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Tennessee Abandoned Vehicle Overview
Tennessee's abandoned vehicle laws are governed by TCA § 55-16-101 et seq. Tennessee uses the standard 72-hour street threshold and 30-day private property notice period. Title claims go through the Tennessee Department of Revenue (DOR) — not the courts in standard cases. Tennessee's process is generally straightforward, though Nashville's rapid growth has created enforcement backlog in some areas.
Street Time Limit
A vehicle left on a Tennessee public road for more than 72 consecutive hours may be tagged and removed. Report to your local police non-emergency line or city 311 system. Tennessee Highway Patrol handles state road situations at (615) 251-5166. Officers establish the 72-hour baseline with tire marking, post notice, and notify the registered owner through TN DOR records. If unclaimed, the vehicle is towed to a licensed facility.
Private Property Removal
Document the vehicle thoroughly, file a police report, and wait the full 30 days after certified notification. Tennessee requires: (1) Dated photographs from all angles. (2) Police report documenting unauthorized presence. (3) Certified mail notice to registered owner via TN DOR address on file. (4) 30-day wait period. (5) Arrangement of removal through a licensed Tennessee tow company after the period expires.
Claiming Title
Tennessee title claims go through the Department of Revenue. Steps: (1) File police report. (2) Identify registered owner through TN DOR — call (615) 741-3101 or tn.gov/revenue. (3) Send certified notice. (4) Wait 30 days. (5) Apply to TN DOR for abandoned vehicle title with all documentation. Tennessee county clerk offices handle the actual title issuance — find yours at tnvotes.org/counties. Processing typically 4–6 weeks.
City-by-City Contacts
| City | Contact | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Nashville | (615) 862-8600 · nashville.gov | Metro Nashville Police non-emergency; high complaint volume — use online 311 at nashville.gov/departments/police |
| Memphis | (901) 545-2677 · memphistn.gov | MPD non-emergency; Shelby County handles unincorporated areas separately |
| Knoxville | (865) 215-4010 · knoxvilletn.gov | KPD non-emergency; Knox County Sheriff for county roads |
| Chattanooga | (423) 698-2525 · chattanooga.gov | CPD non-emergency; Hamilton County Sheriff for unincorporated areas |
| Clarksville | (931) 645-8477 · cityofclarksville.com | CPD non-emergency |
| Murfreesboro | (615) 893-1311 · murfreesborotn.gov | MPD non-emergency; rapid growth area with active enforcement |
Inoperable Vehicle Storage
Tennessee does not have a statewide inoperable vehicle storage rule — local ordinances govern this. Nashville prohibits inoperable vehicles in plain view in residential zones under Metro Code of Laws § 16.08. Memphis and Shelby County have similar provisions. Most Tennessee cities require enclosed structure or opaque screening for inoperable vehicles. Rural Tennessee counties are generally more permissive. Check your specific municipality's code.
Official Contacts
| Resource | Contact |
|---|---|
| TN Dept. of Revenue — Vehicle Titles | (615) 741-3101 · tn.gov/revenue |
| Tennessee Code Annotated § 55-16-101 | advance.lexis.com/tennessee |
| Tennessee Highway Patrol | (615) 251-5166 · tn.gov/safety/article/thp |
| Nashville Metro Police | (615) 862-8600 · nashville.gov |
| Memphis Police | (901) 545-2677 · memphistn.gov |
| Knoxville Police | (865) 215-4010 · knoxvilletn.gov |
Frequently Asked Questions
Tennessee title issuance is handled at the county level by county clerk offices, even though the Department of Revenue oversees the process. To find your county clerk: go to tnvotes.org/counties and select your county. Call the clerk's office to confirm their specific abandoned vehicle title procedure and any local requirements. Nashville (Davidson County), Memphis (Shelby County), and Knoxville (Knox County) all have different processing times.
Nashville's rapid population growth has created significant backlogs in code enforcement and abandoned vehicle response. If your 311 complaint hasn't produced action in 2–3 weeks, the most effective escalation path in Nashville is to contact your Metro Council member's office — find yours at council.nashville.gov. Metro Council members have direct relationships with Metro Police precinct commanders and code enforcement supervisors. Including your 311 service request number when you contact them speeds up the escalation considerably.