Curbside Pickup Food Pantries
Curbside pickup pantries let you stay in your car: pull up, pop your trunk or roll down a window, volunteers load a pre-packed box directly in, and you drive off.
Stay in the car
Pop trunk, volunteers load
1,110+ curbside sites
Model scaled up during COVID
Faster for everyone
Higher throughput, less wait
Pre-register common
Call or use online form
How it works
- Check whether the pantry requires pre-registration or is drive-up.
- If pre-register: call or submit the online form to reserve a slot.
- Arrive within the posted pickup window — not earlier, not later.
- Stay in your car; volunteers load the box in your trunk or back seat.
Find pantries offering curbside pickup food pantries near you
Enter a ZIP or city to see the nearest verified pantries offering curbside pickup food pantries, or tap a chip below to narrow this list.
No pantries match the current filters · filtered: free, no-ID, open now.
No pantries match the active quick filters. Clear them to see the full list.
Clear filters →Common Questions
Do I need to get out of the car for curbside pickup?
No. The entire model is designed so you stay in the vehicle. Pop the trunk from inside (or pull the release); volunteers place the box inside and signal when done. If you're paying with SNAP, confirming paperwork, or completing first-time intake, you may need to roll down a window briefly — but you stay seated.
Is curbside pickup faster than walking into a pantry?
Usually, yes. Curbside lines move 3–5x faster than indoor client-choice queues because the boxes are pre-packed and volunteers load multiple cars in parallel. Average curbside visit time is 5–10 minutes; average indoor visit is 20–40 minutes.
Can I choose what goes in my curbside box?
Rarely — the speed of curbside depends on standardized pre-pack. Some sites let you indicate dietary restrictions at registration, and volunteers pull a "modified" box (gluten-free, no pork, vegetarian). Few allow granular item choice. If you want full client-choice, go indoors.
What if I don't have a car?
Most curbside sites also accept walk-up or bike-up pickups — ask at registration. Some pair curbside with a separate indoor distribution window. If you have no transportation and limited mobility, consider a home-delivery pantry instead.