Sell to Us · Corona
Estate buyers for Corona, racing history included.
Corona’s circle was once a racetrack: the Grand Boulevard road races put this citrus town in motoring history before the orchards gave way to neighborhoods. The households that remain from those eras hold both legacies: lemon economy paper and equipment, and the automotive keeping of a town that never stopped loving engines.
Free visit · cash offers · no obligation
We drive inland for Corona estates regularly: ranch properties with their outbuildings, the old grid’s craftsman homes, and the garages where the Circle City’s mechanical heritage still sits on jack stands. One walkthrough, every structure, one documented cash offer.
What Circle City households hold
Citrus era pieces
Lemon house labels, equipment, and the paper of the Queen Colony’s groves.
Automotive history
Early racing ephemera, garage signage, tools, and the parts stashes of engine families.
Ranch household contents
Furniture, western gear, and the deep keeping of properties with acreage.
Workwear and denim
The field and shop clothes of a town that worked, aged to collector grade.
Full clear-outs
House, barn, and shop in one pass, broom-ready on your timeline.
Garage towns reward garage buyers
Corona garages are working garages: three generations of tools, the signage of closed shops, and parts hoards organized by memory. We price them seriously, brand by brand, and we know when a bench drawer holds more value than the living room. From the Circle’s historic blocks to the ranch edges toward Temescal Canyon, the visit is free and the truck comes with us.
A Recent Find
A 1940s Levi’s Type 1 jacket, sold to us by a former dealer who knew exactly what he had. We paid $12,000 in cash, the same day.
How it works
Call us.
A real conversation about what you have, no forms, no waiting.
We come to you.
We look at everything, at your pace. We know what we're seeing.
Cash offer, same visit.
A fair price on the spot, or a full estate sale run for you.
Common questions
Do you buy automotive parts hoards and shop equipment?
The vintage end, yes: early speed parts, brand signage, quality tools, and literature. Late-model commodity parts, honestly, no, and we sort the difference on sight.
Our property has multiple outbuildings. Does that change the process?
Only the schedule: every structure gets walked, and larger properties simply earn a longer visit or a second one. The offer still arrives as one documented number.
How does Corona fit your inland routes?
It anchors them: Corona pairs with Riverside and Norco weekly, so even small collections schedule fast.