72
Hours on public street
30
Day private property notice period
MVA
Motor Vehicle Administration handles titles

Maryland Abandoned Vehicle Overview

Maryland's abandoned vehicle laws are governed by MD Transportation Code § 25-201 et seq. Maryland uses the standard 72-hour street threshold and 30-day private property notice period. Title claims go through the Maryland Motor Vehicle Administration (MVA). Maryland's proximity to Washington D.C. creates a dense urban core in the suburbs (Montgomery and Prince George's Counties) with active enforcement, while the rural Western Maryland and Eastern Shore areas are more relaxed.

Street Time Limit

Report abandoned vehicles on Maryland public roads to your local police non-emergency line or county code enforcement. Maryland State Police handles state highway cases at (410) 486-3101. Officers establish the 72-hour baseline, post abandonment notice, and attempt owner notification through MVA records. Towing goes through licensed Maryland facilities. Baltimore City has its own dedicated abandoned vehicle program through the Department of Transportation.

Private Property Removal

Document the vehicle, contact local police or county code enforcement, wait the full 30 days after certified notification to the registered owner, then arrange removal through a licensed Maryland tow operator. Baltimore City residents: contact the Baltimore City DOT Abandoned Vehicle Unit directly at (410) 396-5600 for faster action in the city — Baltimore has a dedicated program separate from police reporting.

Claiming Title

Maryland title claims go through the MVA. Steps: (1) File police or code enforcement report. (2) Request owner info from Maryland MVA at (410) 768-7000 or mva.maryland.gov. (3) Send USPS certified notice to registered owner. (4) Wait 30 days. (5) Apply to MVA for abandoned vehicle title with all documentation. Maryland MVA has branch offices throughout the state — find locations at mva.maryland.gov. Processing typically 4–6 weeks.

City-by-City Contacts

City/CountyContactNotes
Baltimore City(410) 396-5600 · baltimorecity.gov/cs/transportationBaltimore DOT Abandoned Vehicle Unit — dedicated program; faster response than standard police reporting
Montgomery County(301) 279-8000 · montgomerycountymd.govMCPD non-emergency; high-density suburban enforcement
Prince George's County(301) 352-1200 · princegeorgescountymd.govPGPD non-emergency; contact code enforcement for private property cases
Anne Arundel County(410) 222-8610 · aacounty.orgAACPD non-emergency; includes Annapolis area
Baltimore County(410) 307-2020 · baltimorecountymd.govSeparate from Baltimore City — Baltimore County Police non-emergency
Frederick County(301) 600-1046 · frederickcountymd.govFrederick County Sheriff non-emergency

Inoperable Vehicle Storage

Maryland does not have a uniform statewide inoperable vehicle storage ordinance — counties and municipalities govern this. Baltimore City prohibits inoperable vehicles in plain view in residential areas under City Code Article 19. Montgomery County and Prince George's County have similar prohibitions. Rural Maryland counties (Frederick, Washington, Garrett) are more permissive. Check your specific jurisdiction's code at Maryland's MunicipalCodes.com resource.

Official Contacts

ResourceContact
Maryland MVA — Vehicle Titles(410) 768-7000 · mva.maryland.gov
MD Transportation Code § 25-201mgaleg.maryland.gov
Maryland State Police(410) 486-3101 · mdsp.maryland.gov
Baltimore DOT Abandoned Vehicles(410) 396-5600 · baltimorecity.gov
Montgomery County Police(301) 279-8000 · montgomerycountymd.gov
Prince George's County Police(301) 352-1200 · princegeorgescountymd.gov

Frequently Asked Questions

This confuses many people. Baltimore City and Baltimore County are separate jurisdictions. If you are within Baltimore City limits (the independent city, not the surrounding county), contact the Baltimore DOT Abandoned Vehicle Unit at (410) 396-5600 — they have a dedicated program. If you are in Baltimore County (the suburban ring around the city including Towson, Catonsville, Essex), contact Baltimore County Police at (410) 307-2020. The quickest way to tell which jurisdiction you're in: Google your address — it will show either 'Baltimore' or 'Baltimore County' as the municipality.

Maryland has an extremely high concentration of HOAs, particularly in Montgomery County, Prince George's County, Howard County, and the Baltimore suburbs. In many Maryland communities, your HOA's vehicle rules are stricter than county ordinances and will be the first enforcement you encounter. Check your CC&Rs before calling county code enforcement — HOA enforcement is often faster and more targeted. For the most common situations (inoperable driveway car, commercial vehicle parking), your HOA may resolve the situation before county code enforcement even responds.

Informational only. Verify current rules with your local authorities and state DMV. Not legal advice.