Home  »  Car Grants   »   North Carolina Free Car Voucher Program

North Carolina Free Car Voucher Program

North Carolina Free Car Voucher Program

A car voucher program is a government or nonprofit initiative that provides financial help to replace or purchase a vehicle. These programs use grants, rebates, or subsidized loans to reduce the cost of getting a newer, cleaner, or more reliable vehicle.

North Carolina does not have a single statewide car voucher program for individual residents. However, the state runs several real vehicle incentive programs through state agencies, utilities, and nonprofits. These include diesel vehicle replacement grants, EV charging rebates, nonprofit vehicle access programs, and federal tax credits that NC residents can use.

Understanding the difference between these program types helps you apply for the right one:

  • A voucher is a pre-approved credit applied at the point of purchase
  • A rebate is a reimbursement paid after a qualifying purchase
  • A grant is funding awarded to an organization or individual for a specific project

The North Carolina Department of Environmental Quality (NC DEQ), the NC Division of Air Quality (DAQ), and the North Carolina Department of Transportation (NCDOT) manage most of the state’s transportation incentive programs. Funding comes from federal programs, the Volkswagen Settlement, and utility initiatives.


Key Takeaways

  • North Carolina has no universal car voucher program for individual consumers
  • The NC Volkswagen Settlement Program (managed by NC DEQ) has distributed over $92 million in vehicle replacement funding — primarily targeting fleet and heavy-duty diesel vehicles
  • The Mobile Sources Emissions Reductions Grant (MSERG) provides annual funding for diesel vehicle replacement — for businesses and organizations, not individual buyers
  • Nonprofits like Wheels 4 Hope and Working Wheels WNC help low-income, employed North Carolinians access affordable vehicles
  • Federal Clean Vehicle Tax Credits of up to $7,500 (new) and $4,000 (used) are available directly to qualifying NC residents

Current Car Voucher or Vehicle Incentive Programs in North Carolina

North Carolina routes vehicle incentive funding through state agencies, utilities, and nonprofits. Here are the active programs available as of 2026:

Program NameWho QualifiesBenefit AmountVehicle RequirementsHow to ApplyOfficial Website
NC Volkswagen Settlement – Mobile Source ReplacementPublic/private fleet operators in NC25%–45% of replacement vehicle cost as rebate voucherMust replace older diesel vehicles; new vehicle must be cleaner alternative or zero-emissionSubmit RFP via NC DEQ Grant Management Systemdeq.nc.gov
Mobile Sources Emissions Reductions Grant (MSERG)Any public or private sector entity with physical NC presence~$1.1–$1.4 million total annual pool; individual awards varyReplace older diesel vehicles; new vehicle operates 70%+ in NC for 5 yearsApply via DAQ Grant Management System at ebs.nc.govdeq.nc.gov/mobile-sources
Federal Clean Vehicle Credit (IRS Sec. 30D)NC residents buying new qualifying EVs or fuel cell vehiclesUp to $7,500New plug-in EV; income and MSRP caps applyClaim via IRS Form 8936 or point-of-sale dealer creditirs.gov
Federal Used Clean Vehicle Credit (IRS Sec. 25E)NC residents buying qualifying used EVsUp to $4,000Used EV, 2+ model years old; sale price under $25,000Claim on federal tax returnirs.gov
Duke Energy NC – EV Charging RebateDuke Energy NC residential customersUp to $2,500 for Level 2 charger; higher for income-qualifiedLevel 2 EV charger installed at homeApply via Duke Energy customer portalduke-energy.com
Wheels 4 HopeLow-income, employed NC residents referred by partner agenciesVehicle for approximately $500Donated cars restored to sound condition; 6-month warrantyReferral from approved partner agency requiredwheels4hope.org
Working Wheels WNCClients of partner agencies in western NC; must be employedVehicle for $628Subsidized program vehiclesReferral from case manager at partner agencyworkingwheelswnc.org
The CARes ProjectEmployed workers in Forsyth, Davie, Davidson, Stokes, Surry, or Yadkin County; credit score ≤ 600; income ≤ 80% AMILow-interest car loanAny vehicle from program inventoryApply at thecaresproject.orgthecaresproject.org

Who Qualifies for the North Carolina Car Voucher Program

Eligibility depends entirely on which program you pursue.

Eligibility GroupRequirementsPossible Benefit
Fleet operators / businesses (VW Settlement)Operate diesel vehicles in NC; public or private sector25%–45% of vehicle replacement cost as rebate voucher
Businesses / organizations (MSERG)Physical presence in NC; diesel vehicle must have been operational in prior 2 yearsGrant funding; portion varies by emissions tier
Individual EV buyers (Federal Tax Credit)AGI under $150,000 (single) or $300,000 (joint); new qualifying EV under MSRP capUp to $7,500
Individual used EV buyersAGI under $75,000 (single); used EV priced under $25,000Up to $4,000
Low-income employed individuals (Wheels 4 Hope)Employed; valid NC license; no vehicles in household; referred by partner agency; age 18+Donated vehicle for ~$500
Western NC partner agency clients (Working Wheels)Active in partner agency program 3+ months; valid NC license; employedSubsidized vehicle for $628
Credit-challenged workers (CARes Project)In qualifying county; credit ≤ 600; income ≤ 80% AMI; employed 30+ hrs/week for 1+ yearLow-interest car loan

Critical notes on eligibility:

  • Most consumer-facing nonprofit programs require employment verification, not just income documentation
  • Wheels 4 Hope does not accept SSI or disability income as qualifying employment
  • The NC DEQ diesel replacement grants do not target individual consumers — they fund organizations with diesel fleets
  • The CARes Project requires financial coaching participation as a condition of the loan

How to Apply for a Car Voucher in North Carolina

Nonprofit Vehicle Programs (Wheels 4 Hope / Working Wheels WNC)

StepActionRequired Documents
1 – Contact a partner agencyGet a referral; you cannot apply directly to these programsN/A
2 – Confirm eligibilityCase manager verifies employment, license, and household vehicle statusRecent pay stub (within 1 month); valid NC driver’s license
3 – Complete the applicationSubmit jointly with case manager; three signatures requiredNC license copy; DMV vehicle records verification; proof of no existing household vehicle
4 – Attend orientation/interviewAttend mandatory orientation; wait time is typically 8–10 weeks after orientationApplication approval confirmation
5 – Pay program feePay via cashier’s check or money order only$500 (Wheels 4 Hope) or $628 (Working Wheels WNC)
6 – Collect vehiclePick up restored vehicle with warrantyProof of active car insurance required before driving

DEQ Diesel Replacement Grants (Businesses/Organizations)

StepActionRequired Documents
1 – Review the RFPDownload the Request for Proposals from deq.nc.govN/A
2 – Register in DAQ GMSCreate account in NC DEQ Grant Management System at ebs.nc.govBusiness registration details
3 – Submit application by deadlineComplete and submit before published deadlineVehicle ownership records; diesel vehicle operational history; replacement vehicle quotes
4 – Await reviewDAQ reviews applications for completeness and eligibilityN/A
5 – Sign project agreementDEQ Secretary approves vouchers; awardee returns signed agreementSigned project agreement
6 – Claim reimbursementSubmit invoices and scrappage evidenceNC DAQ Form 001 Certificate of Destruction; photos of old and new vehicle

Voucher Amounts and Vehicle Requirements

NC DEQ Volkswagen Settlement Program

North Carolina received $92 million from the national Volkswagen settlement. The NC DEQ managed this allocation through the Division of Air Quality. Rebate voucher amounts depend on the emissions tier of the replacement vehicle:

  • Replacing with a standard clean engine: 25% of cost covered
  • Replacing with a CARB-Certified Low-NOx Engine: 35% covered
  • Replacing with a zero-emission vehicle: 45% of cost covered

The program funded 64 replacement buses, including 24 all-electric buses worth over $13 million.

Mobile Sources Emissions Reductions Grant (MSERG)

The annual funding pool runs approximately $1.1–$1.4 million statewide. Eligible projects include:

  • Replacing on-road diesel vehicles with cleaner alternatives
  • Converting vehicles to alternative fuels
  • Expanding medium and heavy-duty EV usage statewide
  • Repowering existing vehicles with newer, cleaner engines

Projects replacing diesels with zero-emission vehicles receive bonus scoring points. The old vehicle must have been operational within the prior two years.

Federal Clean Vehicle Tax Credits

Credit TypeMaximum AmountMSRP CapIncome Limit (Single/Joint)
New EV (Sec. 30D)$7,500$55,000 (sedans); $80,000 (SUVs/trucks)$150,000 / $300,000 AGI
Used EV (Sec. 25E)$4,000$25,000 sale price$75,000 / $150,000 AGI

The new EV credit is split into two $3,750 components tied to battery critical mineral sourcing and North American assembly requirements.

Duke Energy NC Charging Rebates

Duke Energy North Carolina offers up to $2,500 for residential Level 2 EV charger installation, with elevated rebates for income-qualified customers. Most electrical upgrade costs for a standard home installation are covered by the baseline $1,133 rebate. Applications must be submitted within 120 days of the final invoice date.

Nonprofit Vehicle Programs

  • Wheels 4 Hope: Vehicles for approximately $500; all include a 6-month warranty
  • Working Wheels WNC: Vehicles for $628 including DMV fees

Alternatives if No Official NC Car Voucher Program Exists

Since North Carolina has no universal statewide car voucher for individual residents, these are the practical alternatives:

Federal Programs

  • IRS Section 30D Clean Vehicle Credit: Up to $7,500 for new qualifying EVs. Starting in 2024, this can be applied as a point-of-sale discount through participating dealerships.
  • IRS Section 25E Used Clean Vehicle Credit: Up to $4,000 for used EVs under $25,000.

Utility Rebates

  • Duke Energy North Carolina and Duke Energy Progress offer EV charging equipment rebates of up to $2,500 for residential Level 2 charger installations. These are processed within 4–8 weeks and do not require state tax filing.

Nonprofit Vehicle Assistance

  • Wheels 4 Hope: Serves the Greensboro area with plans to expand to Charlotte. Provides donated, restored vehicles for ~$500 to employed, low-income NC residents with a partner agency referral.
  • Working Wheels WNC: Subsidized vehicle access at $628 for western NC clients of partner agencies.
  • The CARes Project: Low-interest car loans for employed, credit-challenged adults earning at or below 80% AMI in Forsyth-area counties.

State & Federal Transit Support

  • NCDOT Mobility for Everyone, Everywhere (MEE-NC): A $10.4 million on-demand microtransit initiative for 11 rural communities across NC. Not a vehicle purchase program, but it reduces transportation costs for residents who need mobility options.
  • NC DHHS Low-Income Services: Connects residents with transportation assistance and local mobility resources.

Common Misconceptions About Car Voucher Programs

“The state gives away free cars.”
No NC program provides free vehicles. Even Wheels 4 Hope charges ~$500 plus insurance, title, and transfer fees. Websites claiming otherwise misrepresent legitimate nonprofit or federal programs.

“Anyone can apply directly.”
Most nonprofit vehicle programs in NC require a referral from a partner agency. You cannot submit an application independently to Wheels 4 Hope or Working Wheels WNC. A case manager at an approved organization must initiate the process.

“Approval is guaranteed.”
Funding is limited and competitive. The MSERG program has approximately $1.1 million for the entire state per cycle. DEQ reserves the right to award less than the full amount requested in any single application.

“These programs help individuals replace old personal cars.”
The NC DEQ Volkswagen Settlement grants and MSERG grants fund businesses and organizations replacing diesel fleet vehicles — not individual consumers replacing personal passenger cars.

“North Carolina offers a statewide EV rebate.”
As of 2026, North Carolina does not offer a statewide EV purchase rebate for individual buyers. The state’s focus has been on building charging infrastructure and supporting utility-side programs.

“EV credits mean you get money back immediately.”
Federal EV tax credits reduce your tax liability. If your tax bill is less than the credit amount, you do not automatically receive the difference as a refund. Ask your dealer about applying the credit as a point-of-sale discount through IRS-approved processes.


Conclusion

North Carolina’s vehicle incentive landscape is distributed across state agencies, federal programs, utilities, and nonprofits. The NC DEQ, through the Volkswagen Settlement and MSERG, funds vehicle replacement at the organizational and fleet level. Individual residents can access federal EV tax credits, Duke Energy charging rebates, and nonprofit vehicle programs like Wheels 4 Hope and Working Wheels WNC.

Eligibility rules are strict. Most programs require employment verification, agency referrals, or organizational standing. Funding pools are limited and awarded competitively. Apply early each cycle and verify all program details directly through official NC DEQ (deq.nc.gov), NCDOT (ncdot.gov), or nonprofit websites before submitting any application.


Frequently Asked Questions

How does the North Carolina car voucher program work?
North Carolina does not have a single statewide car voucher program for individual residents. The state’s main vehicle replacement programs — managed by NC DEQ and DAQ — issue rebate vouchers to businesses and organizations replacing diesel vehicles. Individual residents can access nonprofit programs, federal EV tax credits, and utility rebates.

Who qualifies for a vehicle replacement voucher in North Carolina?
For state-administered programs like the MSERG, any public or private sector entity with a physical presence in NC is eligible. For nonprofit programs like Wheels 4 Hope, you must be employed, hold a valid NC driver’s license, have no existing vehicle in your household, and be referred by a partner agency.

How much money can you receive from a North Carolina car rebate program?
State DEQ vehicle replacement grants cover 25% to 45% of vehicle replacement cost depending on emissions tier. The federal Clean Vehicle Credit offers up to $7,500 for new EVs and up to $4,000 for qualifying used EVs. Duke Energy offers up to $2,500 for residential EV charger installation.

Can low-income residents qualify for vehicle replacement assistance in North Carolina?
Yes, through nonprofits. Wheels 4 Hope provides donated vehicles for approximately $500 to low-income, employed NC residents with a partner agency referral. Working Wheels WNC offers subsidized vehicles for $628 in western NC. The CARes Project provides low-interest auto loans for workers with credit scores at or below 600 and income at or below 80% Area Median Income.

Does the North Carolina car voucher program require scrapping an old vehicle?
State DEQ grants — including both the Volkswagen Settlement and MSERG programs — require evidence of scrappage. Recipients must submit NC DAQ Form 001 (Certificate of Destruction) along with photographic evidence that the old vehicle was destroyed. Nonprofit programs like Wheels 4 Hope require that no vehicle currently be registered in your household, but do not require scrappage.

Are EV rebates part of the North Carolina vehicle incentive program?
North Carolina does not offer a statewide EV purchase rebate as of 2026. However, Duke Energy North Carolina and Duke Energy Progress offer residential EV charging equipment rebates of up to $2,500. Federal EV tax credits of up to $7,500 for new and up to $4,000 for used EVs are available to qualifying NC residents and can be applied at the point of sale through participating dealers.

Where do I apply for transportation or vehicle assistance programs in North Carolina?

  • NC DEQ grants: deq.nc.gov and DAQ Grant Management System at ebs.nc.gov
  • Wheels 4 Hope: wheels4hope.org (referral through partner agency required)
  • Working Wheels WNC: workingwheelswnc.org (referral from community partner required)
  • The CARes Project: thecaresproject.org
  • Duke Energy EV charging rebate: duke-energy.com
  • Federal EV tax credits: irs.gov or ask your EV dealer about point-of-sale application

John Reese

John Resse has worked in Government Grants and Loans for 5 Years, and is currently the Editor in Chief of CarAssists. He lives in Newark, NJ with family and sometime enjoys weekly vacation.