72
Hours on public street
30
Day private property notice period
SCDMV
SC DMV handles title claims

South Carolina Abandoned Vehicle Overview

South Carolina's abandoned vehicle laws are governed by SC Code § 56-5-5810 et seq. South Carolina uses the standard 72-hour street threshold and 30-day private property notice period. Title claims go through the South Carolina Department of Motor Vehicles (SCDMV). South Carolina's coastal areas (Myrtle Beach, Charleston) face unique vehicle abandonment issues related to tourism and hurricane seasons.

Street Time Limit

Report abandoned vehicles on South Carolina public roads to your local police non-emergency line or county sheriff. South Carolina Highway Patrol handles state road cases at (803) 896-7920. Municipalities handle city streets; county sheriffs handle unincorporated areas. Officers post notice and attempt owner notification through SCDMV records. Unclaimed vehicles go to licensed SC facilities.

Private Property Removal

Document the vehicle, contact local police or county sheriff, wait the full 30 days after certified notification to the registered owner, then arrange removal through a licensed South Carolina tow company. South Carolina private property note: if the vehicle is in a tourist or seasonal area (Myrtle Beach, Hilton Head, Pawleys Island), rental cars and out-of-state tourist vehicles are occasionally abandoned — the process is the same but out-of-state registration means the SCDMV must contact the home state DMV, adding 1–2 weeks to owner notification.

Claiming Title

South Carolina title claims go through SCDMV. Steps: (1) File police or sheriff report. (2) Request owner info from SCDMV at (803) 896-5000 or scdmvonline.com. (3) Send certified notice. (4) Wait 30 days. (5) Apply to SCDMV for abandoned vehicle title with all documentation. SCDMV offices throughout the state — find at scdmvonline.com/Locations. Processing typically 4–6 weeks.

City-by-City Contacts

City/CountyContactNotes
Columbia(803) 253-6000 · columbiascpd.comCPD non-emergency; Richland County Sheriff for unincorporated county areas
Charleston(843) 743-7200 · charleston-sc.govCPD non-emergency; Charleston County Sheriff for county roads; use charleston311.com for online reports
North Charleston(843) 554-5700 · northcharleston.orgNCPD non-emergency; separate from Charleston city jurisdiction
Greenville(864) 271-5333 · greenvillesc.govGPD non-emergency; Greenville County Sheriff for county roads
Myrtle Beach(843) 918-1382 · cityofmyrtlebeach.comMBPD non-emergency; Horry County Sheriff for county and tourist corridor roads; seasonal enforcement patterns
Rock Hill(803) 329-7200 · cityofrockhill.comRHPD non-emergency; York County Sheriff for county roads

Inoperable Vehicle Storage

South Carolina does not have a statewide inoperable vehicle storage ordinance — municipal and county codes govern this. Columbia prohibits inoperable vehicles in plain view in residential areas under Columbia City Code. Charleston and North Charleston have similar provisions. Myrtle Beach code enforcement is seasonally active due to tourism. Rural Upstate South Carolina (Greenville, Spartanburg areas) and Lowcountry rural areas are generally more permissive. Check your specific city or county municipal code.

Official Contacts

ResourceContact
SC Department of Motor Vehicles(803) 896-5000 · scdmvonline.com
SC Code § 56-5-5810scstatehouse.gov
SC Highway Patrol(803) 896-7920 · schp.gov
Columbia Police (non-emergency)(803) 253-6000 · columbiascpd.com
Charleston Police (non-emergency)(843) 743-7200 · charleston-sc.gov
Myrtle Beach Police (non-emergency)(843) 918-1382 · cityofmyrtlebeach.com

Frequently Asked Questions

Myrtle Beach's tourism economy creates a specific abandoned vehicle pattern: rental cars are occasionally not returned, out-of-state tourist vehicles break down and get abandoned, and short-term rental properties sometimes end up with guests' vehicles left behind. Myrtle Beach Police and Horry County Sheriff are familiar with these situations. The process is legally the same, but out-of-state registration means the SCDMV must contact the vehicle's home state to identify the owner, which typically adds 1–2 weeks to the notification process. Rental car abandonment goes through the rental company, which usually retrieves vehicles faster than the government process.

No — South Carolina does not have an equivalent to Virginia's $40 online Abandoned Vehicle Program. South Carolina's process requires police or sheriff involvement and the standard certified mail notification process before SCDMV can process a title claim. The SCDMV has made many services available online at scdmvonline.com, but the abandoned vehicle title claim process still requires the police report and physical documentation. Virginia's AVP remains the standout national program for ease of use.

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