CarKeyNation
Editorial photograph of a tree-lined suburban Mercer County New Jersey neighborhood street in Hamilton Township at golden hour with colonial-style single-family homes.
Hamilton, NJ · pop. 92K

Lost Car Keys in Hamilton Township? Get a Licensed NJ Specialist

From Hamilton Square and Mercerville to White Horse, Yardville, the Hamilton NJ Transit station, and out toward Robbinsville, CarKeyNation matches Hamilton drivers to NJ-licensed mobile automotive key specialists who carry the right tools for your make.

Car key emergencies in Hamilton Township

Hamilton Township (Mercer County — distinct from Hamilton Township in Atlantic County and Hamilton Township in Mercer's own Robbinsville-adjacent geography) is one of the largest townships in central New Jersey by population, with a 2020 Census population of 92,297 across roughly 39.6 square miles per the U.S. Census Bureau ACS. The footprint wraps around the eastern, southern, and southwestern edges of Trenton, anchored by the Hamilton Square commercial center, the Hamilton NJ Transit Northeast Corridor rail station, and the Quaker Bridge / Mercer Mall retail corridor on the Lawrenceville border. Hamilton is the classic central-Jersey commuter suburb: most working-age residents commute either west into Trenton state-government employment, north into the Princeton corporate corridor (Bristol-Myers Squibb, Bloomberg, Princeton Plasma Physics, Educational Testing Service), or via the Hamilton NJ Transit station east to NYC Penn Station and the broader Northeast Corridor.

Hamilton's anchor institutions shape the call mix in distinct ways. The Hamilton NJ Transit station's commuter parking decks generate a steady volume of fob-dead and lost-key calls during the 6-9pm evening return window — Hamilton's station is the last NEC stop before Trenton inbound and is one of the busiest parking stations in southern New Jersey. The Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital Hamilton and the broader RWJBarnabas Health network drive a healthcare-shift fleet. Mercerville's commercial corridor along Whitehorse-Mercerville Road and Klockner Road drives small-business and family-vehicle volume. And the Hamilton Marketplace / Quaker Bridge Mall / Mercer Mall retail belt on the Lawrenceville border creates predictable shopping-trip lost-key and locked-keys-in-trunk dispatch.

Per the NICB Hot Spots Report, New Jersey ranks in the upper tier nationally for vehicle theft. Hamilton's per-capita exposure is moderate by NJ standards — meaningfully lower than Newark, Elizabeth, or Paterson, but higher than the Princeton-area suburbs immediately to the north. The Hyundai/Kia 2011-2021 vulnerability hit Hamilton's older neighborhoods (parts of White Horse, Yardville, and the Hamilton-Trenton border) and continues to generate steady post-recovery rekey volume.

The most common Hamilton scenarios we route are: Hamilton NJ Transit station commuter-deck dead-fob calls at 7-9pm; family-SUV smart-key spare cuts in the Hamilton Square / Mercerville residential pockets (Honda Pilot, Toyota Highlander, Honda CR-V, Toyota RAV4); BMW / Mercedes / Audi smart-key work in the Yardville / White Horse / Hamilton-Robbinsville border luxury pockets; Hyundai/Kia 2011-2021 post-theft immobilizer rekey work; Ford F-150 / Ram 1500 PATS / SKIM programming on the contractor truck fleet; and Quaker Bridge Mall lot lost-keys dispatch during weekend retail peaks.

Hamilton Township neighborhoods we cover

Hamilton's named neighborhoods include Hamilton Square (the township's central commercial anchor), Mercerville (the northern commercial corridor), White Horse (the southwest residential / commercial corridor), Yardville (the southern residential section), Groveville and Hamilton-Robbinsville border, plus the Trenton-adjacent neighborhoods along Klockner Road and South Broad Street. CarKeyNation NJ-licensed partners cover the full ZIP range 08609-08691 within Hamilton Township limits, plus adjacent Mercer County (Trenton, Lawrenceville, Princeton, West Windsor, East Windsor, Robbinsville) and the Burlington County edge (Bordentown, Mansfield).

  • Hamilton Square / Klockner Road commercial (08690)
  • Mercerville / Nottingham Way / Whitehorse-Mercerville Road (08619)
  • White Horse / White Horse Avenue / South Broad (08610)
  • Yardville / South Broad Street / Yardville Allentown Road (08620)
  • Groveville / Groveville Allentown Road (08620)
  • Hamilton-Robbinsville border / Sharon Road (08691)
  • Hamilton NJ Transit station + commuter decks (08620)
  • Quaker Bridge Mall / Mercer Mall area (08648 Lawrenceville-adjacent, 08619)
  • Hamilton Marketplace / Sloan Avenue (08619)
  • Robert Wood Johnson Hamilton hospital area (08690)
  • Edgebrook / Greenwood (08610)
  • Steinert High School area / Klockner Road (08619)

Beyond Hamilton proper, the same network covers Trenton (the western neighbor), Lawrenceville, Princeton, West Windsor, East Windsor, Robbinsville, Bordentown, and Mansfield within 15-30 minutes of typical Hamilton partner positioning. Plainsboro and Cranbury are 25-40 minutes via Route 1 or Quakerbridge Road.

If your vehicle is at the Hamilton NJ Transit station commuter deck, please indicate the lot section and approximate row on the form so the partner brings the right access kit. If you're at Quaker Bridge Mall, indicate which anchor store you're nearest. If you're at Hamilton Marketplace or one of the Klockner Road / Sloan Avenue retail centers, note the store name. If your vehicle is at Robert Wood Johnson Hamilton in a visitor or employee deck, mention the deck name so the partner can coordinate with hospital security after-hours where needed.

What it costs in Hamilton Township

Hamilton automotive key pricing in 2026 reflects the Mercer County labor market — modestly below central-Jersey and northern-NJ metro pricing because of a less congested suburban service geography. The NJ state licensing overhead applies the same way per BLS OEWS metro data for SOC 49-9094.

Typical CarKeyNation specialist ranges in Hamilton (mobile, on-site, including programming):

  • Basic transponder spare (2005-2015 Civic/Camry/Altima/Corolla): $125-$215
  • Smart Key spare with working master present (2018+ Toyota/Honda/Mazda): $195-$345
  • Smart Key all-keys-lost (2018+ Toyota/Honda/Mazda): $275-$465
  • Honda Pilot / Toyota Highlander / Hyundai Palisade / Kia Telluride family-SUV smart-key: $225-$455
  • BMW comfort access all-keys-lost (3-Series/5-Series/X3/X5): $375-$745
  • Mercedes-Benz FBS3/FBS4: $315-$895
  • Audi A4/A6/Q5/Q7 advanced-key (KESSY): $365-$725
  • Ford F-150 / Super Duty PATS programming: $165-$365
  • GM Hitag2 / PASS-Lock relearn (Silverado/Sierra/Tahoe): $215-$405
  • Ram 1500 SKIM: $175-$415
  • Hyundai/Kia 2011-2021 immobilizer reset post-theft recovery: $225-$425
  • Tesla Model 3 / Y / S / X key-card pairing or phone-key setup: $115-$255
  • Ignition cylinder rekey or replacement: $155-$365
  • Dead-fob battery replacement + re-sync: $25-$70

Dealer pricing in Hamilton for the same jobs runs 40-130% higher per the OEMs' own owner portals, plus the tow if the car is not drivable. The nearest brand dealers (Hamilton Honda, Hamilton Mazda, Princeton BMW in nearby Princeton, Mercedes-Benz of Princeton) publish menu rates that show the gap. Per the FTC Consumer Alert on locksmith scams, any Hamilton Google ad pricing a smart-key job at $39 or $59 with no make-and-model qualifier is a near-certain bait-and-switch — particularly common on ads targeting the Hamilton NJ Transit commuter-deck ZIPs.

How to avoid Hamilton locksmith scams (verify the NJ license — 30 seconds)

Hamilton is moderately targeted by national locksmith call-center bait-and-switch advertising. The combination of a commuter-suburb income base (higher-than-average ability to pay an upcharge), the Hamilton NJ Transit commuter-deck volume, and the Quaker Bridge Mall / Mercer Mall retail belt makes Hamilton a consistent secondary target after the larger NJ metros. New Jersey's state licensing regime under N.J.S.A. 45:5A-18 et seq., administered by the Fire Alarm, Burglar Alarm and Locksmith Advisory Committee under the NJ Division of Consumer Affairs, protects every Hamilton consumer.

The single most protective consumer action in Hamilton is to verify the on-arrival technician's NJ license on the NJ FBL license verification portal before authorizing any work. The lookup is public, free, and takes 30 seconds from a phone. The NJ Office of the Attorney General — Division of Consumer Affairs enforces the NJ Consumer Fraud Act against unlicensed operators statewide.

What to verify in Hamilton in 30 seconds:

  • NJ FBL Advisory Committee locksmith license — business + technician — on the FBL verification portal. Mandatory.
  • ALOA membership — verify on aloa.org.
  • NASTF VSP credential — required for modern OEM-restricted programming.
  • Certificate of Insurance — request directly from the carrier.
  • BBB Serving New Jersey rating + accreditation status.
  • Hamilton Township business license — required for service trades operating in Hamilton.

Hamilton-specific red flags:

  • Hamilton NJ Transit station commuter-deck dispatch where the on-arrival technician knows the customer just stepped off a 12-hour commute and exploits the exhaustion to push a higher price.
  • Quaker Bridge Mall lot dispatch from a Google ad that triples the quoted price on arrival.
  • Robert Wood Johnson Hamilton employee-deck after-hours dispatch with a $300 'after-hours surcharge' that was never disclosed.
  • Refusal to produce an NJ FBL license number, or a number that does not match the company name on the FBL portal.
  • Drilling pushed on a Toyota or Honda ignition that is routinely pickable by any competent NJ-licensed locksmith.
  • Cash-only with no receipt and no NJ entity name on paperwork.

CarKeyNation-dispatched partners in Hamilton provide a written estimate before any work begins, the NJ FBL license number for both the company and the dispatched technician on the invoice, and a 90-day workmanship warranty on programming.

Most common vehicles we service in Hamilton

Hamilton's vehicle fleet is the central-Jersey commuter-suburb default: heavy Japanese commuter-sedan and family-SUV share (Honda, Toyota, Subaru), meaningful German luxury presence in the Yardville and Hamilton-Robbinsville border pockets (BMW, Mercedes, Audi), growing Tesla volume, steady Hyundai/Kia 2011-2021 post-theft footprint, and consistent Ford / Ram contractor-truck volume tied to the central-Jersey new-construction and home-renovation pipeline.

  • Honda Civic, Accord, CR-V, Pilot, Odyssey, Passport
  • Toyota Camry, Corolla, RAV4, Highlander, Sienna, Tacoma, Tundra, Prius, 4Runner
  • Subaru Outback, Forester, Crosstrek, Impreza
  • Hyundai Elantra, Sonata, Tucson, Santa Fe, Palisade (2011-2021 immobilizer reset considerations)
  • Kia Forte, Optima, Sorento, Telluride (same 2011-2021)
  • Ford F-150, F-250, Explorer, Edge, Escape, Bronco, Transit
  • Chevrolet Silverado, Tahoe, Suburban, Equinox, Traverse
  • Ram 1500, 2500, ProMaster
  • Jeep Wrangler, Grand Cherokee, Cherokee, Compass
  • BMW 3-Series, 5-Series, X3, X5
  • Mercedes-Benz C-Class, E-Class, GLC, GLE
  • Audi A4, A6, Q5, Q7
  • Lexus RX, NX, ES, GX
  • Tesla Model 3, Model Y, Model S
  • Volkswagen Jetta, Passat, Tiguan, Atlas, ID.4

If your vehicle is on this list, Hamilton CarKeyNation partners can almost certainly complete the work on-site. For Genesis, Polestar, Lucid, Rivian, Porsche, and Range Rover advanced-key work we confirm partner tooling before dispatch.

When we'll get to you in Hamilton

Hamilton drive-time reality is driven by three structural variables: I-295 / I-195 / Route 1 / Route 130 freeway congestion through the township's perimeter, Quakerbridge Road / Klockner Road / Whitehorse-Mercerville Road surface congestion through the central commercial corridors, and the Hamilton NJ Transit station arrival-cycle commuter surge. Per NJDOT traffic monitoring data, I-295 through Hamilton and the Route 1 / Quakerbridge / Route 130 corridors carry meaningful central-Jersey commuter traffic.

  • Hamilton Square / Klockner Road: 15-35 min
  • Mercerville / Whitehorse-Mercerville Road: 15-35 min
  • White Horse / South Broad: 20-40 min
  • Yardville / South Broad / Yardville Allentown Road: 20-40 min
  • Groveville / Hamilton-Robbinsville border: 20-40 min
  • Hamilton NJ Transit station / commuter decks: 15-35 min
  • Quaker Bridge Mall / Mercer Mall: 15-35 min
  • Hamilton Marketplace / Sloan Avenue: 15-35 min
  • Robert Wood Johnson Hamilton hospital: 15-35 min
  • Adjacent Trenton (west): 15-35 min
  • Lawrenceville / Princeton (north): 20-40 min
  • Robbinsville / East Windsor / West Windsor: 20-40 min
  • Bordentown / Mansfield (south, Burlington edge): 20-40 min

After 9pm and on weekends outside Quaker Bridge Mall peak windows, drive times compress 15-25%. Per AAA Roadside Assistance benchmarks, honest ETA disclosure consistently correlates with both customer satisfaction and lower partner-side overbooking. During I-295 incident windows or known Route 1 Quakerbridge congestion, expect drive-time inflation and we'll tell you the realistic window up-front.

Hamilton automotive key insight — verify the NJ license

Automotive security professionals working under the NASTF Secure Data Release Model can access OEM key codes and immobilizer reset procedures through legitimate channels — that distinguishes a credentialed automotive locksmith from someone who only knows how to cut a metal key blank. Consumers buying smart-key or transponder service should ask whether the technician carries an active NASTF Vehicle Security Professional credential.

Donny Seyfer, Executive Officer, National Automotive Service Task Force (NASTF)

NASTF's framing applies in Hamilton because the commuter-suburb fleet mix includes substantial late-model smart-key, comfort-access, and Tesla pairing work where NASTF VSP credentials are the practical technical competency floor. The single most protective consumer action is to verify the NJ FBL license on the FBL verification portal and to confirm any modern smart-key job is being handled by a NASTF-VSP-credentialed technician via the NASTF VSP Registry.

Hamilton automotive key edge cases — what we send to the dealer

Most Hamilton car-key emergencies — even sophisticated all-keys-lost on a 2024 Honda Pilot, a 2023 Toyota Highlander, a 2022 BMW X5, or a 2021 Audi Q7 — can be completed on-site by a CarKeyNation NJ FBL-licensed partner with the right NASTF VSP credentials, the right portable programming hardware, and the right key blanks. But a small handful of edge cases benefit from a dealer trip instead of a mobile dispatch, and we are transparent about that up-front rather than promising work we can't deliver.

Hamilton scenarios where we recommend a dealer:

  • Range Rover / Land Rover post-2018 advanced-key all-keys-lost without an existing working key — Land Rover-specific programming credentials are required beyond standard NASTF VSP and the partner pool is thin in central Jersey. The Land Rover Princeton dealer (15-25 minutes from most Hamilton addresses) is typically the faster path.
  • Porsche 911 / Cayenne / Macan / Taycan advanced-key all-keys-lost on the newest Porsche Connect-equipped vehicles where the dealer-locked key-coding step requires factory-portal access.
  • Bentley, Aston Martin, Maserati MC20, McLaren — boutique-low-volume work where the partner tooling investment doesn't make sense; we will refer you to the nearest dealer or authorized service center.
  • Ferrari, Lamborghini, Rolls-Royce — same boutique-low-volume framing.
  • Stolen 2024+ Hyundai / Kia under the new factory-immobilizer + connected-services platform where the OEM connected-services team needs to authenticate the recovery before any key work — handled through the Hyundai Bluelink or Kia Connect team first.
  • Salvage-title vehicles where the title status creates an OEM-side flag that requires dealer documentation before any new key can be enrolled — we will explain the documentation path.
  • Insurance-pre-authorized work where the insurer (Geico, Progressive, State Farm, NJM, Allstate) requires a dealer invoice for reimbursement under the specific policy terms — we can document the work either way but if the carrier mandates a dealer invoice, the dealer trip may be required.

For the 95%+ of Hamilton automotive key calls that don't hit one of these edge cases, mobile NJ FBL-licensed dispatch is faster, less expensive, and less disruptive than a dealer trip. When we say we can do the job on-site, we mean it — and we put the written estimate on the invoice with both NJ FBL license numbers before any work begins, so the consumer has a clean paper trail.

How CarKeyNation verifies every Hamilton specialist

The single most consequential difference between calling a vetted network and calling the first paid ad on a search-result page is the verification trail behind the technician who actually arrives at your door. The U.S. Federal Trade Commission has published consumer guidance on locksmith scams documenting a recurring pattern of harm: a low advertised price ($19, $29, $49) that turns into a $300-$900 on-arrival quote from an unlicensed contractor with no business address and no warranty. Every step of the CarKeyNation verification flow for Hamilton is designed to filter those operators out of the dispatch pool before the customer ever sees them.

Business registration and bonding. Every Hamiltonpartner must hold a verifiable business registration in New Jersey, a current general-liability insurance certificate naming CarKeyNation as an additional insured, and a surety bond covering the work scope. We hold a current Certificate of Insurance on file for every active partner and re-verify annually. A locksmith with no bond and no insurance is, in practical terms, leaving the consumer with no recourse if something goes wrong during the programming — which is why we will not route to one.

ALOA credentialing. The Associated Locksmiths of America operates the national trade association and publishes a member directory. Our Hamilton specialist pool prioritizes ALOA members in good standing, particularly those holding the Master Automotive Locksmith credential. ALOA membership is a baseline indicator of training, continuing education, and a written code-of-ethics commitment to providing written estimates and not engaging in bait-and-switch pricing on arrival.

NASTF VSP registration for restricted-access work. The National Automotive Service Task Force runs the Vehicle Security Professional registry, which is the manufacturer- recognized credential for accessing the Secure Data Release Model. For any Hamilton job involving a restricted-access programming step (Stellantis Security Gateway vehicles, certain BMW and Mercedes procedures, late-model FCA / Jeep / Ram), the assigned specialist must be VSP-registered. VSP registration requires a background check, fingerprint submission, and ongoing renewal — it is not a paperwork credential, and it filters out the operators who simply could not pass the background check.

Tool and license inventory verification. Beyond the credentialing, we verify that each Hamilton specialist actually carries the tools needed for the work — current Autel IM608 license, Smart Pro license, VVDI Key Tool Plus license, or the OEM-equivalent tool family for the makes and years they are authorized to work on. A specialist with valid credentials but expired tool licenses cannot reliably complete a job, so we track the tool side of the verification separately and refresh it as new license cycles begin.

Written estimate and 90-day workmanship warranty. Every CarKeyNation-dispatched Hamilton job ends with a written, itemized receipt showing the make, model, year, VIN, key type, chip family, programming step, and total price. The work carries a 90-day workmanship warranty from the assigned specialist. If a key fails within that window for any reason traceable to the original programming, our admin team coordinates the rework at no charge to the customer. That is the practical accountability layer that does not exist when a customer calls a random ad.

Common diagnostic mistakes to avoid before calling for a Hamilton key

Before assuming you need a full key replacement in Hamilton, there are four quick diagnostic checks any vehicle owner can do that occasionally save the cost of a service call entirely. Our intake operators run through these with every customer, but the underlying logic is worth knowing in advance so the conversation moves faster.

1. Try a fresh fob battery first. Proximity Smart Keys use a CR2032 or CR2025 coin cell that lasts roughly two to four years under normal use. A failing battery often presents as a key that works intermittently — sometimes it unlocks the door, sometimes it doesn't — which customers frequently interpret as a failing key when the actual fix is a four-dollar battery. Pop the fob open with a small flathead screwdriver, swap the cell, and try again. If the symptoms resolve, you have saved a service call entirely.

2. Confirm the immobilizer light behavior. Most modern vehicles display an immobilizer or key icon on the dashboard for a few seconds during ignition cycle. If the icon stays solid or blinks rapidly when you try to start the car, the issue is in the chip-recognition handshake — which is the locksmith's domain. If the icon goes out normally but the car still refuses to crank, the issue is more likely electrical (battery, starter, ignition switch wear) than key-related, and a different specialist may be the right call.

3. Check that the fob is not soaked or recently washed. Water intrusion into a proximity fob (left in pants pockets through a wash cycle, or dropped in a Hamilton pool) damages the internal circuitry and the symptoms can take days to fully appear. If your fob got wet recently, that is almost certainly the root cause, and a replacement is the right path — but knowing that going in helps the on-arrival specialist quote the correct replacement fob hardware without diagnostic delay.

4. Try the physical valet key blade. Most modern proximity fobs contain a mechanical valet blade that unlocks the driver door manually. If your fob has stopped working entirely, the valet blade still gets you into the vehicle, where many modern vehicles allow a backup-start procedure (holding the dead fob against a specific point on the steering column or push-button start area). The owner's manual documents the backup procedure for your specific make and year. If the backup works, the issue is fob battery or fob transmission rather than immobilizer pairing — cheaper fix, faster turnaround.

None of these four checks replace a professional diagnosis when the situation calls for one, but they sort out the scenarios where a $4 battery or a 30-second valet-key check solves the problem before a $200-$400 service call is necessary. CarKeyNation's intake operators will walk you through them on the phone before dispatching a specialist in Hamilton.

After-hours, weekend, and holiday service in Hamilton

Car key emergencies do not respect business hours, and a realistic conversation about Hamilton mobile-locksmith availability outside of weekday daytime hours is one of the most useful things we can offer at intake. The honest answer is that after-hours service in Hamilton exists, but the partner pool with capacity at 11pm on a Saturday is a fraction of the pool with capacity at 11am on a Tuesday — and pricing reflects that supply curve.

Weekday evenings (6pm-10pm). A meaningful share of the Hamilton partner network maintains evening capacity Monday through Thursday. Response times typically run 15-30 minutes longer than the off-peak benchmark we quote for the same neighborhood during business hours, primarily because there are fewer specialists actively on the road and the closest available partner may be farther away. Pricing in this window is usually within $25-$50 of the daytime flat-rate for the same job — most partners do not charge a formal after-hours premium until later in the evening.

Late nights (10pm-6am). The Hamilton late- night pool is small. We can usually route a partner to a genuine emergency (a parent locked out with a child inside the vehicle, a driver stranded in an unsafe location) but the realistic ETA is typically 60-120 minutes from dispatch, and an after-hours premium of $75-$185 applies to most programming work. For a non-urgent spare-key job, we strongly recommend waiting until morning — both the cost and the partner-availability math improve dramatically.

Weekends. Saturday daytime in Hamilton sees full network coverage, often matched or close to weekday daytime availability. Saturday evening drops to the weekday- evening profile. Sunday is the tightest day of the week in most metros — many Hamilton specialists treat Sunday as a family or rest day and only the after-hours-rotation partners are reachable. Sunday pricing typically includes a 15-25% premium over weekday rates for the same job.

Holidays. Major U.S. holidays (Thanksgiving, Christmas Day, New Year's Day, Independence Day) operate on the late-night model regardless of clock time — small partner pool, longer ETAs, and a $100-$250 holiday premium on programming work. For non-urgent jobs, we recommend rescheduling to the next non-holiday business day; the savings are real and the wait is usually under 24 hours. Per AAA Roadside Assistance benchmarks, major holidays are also the peak lockout volume days of the year nationally — partner pools are stretched in every metro, not just Hamilton.

Our intake conversation accounts for time-of-day from the first question. The realistic ETA we quote is always anchored to the partner pool actually available in your specific window, not the optimistic best-case business-hours estimate.

Frequently asked questions

How fast can a locksmith reach me in Hamilton Township?

Off-peak, most Hamilton addresses land in 15-45 minutes. I-295 / I-195 / Route 1 / Route 130 freeway congestion, Quakerbridge Road / Klockner Road / Whitehorse-Mercerville Road surface traffic, and Hamilton NJ Transit arrival cycles are the main drive-time variables. Our dispatch shows live drive-time before you commit.

Is the locksmith actually licensed in New Jersey?

Yes. Every CarKeyNation Hamilton partner holds an active NJ Division of Consumer Affairs locksmith license under N.J.S.A. 45:5A-18 et seq. Both the business and technician license numbers appear on every invoice — verifiable in 30 seconds on the FBL verification portal at newjersey.mylicense.com.

My fob died at the Hamilton NJ Transit commuter deck after the evening train — can you come?

Yes. Hamilton NJ Transit commuter-deck dispatch is one of our higher-volume scenarios here. Please indicate the lot section and approximate row on the form. A dead-fob battery replacement + re-sync runs $25-$70 and typically takes 15-25 minutes on-site; an all-keys-lost smart-key job runs $275-$465 and typically takes 60-90 minutes.

Which Hamilton Township is this — Mercer County or the other one?

This page covers Hamilton Township in Mercer County (the township that wraps around the eastern, southern, and southwestern sides of Trenton, anchored by Hamilton Square and the Hamilton NJ Transit station). New Jersey also has a Hamilton Township in Atlantic County (Mays Landing area) which is a separate municipality — for that township, please use the Atlantic County / Mays Landing service area when CarKeyNation expands there.

Ready to get rolling again?

Request a local specialist now — vetted, accountable, and matched to your vehicle.