Car Removals helps Melbourne owners and businesses request quotes for trucks and commercial vehicles that are old, damaged, unwanted, unregistered, non-running or no longer needed. This can include light trucks, delivery trucks, tray trucks, tipper trucks, small fleet vehicles and other commercial vehicles assessed case by case. A truck quote depends on vehicle details, condition, size and access.
Provide the make, model, year, variant, body type, registration status, running condition and pickup suburb. If known, include GVM, approximate size, load body type, fuel type and whether the truck starts, drives, rolls or needs assessment before movement. Mention accident damage, written-off status, missing keys, missing battery, missing wheels, mechanical faults, flat tyres or removed major components.
Commercial pickup access can be different from standard car removal. Tell the team whether the truck is at a depot, warehouse, factory yard, workshop, loading yard, driveway, farm-style property, apartment loading area or legal street location. Mention site access hours, low clearance, locked gates, soft ground, loading restrictions, blocked vehicles or tight turning space before pickup is arranged.
If the quote suits you, towing or pickup can be arranged where practical across Melbourne suburbs, metro Melbourne and selected nearby regional Victoria. Before collection, remove business equipment, tools, paperwork, toll tags and personal belongings. Be ready to confirm ownership or authority to sell and check any registration or plate preparation that applies.
Depending on condition, a truck may be assessed for reuse, parts recovery, dismantling, metal recovery or responsible recycling. To request a truck quote, call Car Removals on 0406 895 973 or send the details online.
Commercial and online quote options can also be compared with sell your car online and cars on cash.
Truck quotes often need more context than passenger cars. Note whether the vehicle has a tray, box body, tipper, crane, refrigeration unit, service body or other fitted equipment, and whether that equipment is included. If the truck belongs to a business or fleet, provide the site contact and any access requirements for the depot or yard.
Condition details should cover the cab, chassis, body, driveline and tyres where possible. Mention whether the truck has been parked for months, has a failed clutch or gearbox, has accident damage, has electrical faults, or cannot be safely started. This helps Car Removals consider pickup planning, parts recovery, metal recovery and whether extra assessment is needed before collection.
Truck removal can also involve workplace timing. If the truck is in a depot, yard or loading area, mention business hours, site induction requirements, gate codes, parking restrictions and whether other vehicles or equipment block access. If the truck is loaded, fitted with tools or contains business property, remove those items before collection or make clear what is included.
The quote may consider more than scrap metal. A commercial vehicle can have reusable tyres, trays, hydraulic parts, body components, mirrors, lights, seats, driveline parts or other recoverable items depending on condition. A complete running truck may be assessed differently from a stripped, accident-damaged or non-running truck with missing batteries and flat tyres. Clear photos of the cab, body, tray or box, wheels, compliance plate where accessible and damage areas help make the quote discussion more useful.
If the truck is registered to a company, partnership or former business, make sure the person arranging collection can explain their authority to sell or release it in general terms. Also check whether signage, tools, fuel cards, toll tags, paperwork or tracking devices need to be removed before pickup. These practical details are easy to miss on commercial vehicles and can delay handover if they are left until collection day.
For larger trucks, describe whether there is room for safe approach and loading. Tight yards, low awnings, loading docks, parked fleet vehicles and uneven ground can all affect collection. Clear access photos can be as useful as photos of the truck itself. This is especially useful when the truck cannot be moved without planning around size, weight, site access or commercial equipment.