Find the car.
Learn the fix.
GarageAtlas is where project car hunters find their next build and get model-specific repair guidance from a mechanic who's been turning wrenches for 35 years. Search listings. Read the guide. Order the parts.
You buy a '68 Camaro on Bring a Trailer. Then you're on your own. Googling wiring diagrams at midnight, scrolling dead forum threads, guessing which parts fit. The marketplace sells you the car. Nobody helps you fix it.
Find Project Cars
Search classic and vintage vehicles by make, model, year, condition, and price. Filter for project-ready builds that match your skill level and budget.
Expert Repair Guides
Model-specific walkthroughs written by a mechanic, not a blogger. Wiring diagrams, common failure points, the tricks that save you a weekend in the garage.
Parts, Linked
Every repair guide links directly to the parts you need. No more cross-referencing part numbers across three websites. Click, buy, install.
Built by a mechanic who'd rather show you the fix than charge you for it
Most car sites are built by tech companies. GarageAtlas is built by someone who's actually replaced a distributor in a parking lot at 2am.
The guides aren't generic. They're written from decades of hands-on experience with specific makes and models. The kind of knowledge that lives in a mechanic's head and usually dies when they retire.
Now it's a searchable library that grows every week.
Three moves from "I want a project car" to turning the key
Search
Browse project car listings filtered by make, model, year, price, and condition. Find the build that fits your garage and your wallet.
Learn
Read model-specific repair guides before you buy. Know what you're getting into. Understand the common issues, the parts you'll need, and the real cost of the build.
Build
Follow step-by-step repair walkthroughs with direct parts links. Every guide is written to save you time, money, and the frustration of guessing.
Every project car deserves a mechanic in your corner
GarageAtlas is being built in Phoenix, Arizona. The place where rust goes to die and project cars go to live.