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Free Gas Near Me Gas and transportation assistance resources
Local charitable transportation help

Churches and Nonprofits That May Help With Gas

Use verified national locators and a practical contact process to find local faith-based organizations, charities, Community Action Agencies, and referral services that may address an essential transportation need.

Need a local referral for an essential trip?

Call 211 or search your local 211 online. A specialist can identify resources that may be available in your area, but 211 is a referral service and does not guarantee a gas voucher. Call 911 for a life-threatening emergency.

Local and funding-dependent

How church and nonprofit transportation help may work

Local organizations often respond to immediate community needs, but services are not standardized across a national network. The same organization may offer different assistance in different cities, counties, or seasons.

Limited fuel card or voucher

A provider may offer a small, one-time fuel card or station-specific voucher for an approved essential trip when funding is available.

Transit pass or fare help

Where public transit is practical, an organization may offer a bus pass, rail fare, reduced-fare referral, or another transit-based solution.

Arranged ride or referral

The provider may connect the applicant with a volunteer driver, medical ride, community shuttle, workforce program, or another specialized service.

Case-managed assistance

Transportation may be considered as one part of a broader plan involving employment, housing, health care, treatment, shelter, or family stability.

A national name is not proof of a local gas program

The old page listed charities, food banks, and statewide networks as confirmed gas-voucher providers without evidence. Those claims have been removed. Use an official locator, then ask the local office exactly which services are currently offered.

Verified starting points

Find local churches and nonprofit organizations

These official locators can help you identify nearby offices. A locator result confirms that an organization exists—not that it currently offers gas vouchers.

Referral network

211

Use 211 when you need the broadest local search for transportation, financial assistance, health care, housing, food, and other basic needs.

Ask for
Transportation assistance, gas-voucher programs, transit passes, medical rides, or emergency financial help.
Remember
211 makes referrals and does not guarantee funding or provide every service directly.
Search your local 211
Faith-based network

Catholic Charities

Catholic Charities USA provides an agency locator for its local network. Services are delivered by local agencies and vary by community.

Ask for
Emergency assistance, transportation referrals, case management, employment support, or another locally listed service.
Remember
The national office does not establish one identical gas-voucher program for every agency.
Find a Catholic Charities agency
Faith-based network

The Salvation Army

Use the official location finder to search nearby Salvation Army offices and the service categories listed for each location.

Ask for
Current emergency assistance, transportation help, family services, shelter case management, or a local referral.
Remember
Service categories, eligibility, appointment schedules, and funding differ by location.
Search Salvation Army locations
Parish-based assistance

Society of St. Vincent de Paul

The national council does not provide direct household assistance. Its guidance directs people to contact a community Catholic church and ask whether it has a local St. Vincent de Paul Conference.

Ask for
The local Conference or Council that accepts assistance requests for your address.
Remember
Local Conferences decide what help they can provide and which area they serve.
Read official help instructions
Community services

Community Action Agencies

A Community Action Agency may provide direct assistance, manage another program, or connect a household with transportation, employment, housing, and basic-needs resources.

Ask for
Emergency transportation, supportive services, workforce referrals, vehicle-related assistance, or partner programs.
Remember
Programs are locally designed and not every agency offers the same service.
Find a Community Action Agency
Local congregations

Church offices and ministerial alliances

Independent congregations, church benevolence funds, interfaith coalitions, and local ministerial alliances may handle emergency requests that are not shown in a national database.

Ask for
The benevolence, outreach, community-care, social-ministry, or emergency-assistance contact.
Remember
Call before visiting. Some programs serve only specific ZIP codes, congregational areas, or referred households.
Prepare a focused request
Contact efficiently

How to ask a church or nonprofit for transportation help

A clear, specific request helps the organization determine whether it has an appropriate service or referral. Avoid sending sensitive documents until the provider and its official process are verified.

  1. Define the trip

    Know the destination, date, arrival time, distance, and why the trip is essential.

  2. Confirm the service area

    Ask whether the office serves your ZIP code, city, county, parish, congregation, or referral network.

  3. Ask what is available

    Use broad terms such as transportation assistance, transit help, arranged rides, or emergency aid—not only “free gas.”

  4. Verify the process

    Confirm intake days, appointments, referrals, required documents, and whether help must be approved before the trip.

  5. Keep a contact record

    Note the organization, date, staff member, documents requested, and any follow-up or alternative referral.

A concise way to explain the request

“I live in [ZIP code] and need transportation to [work, an interview, treatment, or another essential appointment] on [date and time]. I have checked [available alternatives]. Does your organization currently offer a gas voucher, transit pass, ride, or referral for this type of need?”

Prepare before applying

Information a local organization may request

Requirements differ. Prepare likely information, but provide only what the verified organization requests through its official intake process.

Identity and address

  • Photo identification or another accepted identity document
  • Proof of address or residence in the service area
  • Reliable telephone number or other contact method
  • Household information when relevant to eligibility

Proof of the essential trip

  • Medical appointment or treatment schedule
  • Interview invitation, work schedule, or job offer
  • Training, benefits, school, court, or case-management appointment
  • Destination, distance, date, and required arrival time

Financial and transportation details

  • Income or benefit information if the program uses a financial test
  • Driver’s license, registration, or insurance when relevant
  • Referral from a caseworker, shelter, clinic, school, employer, or workforce program
  • A short explanation of why other transportation is unavailable
Religious affiliation

Do you need to belong to a church?

Do not assume that membership or worship attendance is required. Catholic Charities USA describes its network as serving people regardless of faith, The Salvation Army states that it meets human needs without discrimination, and the Society of St. Vincent de Paul says it makes no distinction in those it serves.

Local programs can still have service-area, income, referral, documentation, or trip-purpose rules. Ask about eligibility directly rather than relying on a general statement about the national organization.

Provider verification

Confirm that you reached the real organization

  • Start from an official locator or the organization’s published website.
  • Confirm the office address and telephone number independently.
  • Ask whether assistance requests are handled by that office or another local partner.
  • Do not send identification or financial records through an unverified social-media account.
Use the right transportation system

Ask about alternatives when a gas voucher is unavailable

A church or nonprofit may have no fuel-card budget but still know of another way to complete the trip.

Medical care

Medicaid transportation

Eligible Medicaid members may have access to non-emergency medical transportation for covered appointments when they lack another reasonable transportation option.

Review official CMS guidance
Older adults

Aging-service transportation

The Eldercare Locator connects older adults and caregivers with community services that may include transportation information, volunteer drivers, or local mobility resources.

Use the Eldercare Locator
Employment and family support

TANF and workforce services

A TANF caseworker, American Job Center, training provider, or employer may know about transportation support connected with work, job search, or approved training.

Review TANF state pathways
Public transit

Passes and reduced fares

Contact the local transit agency about reduced fares, paratransit, travel training, community shuttles, or demand-response transportation.

Find local government services
Broader search

Local gas-assistance guide

Use the site’s broader guide for 211, Community Action, medical transportation, workforce support, older-adult services, and other local pathways.

Find gas assistance near you
Household energy

LIHEAP is not vehicle-fuel help

LIHEAP concerns residential heating and cooling costs. Use it for home-energy assistance, not as a vehicle-gas or transportation-voucher program.

Review LIHEAP correctly
Scam protection

Never pay to receive a supposed free voucher

  • Do not pay an application or activation fee for emergency gas assistance.
  • Do not buy a gift card and send its number or PIN to “verify” your eligibility.
  • Do not trust a social-media comment that promises guaranteed approval.
  • Verify the provider through an official locator before sharing documents.
  • Ask whether the voucher is issued directly by the local organization and where it can be used.

Read FTC gift-card scam guidance

Editorial standard

Why individual state organization lists were removed

The old page named charities, food banks, statewide networks, and local branches as gas-voucher providers without linking to current service pages. Organization names, boundaries, and programs can change, and a food bank or statewide office should not be labeled a transportation provider without evidence.

This version uses official national locators and cautious local-contact instructions. A future directory should include only individually verified offices, source URLs, service areas, visible review dates, and a recurring update process.

Common questions

Church and nonprofit gas-assistance FAQ

Do churches give out free gas cards?

Some local churches or charitable programs may offer a limited fuel card or voucher when funding is available. There is no universal church program, and the organization may provide a transit pass, ride, referral, or another form of help instead.

Which church is most likely to help with gas?

No denomination or national network can be identified as the most likely provider everywhere. Start with 211, Catholic Charities, The Salvation Army, a local St. Vincent de Paul Conference, Community Action, and nearby church benevolence or outreach offices.

Does 211 provide gas vouchers directly?

211 is primarily an information and referral service. A local specialist may identify organizations that address transportation needs, but 211 does not guarantee funding and may not issue the voucher itself.

Do I need to be a member of the church?

Do not assume membership is required. Several large faith-based networks state that they serve people without regard to faith or discrimination. Local service-area, financial, referral, documentation, and trip-purpose rules can still apply.

What trips are most likely to be considered essential?

Local providers may prioritize work, interviews, medical care, treatment, benefits appointments, school, shelter transitions, or another documented need. Priorities are set locally and do not guarantee approval.

How much gas assistance can I receive?

There is no reliable national amount. A local organization may provide a small one-time benefit, restrict the gas station or trip, use a direct payment, or have no fuel funding available.

How quickly will a church respond?

Response times vary with office hours, volunteer availability, intake schedules, documentation, and current funding. Call before visiting and ask whether the request can be reviewed before the trip deadline.

Can a nonprofit help if I do not own a car?

Possibly. Ask about a bus pass, arranged ride, community shuttle, medical transportation, paratransit, volunteer driver, or referral. A gas voucher is not useful for every transportation barrier.

Can I contact the national St. Vincent de Paul office for money?

The national council states that it does not provide direct assistance. Its guidance is to contact a community Catholic church and ask whether it has a local Society of St. Vincent de Paul Conference.

Does FreeGasNearMe.com distribute nonprofit gas vouchers?

No. FreeGasNearMe.com is an independent informational website. It does not issue vouchers, accept applications, determine eligibility, or control local organization funding.

Start with a verified local organization

Use an official locator, call before visiting, describe the essential trip clearly, and confirm current funding and documentation requirements. FreeGasNearMe.com does not distribute gas vouchers or represent the organizations listed on this page.