Cranston, RI
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How to schedule junk removal in Cranston, RI

Junk removal is priced by what fits in the truck and what the dump charges to take it. Once you understand truck-load fractions and which items carry disposal surcharges, the quote stops feeling arbitrary.

Licensed waste haulersRIDEM solid waste transporter registration in RI; MassDEP hauler permit in MA. Tipping receipts available on request.
Donation + recycling routingReusable items routed to Habitat ReStore, Big Brothers Big Sisters, or Salvation Army. Metals separated for scrap. We do not landfill what someone else can use.
Volume-based pricing, written before the truck loadsYou see the price for the volume committed before we touch the pile — no surprise upcharges at the end.
Insured for property damageGeneral liability with auto and cargo coverage — protects floors, doorframes, and stairwells during awkward removals.
Junk Removal project photo

What to know before booking junk removal in Cranston

Cranston is a mix of mid-century ranches, split-levels, and Edgewood-era colonials. Western Cranston has newer construction from the 1980s onward while Edgewood, Auburn, and Pawtuxet have pre-1940 stock with original wood siding and ungrounded electrical service.

Cranston gets the full New England seasonal range with moderate coastal influence. Ice dams are common in winter on older homes with under-insulated attics, and summer humidity stresses central AC systems.

How we price it

These are the factors that move a quote up or down. Knowing them helps you share the right context upfront so we can quote your specific situation accurately — and so you can compare bids on apples-to-apples scope.

Truck volume (cubic yards loaded)
Primary driver

A standard junk-removal truck holds 15 cubic yards — roughly 6 pickup-truck beds. Operators quote in fractions: 1/8, 1/4, 1/3, 1/2, 3/4, full. The minimum is almost always 1/8 even if you only have one chair, because the truck still has to drive out, dump, and drive back. If you are between two fractions, ask the crew to walk the pile and confirm before they start loading — adjusting at the curb is normal; arguing about it after the truck is full is not.

Benchmark:1/8 truck: $100–150 · 1/4: $175–250 · 1/2: $325–450 · 3/4: $525–650 · Full: $700–900
Disposal surcharges (per item)
Primary driver

Some items cost the hauler real money to dump and they pass it through. Mattresses and box springs carry a $25–45 per-piece surcharge in RI and MA because both states banned them from landfills (RIRRC and MassDEP mattress diversion programs). Refrigerators, freezers, and ACs need EPA-certified freon recovery before scrap — $30–60 each. TVs and monitors are e-waste, $25–50 per unit. Tires are $5–15 each. Paint, solvents, and chemicals are hazardous waste and most haulers will not touch them at all. Ask for surcharges itemized on the quote so you can compare bids apples-to-apples.

Benchmark:Mattress: $25–45 · Fridge/freezer (freon): $30–60 · TV/monitor: $25–50 · Tire: $5–15 · Paint: pro-only or HHW drop-off
Labor difficulty (stairs, distance, density)
Secondary

A pile in an open driveway is fastest. A second-floor walk-up with a tight turn at the landing is 30-40% more time per cubic yard. Long carries from a back yard, narrow basement bulkheads, and hoarder-density rooms where the crew has to dig a path all push the price. Some operators bill the extra time as a labor add-on; others bake it into a higher volume bracket. Tell them on the call what the access looks like — that is what changes the number, not the pile size.

Benchmark:Stairs/walk-up: +20–40% over driveway pickup · Hoarder-density: +50–100% (often re-quoted on-site)
Item mix (heavy vs. bulky)
Secondary

Trucks have both a volume limit and a weight limit. Construction debris (drywall, tile, concrete, dirt) hits the weight limit at half the volume of a regular household load, so haulers either cap how much they take per truck or charge a heavy-load premium of $100–200. Bulky-but-light loads (mattresses, sofas, cardboard) fill volume fast without weighing much. If the pile is mostly post-construction debris, a roll-off dumpster is usually cheaper than truck-load service.

Benchmark:Standard household load: $40–55/cubic yard · Heavy/debris load: $60–85/cubic yard or capped at half volume
Donation and recycling routing
Situational

Better haulers sort at the truck: reusable furniture and appliances to donation centers, metals to scrap, e-waste to certified processors, and only the unsalvageable goes to landfill. This costs the operator more labor and time, but keeps things out of the waste stream. National brands (1-800-GOT-JUNK, College Hunks) advertise donation routing as a brand standard. If diversion matters to you, ask the operator what percentage of typical loads they divert and where the donations actually go — a real answer with named partners is the sign of a real program.

Estate cleanout or hoarding scope
Situational

Whole-house estate cleanouts and hoarding remediations are a different product than a curb pickup. They run $1,500–5,000 for a small home, $5,000–15,000+ for severe hoarding with biohazard. They take 1–3 days, sometimes need a 20- or 30-yard roll-off dumpster on site instead of a truck, and often require sensitivity around personal effects (photos, documents, jewelry that the family wants sorted out before disposal). Ask whether the crew has done estate or hoarding work specifically — the workflow is different from a regular junk haul.

Benchmark:Small estate cleanout: $1,500–3,500 · Average whole-house: $3,000–6,500 · Severe hoarding: $5,000–15,000+
Same-day vs. scheduled
Situational

Same-day or next-day service runs 10–20% more because it disrupts the operator route. Scheduling 3–7 days out gets you the standard rate and a tighter arrival window. For real emergencies (closing tomorrow, tenant move-out today) the premium is worth it; for a garage cleanout you have been putting off for a year, book ahead.

Project sizes we handle

Three scopes that cover almost everything in this trade. We'll help you place your project on the right tier based on the property, what you've already tried, and how long you plan to stay.

Single-item or curbside pickup
$75–200 single item · $100–150 for 1/8 truck minimum

You drag it to the curb or driveway. Crew pulls up, loads, hauls. No disassembly, no stairs, no inside work. Best for one fridge, one couch, a mattress set, or a stack of cardboard you broke down. Same-day available, no inspection needed — quote is over the phone with photos.

  • Standard dump truck or box truck with lift gate
  • Furniture dolly, moving straps
  • Tarps to protect truck bed and your driveway

Best for: One bulky item or a small pile already moved to the curb. Cheapest and fastest option.

Full-service junk removal
$175–900 depending on volume

Crew of two arrives, walks the property, gives a written volume-based quote on the spot. They do all the lifting from wherever the items are — basement, attic, second floor, back yard. Disassembly of furniture or play sets included. Surcharge items (mattresses, fridges, e-waste) called out and itemized in the quote. Donation routing for usable items, recycling for metals and electronics, landfill only as the last stop.

  • 15-cubic-yard truck with lift gate and walk-up ramp
  • Sawzall, drill, and basic disassembly tools
  • Floor runners and door jamb protectors
  • Sorting bins for donation, scrap, e-waste, and trash

Best for: Garage, basement, attic, or whole-room cleanouts where the crew does the work. The default residential service.

Roll-off dumpster + scheduled hauls
10-yd: $300–450/week · 20-yd: $400–600/week · 30-yd: $500–700/week (plus tipping over weight allowance)

For ongoing projects (remodel, big landscaping, multi-day cleanouts), a 10–30 yard roll-off dumpster dropped on site lets you load on your own schedule for 5–10 days, then they swap or pull it. Often paired with a single labor-only crew visit at the end to handle anything you cannot lift. Better cost per cubic yard than full-service truck pickups if you have 2+ full trucks worth of debris.

  • 10-yard (driveway-friendly), 20-yard, or 30-yard roll-off container
  • Plywood ground protection to prevent driveway damage
  • Tarp cover for weather and wind compliance

Best for: Multi-day projects, post-construction debris, large estate cleanouts, or anyone who wants to load on their own schedule.

What we reach for and why

The materials and techniques behind a job that lasts — so you know what's in the quote and why it's there.

Lift gate truck vs. dump truck
material

Box trucks with hydraulic lift gates make loading appliances and heavy furniture safer and faster — the gate lifts a 300-lb fridge from ground to truck floor without a four-person carry. Open dump trucks have higher walls and tip to unload at the transfer station, which speeds up multi-load days. Most established residential operators run a 15-cubic-yard box truck with a 1,500-lb lift gate; commercial debris haulers run dump trucks. Either works for residential junk; ask what they are bringing if you have heavy or oversized items.

Pro tip: If you have a piano, hot tub, or safe, mention it on the call. These need specific equipment (piano dollies, hot tub straps, a third crew member) and the standard two-person crew will refuse on arrival if it was not scoped.
Mattress disposal compliance
approach

RI banned mattresses from landfill in 2016 via the Mattress Stewardship Program (RIRRC); MA followed in 2022. Mattresses must go to a registered recycler — the cover, foam, and springs are separated and recycled. Haulers pay a per-piece fee to drop them, which they pass through to you. A pro who quotes "mattress no extra charge" is either eating the cost, or — far more often — dumping them illegally in regular trash. Ask where mattresses get taken; the answer should be a named recycler or a transfer station with a stewardship program (Park Recycling, Conigliaro, UTEC, or similar).

Pro tip: You can drop a mattress yourself at the RIRRC Central Landfill in Johnston (RI) or many MA transfer stations for the same per-piece fee or less. If you only have one mattress and a truck, it can be cheaper to self-haul than to pay the pickup minimum.
EPA freon recovery for appliances
technique

Refrigerators, freezers, window ACs, and dehumidifiers contain refrigerant (R-134a, R-410A, older R-22) that is federally regulated under Section 608 of the Clean Air Act. Before the metal goes to scrap, a Section 608-certified technician has to recover the freon. Reputable haulers either have a certified tech on staff or pay a recycler to do it — adding $30–60 to the per-item price. A hauler who quotes appliance removal at no surcharge is venting refrigerant to atmosphere, which is illegal and a $10K+ fine if reported.

Pro tip: Best Buy will haul away a working or non-working fridge for $40–50 with delivery of a replacement, with freon recovery handled. If you are buying a new appliance anyway, that beats most junk-removal quotes.
Donation routing
approach

The good national operators (1-800-GOT-JUNK, JDog, College Hunks) and many local pros separate donatable items at the truck and drop them at Habitat ReStore, Big Brothers Big Sisters, Salvation Army, Savers, or local shelters. This is real diversion — Habitat resells building materials and furniture, BBBS sells through thrift partners to fund mentorship programs. Ask your hauler what their typical diversion rate is and which specific nonprofits they partner with. A vague "we donate when we can" usually means everything goes to the landfill.

Pro tip: If you have something specific you know is donatable (working appliance, intact furniture, books), tag it before the crew arrives — masking tape with "DONATE" works. That ensures it goes in the donation pile and not on the bottom of the truck.
Roll-off dumpster sizing
material

10-yard (12 ft long x 8 wide x 3.5 tall) fits a driveway and holds about 3 pickup trucks of debris — good for small bath remodels and garage cleanouts. 20-yard is the most common residential rental, fits a kitchen demo or a whole-house cleanout. 30-yard needs significant driveway space and is overkill for most residential work unless you are doing a full house gut. All sizes have a weight allowance (usually 1–2 tons included); overage runs $75–125 per ton.

Pro tip: Order one size bigger than you think you need. Going over the volume of a 10-yard means a second haul fee of $300+; going over by half a yard in a 20-yard costs nothing as long as you stay under the weight limit. Cost per cubic yard drops fast as you scale up.
Hazardous waste exclusions
approach

Paint (liquid), solvents, motor oil, propane tanks, gasoline, pool chemicals, asbestos, and lead-painted demo debris are household hazardous waste (HHW) and almost no junk hauler will take them — the disposal liability is too high. Paint can be dried out with kitty litter or hardened with paint hardener (~$5/packet) and then it is non-hazardous trash. Propane tanks go back to the exchange program (Blue Rhino, AmeriGas). Asbestos requires a licensed abatement contractor, not a junk hauler. Most RI and MA towns run HHW drop-off days 2-4 times per year for free.

Pro tip: If you have a lot of paint, RI has a free PaintCare drop-off program (paintcare.org/locations) at most independent hardware stores. MA has the same program. Liquid paint is the most common reason a junk-removal crew refuses items at pickup.

What to watch for

A short list of the things that actually matter for safety, code, and your peace of mind. Worth confirming with any pro before you sign — we expect these questions and we're happy you ask.

No state hauler registration or commercial auto insurance
RI requires RIDEM solid waste transporter registration and MA requires MassDEP hauler permits to legally move waste over the road for hire. An unregistered hauler is more likely to dump illegally (because they have no relationship with the transfer station) and their personal auto policy does not cover commercial hauling — meaning damage to your driveway or home during the job is not covered. Ask for the registration number and a COI before booking anything over $300.
Quotes "mattresses included" or "appliances no extra charge"
Both items carry per-piece disposal surcharges that the transfer station charges the hauler. A flat-rate quote that ignores them means the operator is either eating the cost (unsustainable, so it usually means there is a surprise upcharge at the end) or dumping them illegally — mattresses in commercial dumpsters, freon-charged appliances scrapped without recovery. Either way it is not a real quote.
No recycling or donation routing at all
When a hauler tells you everything goes to the landfill, two things are true: you are paying full tipping fees on items that should have been diverted, and you are funding landfill volume the state is actively trying to reduce. Good haulers divert 40-70% of typical residential loads. A simple "where does this go?" question should get specific answers — named donation partners, named recyclers, named transfer station.
Cash-only, no written receipt, no business name on the truck
This combination is the operating signature of an unlicensed scrapper running an illegal dumping route. The truck typically ends up at an empty lot, a wooded area, or a residential dumpster they do not own — and when it gets traced back through plate or paperwork, the homeowner who paid the cash gets the cleanup bill from the municipality. Always pay by card or check to a registered business and always get an itemized receipt.
Refuses to give a price before loading, then renegotiates on-site
Volume pricing should be settled at the curb before the truck starts loading. If the crew loads first and then "lets you know what it works out to" once everything is on the truck, you have zero leverage — the items are already on their truck and you cannot easily reverse the decision. Reputable operators walk the pile, point to the truck markings (1/4, 1/2, 3/4, full), and write the number down before anyone lifts anything.
No contract or scope for estate cleanouts and hoarding work
A whole-house cleanout is a 2-15K job that should always have a written scope — what gets removed, what gets set aside for family review (photos, documents, jewelry, ID), how many days, what the per-day rate is if scope expands, and how disposal is documented for the estate. Without that, things that should have been kept end up in the truck and there is no record of what left the house.

What else might come up

Most projects touch more than one trade. Here's where this one usually overlaps with others — so you can plan ahead instead of scrambling.

Demolition / general contractor
When the cleanout is from active demo (kitchen tearout, bathroom gut, deck removal).

Most GCs include debris haulage in their bid via a roll-off dumpster on site. If your GC is not handling it, coordinate the dumpster delivery date with the demo start so you are not paying per-day rental fees waiting for debris to fill it.

Estate or move-out cleaning
After an estate cleanout or tenant move-out, before a real estate listing or new tenant moves in.

Junk removal clears the contents; deep cleaning handles the residue — kitchen grease, bathroom mineral, baseboards, inside cabinets and closets. Sequenced right (haul first, clean after), the home is photo-ready in a day instead of three.

Donation pickup (Salvation Army, Habitat ReStore, BBBS)
For high-value items you specifically want to donate (working appliances, intact furniture, building materials).

Direct donation pickup is free and gets you a tax-deductible receipt. The catch: limited pickup windows (2-4 weeks out), strict "good condition" requirements, and they pick and choose. For items they accept it is the right call; for everything else, route them through a full-service junk pro who diverts at the truck.

Hazardous waste / HHW disposal
Paint, solvents, propane, pool chemicals, motor oil, asbestos suspected in old debris.

Junk haulers will not (and legally cannot) take HHW. Most RI and MA towns run quarterly HHW drop-off days at no cost — check your town DPW calendar. PaintCare runs year-round paint drop-off at hardware stores. Asbestos suspected in pre-1980 debris requires a licensed abatement firm; do not let a junk crew touch it.

Yard waste / landscaping cleanup
Branches, brush, leaves, soil, stumps from storm damage or yard overhaul.

Most municipal yard-waste programs (curbside pickup or transfer station drop-off) are free or near-free for residents — vastly cheaper than paying a hauler to take organic material to the landfill. Have your landscaper or arborist haul yard debris under their own license; reserve junk-removal services for non-organic material.

$100–900per truck load

1/8 truck minimum runs $100–150, 1/4 load $175–250, 1/2 load $325–450, full 15-cubic-yard truck $700–900 all-in. Single-item pickups (fridge, couch, mattress) run $75–200. A 20-yard dumpster rental is a different SKU at $350–550/week.

Volume drives the base rate, but disposal surcharges on mattresses, electronics, tires, and paint stack on top — and stairs, basements, or hoarder-density piles change labor time more than most people expect.

See what drives price

What we show up with

The equipment we bring is part of what separates a real job from a shortcut. Here's what to expect on a typical visit.

15-cubic-yard dump or box truck with lift gate

Standard residential junk removal truck — 1,500-lb lift gate handles appliances and heavy furniture without four-person carries.

Appliance dolly and furniture dolly
DIY-able

Two-wheel appliance dolly for fridges and washers; four-wheel furniture dolly for sofas and dressers. Saves backs and protects floors.

Moving straps and ratchet tie-downs
DIY-able

Two-person lifting straps shift weight to legs and free the hands; ratchet straps secure the load in the truck so it does not shift in transit.

Sawzall and cordless drill
DIY-able

On-site disassembly of bed frames, sectional sofas, swing sets, and shelving so it fits down stairs and through doorways.

Floor runners and door jamb protectors

Adhesive runners protect carpet and hardwood during heavy carries; rigid jamb protectors prevent gouges in painted trim.

EPA Section 608 freon recovery unit

Required to legally recover refrigerant from fridges, freezers, and ACs before the metal goes to scrap. Federal law; $10K+ fines for venting.

10–30 yard roll-off dumpster + delivery truck

For multi-day projects and large-volume cleanouts where on-site loading beats repeated truck visits. Requires a roll-off truck with cable hoist.

How a job goes

1

Phone or text quote with photos

5–10 min

Send 2–3 photos of the pile or room and an item count for surcharge items (mattresses, fridges, TVs). Operator gives a volume estimate and a price range — typically a 1/8-of-a-truck spread (e.g. $200–275 for "1/4 to 1/3 truck"). For single-item pickups, the phone price is firm. Schedule arrival window — most operators offer same-day, next-day, or 2-hour scheduled windows.

What you see: A text back with a price range and a window — not a single number until the crew walks the pile.

2

On-site walkthrough and firm quote

5–10 min

Crew of two arrives, walks the pile, points to the volume markings on the truck (1/8, 1/4, 1/2, 3/4, full), and writes a firm price including itemized surcharges. This is the moment to add or remove items — adjusting after loading starts is harder. Sign or verbally agree to the on-site quote before they begin.

What you see: Crew with a clipboard or tablet, pointing at the truck and at the pile, writing a number down.

3

Load-out

30 min (single item) to 3 hr (full truck)

Crew lays floor runners on the carry path, brings dollies and straps in, and starts loading. Disassembly happens as needed. Crew sorts at the truck: donations on one side, recyclables (metal, cardboard, e-waste) separate, landfill in the main pile. Watch for property damage at narrow doorways and tight turns — flag anything immediately so it goes on the work-completion form.

What you see: Floor runners, dollies, sweat. Crew calling out heavy items so they two-person lift safely.

4

Final sweep and walk-back

5–10 min

Crew sweeps the area where the pile was (broom and dustpan, not a vacuum). Walks you back through to confirm everything intended for removal is gone and nothing intended to stay was loaded. This is also when surcharge items get re-counted and the final invoice is generated.

What you see: A clean floor where the pile was, and a walk-through of every room or area touched.

5

Payment and receipt

5 min

Pay by card, check, or app (Venmo / Zelle on smaller operators). Get an itemized receipt with the company name, registration number, volume billed, surcharges itemized, and disposal destinations on request. For estate cleanouts and tax-deductible donations, request a donation receipt — some operators provide it on the spot, others mail it from the donation partner.

What you see: A printed or emailed itemized receipt — keep it for insurance, taxes, or HOA records.

What to send when you reach out
Send us:
  • Photos of the pile or the room from 2–3 angles (volume estimation is unreliable from descriptions)
  • Item count for surcharge items: mattresses, fridges, freezers, ACs, TVs, monitors, tires
  • Where the pile is: curbside, driveway, garage, basement, attic, back yard
  • Stairs, narrow doorways, or tight turns the crew will need to navigate
  • Target date — today, this week, scheduled for end of month
Helps a lot if you know it:
  • Approximate dimensions of the pile (L x W x H) or comparison to a known volume (half a garage, full pickup bed)
  • Whether there are donatable items you specifically want routed for donation
  • Heavy debris content (concrete, drywall, tile, dirt) and how many cubic yards of it
  • Parking access for a 15-foot box truck or 12-foot roll-off container
Worth flagging if you see any of these — they shape the diagnosis:
  • Suspected asbestos (pre-1980 home with damaged pipe wrap, popcorn ceiling, vinyl tile being removed) — needs abatement, not junk pickup
  • Hoarder-density rooms where the crew cannot see the floor
  • Liquid paint, solvents, propane tanks, gasoline, motor oil — needs HHW routing
  • Biohazard contamination (rodent infestation, medical waste, animal hoarding) — needs specialized remediation crew

Permits, timing, and what's local to Cranston

Permits & regulations

Cranston permits are handled by the Department of Inspections in City Hall on Park Avenue, filed through the city's OpenGov portal. Projects over $1,000 generally require a permit and all electrical, plumbing, and mechanical work must be performed by RI-licensed contractors. The Edgewood Historic District requires Historical Commission review for exterior changes.

Permit authority: Cranston Department of Inspections — Building Inspection (https://www.cranstonri.gov/departments/building-and-public-works/building-inspection/)

What's local to Cranston

Pawtuxet River and Pocasset River flooding affects low-lying Auburn and Edgewood lots; verify FEMA flood zone before any below-grade work.

Recent work in Cranston

Before & After

Storage Area Declutter and Organize: BeforeAfter

After - Storage Area Declutter and Organize
Before - Storage Area Declutter and Organize
Before
After

Large Item Haul Away: BeforeAfter

After - Large Item Haul Away
Before - Large Item Haul Away
Before
After

What homeowners ask us

Where else we serve

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