ISRI Code : NA
Auto Parts Recycling: Which Components Pay Best in 2025
What is Auto Parts Recycling?
Auto parts recycling involves strategically recovering individual vehicle components—metals, plastics, rubber, and electronics—for resale, remanufacturing, or raw material reclamation. Rather than scrapping an entire vehicle at once, component-level parts recovery creates multiple revenue streams that dramatically outperform general scrap values.
The global vehicle recycling market reached $86.57 billion in 2024 and is projected to expand to $286.17 billion by 2033, growing at a compound annual growth rate of 12.24%. North America dominates this market, holding approximately 40–42% of global market share thanks to mature infrastructure, regulatory frameworks, and robust demand for recycled materials.
Industry Scale and Economic Impact
The numbers demonstrate why professional auto recyclers treat each vehicle as a goldmine of recoverable value:
12+ million vehicles recycled annually in the United States alone
26 automobiles processed every minute across America
14 million tons of recycled steel produced from junk vehicles yearly
86% of a vehicle's weight is recyclable through proper dismantling
US automotive recycling industry: $32 billion in sales, 140,000+ employees, 9,000+ facilities
Over 4 million motor vehicles professionally recycled annually in the U.S. and Canada combined
Composition and Material Breakdown
Understanding a vehicle's material composition helps recyclers prioritize extraction and maximize value:
Metals comprise the bulk of recyclable material and value:
Steel/Iron: 2,000–2,400 lbs per vehicle (approximately 55% of total weight)
Aluminum: 200–400 lbs per vehicle (increasingly valuable in modern vehicles)
Copper: 50–100 lbs per vehicle (radiators, wiring, motors)
Precious metals: Platinum, palladium, rhodium concentrated in catalytic converters
Plastics represent emerging recovery potential:
Bumpers, dashboards, trim pieces (polypropylene, ABS polymers)
Modern vehicles contain approximately 250 recycled plastic bottles' worth of material in underbody shields and wheel liners
Rubber and secondary materials:
Tires processed into crumb rubber (approximately 70% of recycled tire material)
The U.S. tire recycling market reached $1.25 billion in 2025 with an 81% recycling rate
Hoses, seals, and gaskets for material reclamation
Environmental Impact
Automotive recycling delivers substantial environmental benefits:
Steel recycling saves 75% of the energy required to produce steel from virgin ore
86% reduction in air pollution and 76% reduction in water pollution versus primary production
97% reduction in mining waste generation
Industry produces enough recycled steel annually to build nearly 13 million new vehicles
Reusing a single Toyota Camry engine prevents 1,760 kg of CO2 emissions and saves 1,600+ kilowatt-hours of energy
How to Identify High-Value Parts
Success in auto parts recycling depends on quickly identifying which components justify individual extraction.
Visual Identification Guide
Aluminum radiators feature wide cooling fins with lightweight construction. Test with a magnet—aluminum won't stick, while steel radiators will. Post-2000 vehicles predominantly use aluminum/copper combinations worth $1.10–$2.25 per pound, while older brass/steel radiators command different pricing.
Alternators and starters contain copper windings that drive their scrap and resale value. Look for rotor/stator assemblies; diesel engine starters are typically larger and substantially more valuable than gasoline equivalents.
Catalytic converters vary dramatically in value based on substrate type (ceramic honeycomb versus metallic substrate) and vehicle origin. Foreign converters from Japanese, European, and luxury vehicles often contain 2–5x the precious metals of domestic units.
Electric motors and inverters (from hybrid/EV vehicles) contain valuable copper windings and rare earth magnets increasingly sought by specialized recyclers.
ECU/Engine Control Modules are vehicle-specific and command premium prices for functional units from 2010+ vehicles.
The Magnet Test: Ferrous vs. Non-Ferrous
This simple field test separates valuable non-ferrous metals from lower-value steel:
Steel radiator frames attract magnets immediately
Aluminum radiator frames show zero magnetic attraction
Copper windings in motors will not attract magnets
Stainless steel components show weak magnetic attraction
Zinc die-cast parts demonstrate no magnetic response
For detailed material specifications and identification standards, reference ISRI Scrap Standards.
Current Market Pricing (November 2025)
Scrap metal markets remained relatively stable through late November 2025, with modest copper decline while precious metals held firm ahead of year-end demand.
Regional Base Metal Price Snapshot
Current pricing from the ScrapMonster Price Index reflects these November 2025 national averages:
| Material | Price Range | Unit | Trend |
|---|---|---|---|
| #1 Copper Bare Bright | $3.60–$4.30 | per lb | ↓2.0% weekly |
| #1 Copper Wire/Tubing | $4.46–$4.76 | per lb | ↓2.06% weekly |
| Aluminum Radiators | $0.25–$0.61 | per lb | Stable |
| Al/Cu Radiators | $1.10–$2.25 | per lb | Stable |
| Alternators/Starters | $0.28–$0.46 | per lb | Stable |
| Complete Car Shells | $140–$180 | per ton | Stable |
| Lead Wheel Weights | $0.10–$0.24 | per lb | Stable |
| Lead-Acid Batteries | $0.22–$0.73 | per lb | Stable |
Track real-time price updates via the ScrapMonster US Scrap Price Index.
Precious Metals Driving Catalytic Converter Premiums
Catalytic converter pricing is determined by precious metal content. November 2025 precious metal prices show:
| Metal | Current Price | Year-over-Year Change |
|---|---|---|
| Rhodium | $7,925/oz | ↑73.22% |
| Platinum | $1,513/oz | Relatively stable |
| Palladium | $1,400–$1,421/oz | ↑43.82% |
These precious metal prices directly determine catalytic converter scrap values. The national average catalytic converter brings $107.82 each, though individual units range from $50 to $1,140+ depending on type, precious metal loading, and vehicle application.
Factors Impacting Your Scrap Prices
Part condition and cleanliness significantly influence offers. Drained, properly cleaned components with plastic attachments removed command premium rates.
Quantity and batch consistency create negotiating leverage. Sorted, batched materials yield better per-pound pricing than mixed loads.
Regional variations create opportunities for improved returns. Compare offers from multiple qualified buyers using the ScrapMonster Scrap Yard Locator.
Vehicle popularity affects part demand and pricing. Common models (Honda Civic, Toyota Camry, Ford F-150) maintain strong demand; rare models command premiums.
Top-Paying Auto Parts: Complete Value Rankings
Tier 1: Premium Value ($200–$2,000+ per Part)
1. Catalytic Converters: $50–$1,140+ Each
Catalytic converters represent the single highest-value component on most vehicles due to concentrated platinum, palladium, and rhodium content.
Current pricing by converter type (November 2025):
Torpedo Cats: $110–$1,140 each (Ford Econoline, large SUVs, trucks)
Exotic Cats: $200–$563 each (high-end foreign sports/luxury vehicles)
Large Foreign Cats: $67–$446 each (Japanese, European imports)
High Grade Domestic: $65–$596 each (American vehicles pre-2000)
Large GM Cats: $76–$276 each (Chevrolet/GMC trucks)
Aftermarket Cats: ~$5 each (minimal precious metal content)
Vehicles with most valuable converters:
Ferrari F430: $3,770 each (requires 2 units)
Lamborghini Aventador: $3,120 each (requires 2 units)
Ram 2500 Diesel: $3,460 each
Ford F-250 Super Duty: $2,800 each
Toyota Prius (2004–2009): $1,000+ average each
Toyota Prius (2010+): $500–$900 average each
Why Prius converters command premiums: Hybrid systems require catalytic converters with elevated precious metal concentrations for lower-temperature exhaust streams. Older Prius models (2004–2009) saw catalytic converter theft increase 40-fold in 2020 due to scrap values exceeding $1,000.
Track current converter pricing through ScrapMonster Catalytic Converter Prices.
2. Engines: $300–$2,500
Engine values depend heavily on running condition, mileage, and buyer type:
| Condition | Price Range | Best Buyers | ISRI Code |
|---|---|---|---|
| Complete Running | $800–$2,500 | Engine remanufacturers, performance shops | 260 |
| Rebuildable Core | $300–$800 | Core brokers, rebuilding facilities | 260 |
| Scrap Value | $100–$200 | Metal recyclers | 211 |
Premium engine types include:
Diesel powerplants (Cummins, Duramax, Powerstroke)
Performance engines (LS, 5.0L Coyote, small-block variants)
Low-mileage imports (Honda K-series, Nissan RB)
Environmental benefit: Reusing engines dramatically reduces environmental impact compared to manufacturing new units—a single engine reuse prevents 1,760 kg of CO2 emissions.
3. Transmissions: $250–$2,000
Transmission values vary significantly by type, functionality, and vehicle platform:
| Type | Working Condition | Core Value | Best Markets |
|---|---|---|---|
| Automatic | $500–$2,000 | $150–$400 | Luxury, truck, SUV applications |
| Manual | $250–$800 | $100–$250 | Performance, import vehicles |
| AWD/4WD Systems | Premium pricing | Higher core values | SUVs, trucks, luxury sedans |
Diesel transmission cores and truck transmissions command particularly strong demand in the remanufactured parts market.
4. ECU/Engine Control Modules: $100–$800
Modern vehicles contain sophisticated engine control units with significant salvage value:
Gasoline ECMs: $200–$1,500 depending on vehicle and condition
Diesel ECMs: $300–$2,500 (command premium due to scarcity)
Average used ECU market price: Approximately €1,265 (~$1,300+)
Value drivers:
Vehicle-specific programming requirements (non-interchangeable)
Newer vehicles (2010+) command stronger premiums
Luxury brands (BMW, Mercedes, Audi) hold value longer
Functionality verification critical—testing before sale increases price 30–50%
5. Infotainment Systems: $100–$600
OEM navigation and premium audio systems represent growing salvage demand as owners seek affordable vehicle upgrades:
OEM Navigation Units: $200–$600
Premium Audio Systems (Bose, Harman Kardon, Bang & Olufsen): $150–$400
Touchscreen/Multimedia Systems: $100–$300
Apple CarPlay/Android Auto Compatible Units: Strong current demand
Tier 2: High Value ($50–$300 per Part)
6. Alternators: $15–$45 Scrap; $75–$200 Working
Alternators contain valuable copper windings that drive their base scrap value of $0.28–$0.46 per pound. Working units command $75–$200 in the remanufactured parts market, making functionality verification worthwhile before scrapping.
ISRI Code considerations: Alternators may be classified as ISRI Code 260 (unstripped motor blocks) depending on size and mounting configuration.
7. Starters: $35–$150
Starters contain copper bearings and windings similar to alternators. Scrap pricing runs $0.30–$0.40 per pound, but working units fetch $60–$150. Diesel engine starters are significantly larger and more valuable than gasoline equivalents due to greater electrical demand.
8. A/C Compressors: $50–$250
Working A/C compressors command $100–$250, with core values of $40–$80. Proper EPA-compliant refrigerant recovery is legally required before component removal in all U.S. jurisdictions.
9. Turbochargers/Superchargers: $100–$500
The automotive turbocharger market reached $20 billion in 2025 and is projected to hit $50 billion by 2035. This demand translates to strong salvage and remanufactured component values:
Performance vehicle turbos: Command premium pricing (Porsche, BMW, Mercedes models)
Diesel turbos: Consistent, strong demand (Cummins, Duramax, Powerstroke)
Bearing integrity critical: Determines whether unit is salvageable or scrap-only
10. Power Steering Pumps/Racks: $50–$200
Electric power steering systems from newer vehicles (2010+) command $100–$200. Traditional hydraulic pumps and pressure hoses bring $50–$100. Electric systems retain value longer due to growing adoption in modern vehicles.
11. Body Panels (Aluminum): $50–$300
Modern vehicles increasingly use aluminum body panels for weight reduction and fuel efficiency. Ford's F-150 aluminum body program recycles approximately 20 million pounds of aluminum monthly—enough to manufacture 30,000 complete truck bodies.
Aluminum body panel values:
| Component | Price Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Aluminum Hoods | $100–$300 | Lightweight, high aluminum content |
| Aluminum Doors | $75–$200 | Growing market demand |
| Aluminum Fenders | $50–$150 | 2010+ vehicles primarily |
12. Batteries: $10–$25 Scrap; $100–$300+ Working
Lead-acid batteries scrap for $0.22–$0.73 per pound depending on region and market conditions. Working AGM/Optima batteries bring $100–$200 in the used parts market.
Hybrid/EV battery market expansion: The EV battery recycling sector grew from $2.98 billion in 2024 to a projected $10.09 billion by 2029. Hybrid batteries from vehicles like the Prius contain recoverable lithium, cobalt, and nickel, with specialized recyclers offering buyback programs ranging from $50–$500+ depending on battery size and condition.
Find battery recyclers and buyers through the ScrapMonster Battery Buyer Directory.
Tier 3: Moderate Value ($25–$100 per Part)
13. Wheels & Tires: $25–$200 per Set
Alloy wheels scrap for $0.55–$1.00 per pound depending on aluminum purity. Clean, functional tires increase set value 2–3x versus bald tires.
| Wheel Type | Price Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Alloy Wheels | $50–$200/set | Aluminum content determines value |
| Steel Wheels | $25–$50/set | Lower value, heavier than alloy |
| Performance/Specialty Wheels | $100–$300/set | Premium brands command premiums |
14. Seats: $50–$150 Each
Seat values depend heavily on material and functionality:
Leather seats: $100–$300 per unit (heating/massage functions increase value 30%)
Heated/power seats: $75–$200 each
Cloth seats: $25–$75 each
Matching sets increase total value 40–60% versus individual seat sales
15. Bumpers: $25–$100
Bumper condition and appearance drive pricing:
Color-matched, undamaged bumpers: $75–$150
Chrome bumpers (older vehicles): $50–$100
Plastic bumpers (modern vehicles): $25–$50
16. Lights: $25–$150 Each
Lighting assemblies hold consistent resale value:
LED/HID Headlight Assemblies: $100–$300
Standard Headlights: $40–$80
Tail Light Assemblies: $25–$75
Fog Lights: $20–$60
17. Suspension Components: $20–$100
Individual suspension parts maintain moderate resale value, particularly for popular vehicle models:
Struts/Shocks: $25–$60 each
Control Arms: $30–$80 each
Sway Bars: $20–$50 each
Complete suspension assemblies: $75–$200
18. Exhaust Systems: $30–$100
Exhaust system values correlate directly to material composition:
Stainless steel exhausts: $50–$150
Performance exhaust systems: $75–$200
Standard mild steel systems: $20–$50
Tier 4: Volume Play ($5–$50 per Part)
19. Electrical Components: $5–$40 Each
Individual switches, sensors, relays, and electrical components:
Window Regulators: $20–$60 per unit
Wiper Motors: $15–$40 each
Seat Motors: $20–$50 each
Door locks/actuators: $15–$35 each
20. Interior Trim: $10–$50
Interior plastic and trim components offer modest returns when condition permits:
Dashboard Pieces: $25–$75
Door Panels: $30–$80 each
Center Consoles: $25–$60
21. Mirrors: $15–$60
Mirror values depend on motorization and heating functions:
Power/Heated Mirrors: $40–$80 per side
Manual Mirrors: $15–$30 per side
22. Glass: $25–$150
Safety glass components command consistent resale demand:
Windshields: $50–$150
Door Glass: $25–$75
Rear Glass/Hatch Glass: $30–$100
Scrap Metal Value from Stripped Vehicles
After strategic parts removal, the remaining vehicle body contains significant scrap metal value. November 2025 metal pricing shows:
Metal Content and Value Per Average Vehicle
| Metal Type | Typical Weight | Current Price | Total Value | ISRI Code |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Steel/Iron | 2,000–2,400 lbs | $140–$180/ton | $140–$216 | 211 |
| Aluminum | 200–400 lbs | $0.48–$0.60/lb | $96–$240 | Tally, Talk |
| Copper | 50–100 lbs | $3.60–$4.30/lb | $180–$430 | Barley, Candy |
Total stripped vehicle scrap value: $400–$886 per average vehicle
Comparative Analysis: Parts-Out vs. Whole Vehicle Sale
Complete junk car payout (average): $512 nationally
Typical range for complete vehicles: $300–$750
Price per ton for complete cars: $165–$200
Strategic parts-out approach: 2–3x higher returns versus whole-car sales
Vehicle type premium pricing:
Ford F-Series trucks: $600–$825 average
Ram pickup trucks: $675–$858 average
Toyota vehicles: $784.51 average (highest brand value)
SUVs generally: $350–$1,500+ depending on size/condition
Monitor current market prices through ScrapMonster Steel Prices, Aluminum Prices, and Copper Prices.
Pricing Factors and Market Dynamics
What Makes Auto Parts Valuable?
1. Demand vs. Supply
Popular vehicle models generate consistent parts demand. Industry leaders include:
Honda Civic and Accord (14+ million sold globally)
Toyota Camry and Corolla (highest junk car value at $784.51 average)
Ford F-150 (America's best-selling vehicle for 40+ consecutive years)
Chevrolet Silverado (full-size truck demand remains strong)
Rare or discontinued parts command premium pricing when supply dwindles. Platform-sharing vehicles (same basic chassis across multiple models/years) increase part compatibility and demand.
2. Condition Grading Standards
| Grade | Description | Price Impact | Best Markets |
|---|---|---|---|
| A-Grade | Like-new, <10k miles on part | Premium pricing (20–40% above market) | OEM dealers, premium used parts |
| B-Grade | Good condition, moderate wear | Standard market rates | General used parts market |
| C-Grade | Functional but visibly worn | Discounted 15–30% | Economy/budget buyers |
| Core/Scrap | Non-functional, material value only | Scrap metal rates | Recyclers only |
3. Vehicle Age Sweet Spot
5–15 years old: Optimal salvage window—old enough that owners seek affordable parts, yet new enough that components remain compatible with vehicles still in production
Under 5 years: Warranty concerns and high replacement costs limit used parts market demand
Over 20 years: Enters collectors/restoration niche with specialized demand
4. Make/Model Popularity
Top sellers for aftermarket parts demand:
Luxury brands (Mercedes, BMW, Audi, Lexus): Command 30–50% premiums on components
Performance vehicles (Corvette, Mustang, Charger): Specialized demand for powertrains and suspension
Japanese imports (Honda, Nissan, Subaru): Strong demand, reliable parts value holds
Toyota leads average junk car values at $784.51 per vehicle, followed by Kia ($718.56) and Hyundai ($706.49).
5. Part Interchangeability
Components fitting multiple model years or platform-sharing vehicles maintain significantly higher value due to broader buyer pools. Single-year-only parts command lower premiums.
6. OEM vs. Aftermarket Availability
No/expensive aftermarket alternatives: Used OEM parts maintain strong premiums (30–50% above general market)
Cheap aftermarket available: Used OEM part demand declines significantly
Electronic/specialized components: Limited aftermarket availability maintains strong used part value
Where to Source Auto Parts for Recycling
Auto salvage yards remain the primary source for professional recyclers. Access the comprehensive ScrapMonster Scrap Yard Directory to locate facilities across North America with specific capabilities.
Dealership parts returns provide access to warranty-replaced components, often in excellent condition despite factory removal.
Tire and auto repair shops generate steady streams of commonly replaced components: alternators, starters, batteries, pumps, and suspension elements.
Insurance salvage auctions provide access to damaged vehicles with intact valuable components—often at lower acquisition costs than whole-vehicle purchases.
Fleet vehicle disposals offer bulk component sourcing opportunities for standardized vehicle types.
Preparation for Maximum Value
Proper preparation dramatically impacts your returns on auto parts sales.
Preparation Checklist
Dismantle carefully to preserve copper windings in alternators/starters and aluminum fins on radiators. Damaged components lose 30–50% of value rapidly.
Clean parts thoroughly by removing:
Antifreeze residue from radiators and cooling system components
Oil contamination from engine and transmission parts
Plastic attachments and mounting hardware
Corrosion and oxidation where possible
Presentation matters—clean parts suggest better original condition and command 15–25% price premiums.
Batch similar materials to maximize negotiating leverage. Sorted, consistent loads yield 10–20% better per-pound pricing than mixed materials.
Document everything:
Vehicle make, model, year of origin
Part condition with photographic evidence
Testing results for functional components (working/non-working)
Any relevant part numbers or identification marks
Documentation helps buyers offer accurate quotes and justifies premium pricing.
Remove personal items and sensitive documents before dismantling begins—retrieving forgotten items becomes impossible once the vehicle leaves your possession.
Fluid Drainage and EPA Compliance
Oil and fluid disposal is legally required before component removal:
Drain all engine oil into proper waste oil containers
Recover refrigerant from A/C systems (EPA requirement in USA/Canada)
Drain transmission fluid, power steering fluid, and coolant
Dispose of fluids at licensed waste collection facilities
Safety and Handling Guidelines
Auto parts recycling involves hazardous materials requiring proper personal protective equipment and procedures:
Hand and arm protection:
Cut-resistant gloves protect hands when handling sharp radiator fins and sheet metal edges
Long sleeves recommended when working with metal shavings and fluids
Eye and respiratory protection:
Safety glasses required when removing catalytic converters and working with fasteners
Dust mask recommended when grinding or cutting metal components
Hazardous material handling:
EPA-compliant refrigerant recovery equipment required before A/C system work
Battery acid precautions including eye wash stations and neutralizing materials nearby
Proper disposal containers for used oil, coolant, and transmission fluid
Catalytic converter removal requires compliance with legal requirements in your jurisdiction—theft of converters increased 300% nationally 2019–2021, prompting new regulations.
Find Local Buyers and Maximize Returns
Connecting with qualified buyers ensures you receive fair pricing:
Post parts online through the ScrapMonster Marketplace to reach regional and national buyers.
Compare buyer offers using the ScrapMonster Company Directory with specialized filters for different component types.
Identify bulk buyers to secure volume discounts on large component quantities. Use the "Bulk Buyer" filter to identify volume purchasers for 50+ parts.
Check regional pricing variations—what's common supply in one region may represent scarce demand in another, creating arbitrage opportunities.
Build buyer relationships for consistent, repeat component supply—many recyclers prefer long-term supplier relationships and offer better pricing for reliable volume.
Market Outlook and Emerging Trends
EV Component Recycling Growth
The EV battery recycling market is expanding at 27–28% CAGR, projected to reach $10.09 billion by 2029. New EU regulations mandate:
90% recovery rates for cobalt, copper, and nickel
35% recovery rates for lithium
These requirements will shape global industry standards through 2025 and beyond
Key EV components gaining recycling value:
Electric motors containing rare earth magnets and copper windings
Inverters containing high-value copper and electronics
Battery packs with lithium, cobalt, nickel, and manganese
Aluminum structural components (frames, body panels)
High-voltage electrical components with copper content
Lightweight Materials Premium
Modern vehicles increasingly incorporate aluminum and high-strength steel for fuel efficiency compliance:
Increased aluminum content per vehicle (200–400 lbs, growing annually)
Higher-grade steel alloys in structural components
Growing demand for proper material separation and sorting
Premium pricing for clean, sorted aluminum versus mixed scrap
Ford F-150 program scale: Recycling 20 million pounds of aluminum monthly while achieving 95% greenhouse gas emission reduction compared to virgin aluminum production.
Digital Marketplace Integration
Professional recyclers increasingly leverage online platforms and data-driven pricing:
Real-time pricing information previously unavailable a decade ago
Online marketplace access to regional and national buyers
Inventory management systems tracking component values
Performance analytics identifying highest-return components
Platforms like ScrapMonster provide market intelligence that empowers recyclers to optimize component-sourcing strategies.
People Also Ask (PAA)
Which auto parts are worth the most money when recycling?
Catalytic converters are the highest-value auto parts, ranging from $50 to $1,140+ each due to their precious metal content (platinum, palladium, rhodium). Other top-paying components include working engines ($300-$2,500), transmissions ($250-$2,000), ECU modules ($100-$800), and aluminum radiators ($0.25-$0.61/lb). Hybrid vehicle batteries and electric motor components are emerging as high-value items as EV recycling markets expand.
How do I prepare auto parts for maximum scrap value?
Clean parts thoroughly by removing fluids, dirt, and contaminants. Drain all oil, coolant, and refrigerant (EPA compliance required). Separate non-ferrous metals from ferrous for better pricing. Batch similar materials together for negotiating leverage. Document part condition with photos and vehicle information. Clean parts command 15-25% higher prices than dirty components.
What determines catalytic converter scrap value?
Catalytic converter value depends on precious metal content—platinum, palladium, and rhodium concentrations vary by vehicle type. Torpedo-style converters from trucks and large SUVs typically command the highest prices ($110-$1,140+). Vehicle make, model year, and OEM vs. aftermarket origin significantly impact pricing. Current precious metal spot prices directly affect scrap values.
Should I sell auto parts individually or scrap the whole car?
Strategic parts-out typically yields 2-3x higher returns than selling a complete junk car. Complete vehicle sales average $300-$750 nationally, while parting out can generate $800-$2,000+ from high-value components alone. The parts-out approach works best for vehicles 5-15 years old with popular models. Consider your time investment and storage capacity when deciding.
Where can I find buyers for auto parts and scrap?
Additional Resources
For comprehensive scrap metal pricing, buyer connections, and market updates across North America, explore ScrapMonster.com—your leading platform for automotive scrap metal professionals since 2009.
Real-time pricing: Scrap Price Index
Buyer locator: Scrap Yard Directory
Sell components: ScrapMonster Marketplace
Material standards: ISRI Scrap Specifications
Industry news: ScrapMonster News & Reports
Report compiled: November 26, 2025