, Barracuda, and GTX attract buyers whose passion for the brand produces auction results that regularly surprise donors.
What Your Plymouth Donation Makes Possible
A well-maintained Neon, Breeze, or Voyager typically brings $1,000–$4,000 at auction. A clean Valiant or Road Runner with the right buyer in the room pushes well beyond those figures. A HEMI Barracuda or documented 'Cuda can fund a wish experience entirely on its own.
Wheels For Wishes has helped grant 14,551 wishes for local children — adventures, transformations, and moments that reminded kids facing critical illnesses that there is still so much ahead of them.
Plymouth built vehicles for everyday Americans for over 70 years. Your donation gives yours one final purpose — and it's a good one.
Donate your Plymouth today or call 1-855-278-9474 — we're ready when you are.







