Acreage properties make acreage-sized piles — brush, barns, and new-build debris in one box.
Bixby is where the metro stretches out — board fences, shop buildings, horse properties, and a fresh crop of new builds pushing south of 121st. The debris follows the acreage: a fence-line clearing produces a brush mountain, a barn cleanout unearths thirty years of implements and lumber, and a new build sheds framing scrap by the ton. None of it fits a curb cart, and the dump run math gets ugly at pasture scale.
A roll-off on the gravel apron resets the math. Yard waste — leaves, branches, brush — loads legally and easily; so do fence-wire and scrap metal down to copper and aluminum, old furniture from the shop loft, and appliances without Freon. The two call-first exceptions: dirt and sod are heavy material that needs loading instructions, and the barn chemical shelf (oil, herbicides, fuel) is banned by law from any container.
Every size with dimensions and tonnage: sizes & pricing. Building new? See construction dumpster rental.

The problem: A Bixby couple bought five acres with a “bonus” barn — full of the previous owner's lumber offcuts, dead appliances, and a decade of baled wire.
What was done: A 25 yard box on the barn apron. Appliances were flagged for the Freon rule, the chemical shelf was set aside for hazardous-waste drop-off, and the wire and scrap loaded flat under the bulky junk.
The result: A working barn by the weekend — one container, one pickup, no borrowed trailer.
The published starting rates apply across the metro: 15 yard from $299 on a 3-day rental ($325 for 7 days), 20 yard from $329 ($350 for 7 days), 25 yard from $379 ($400 for 7 days), and the 30 yard at $475 for 7 days. Distant rural addresses can carry a per-mile charge after 20 miles — the price you get on the phone is the whole price.
Yes — yard waste such as leaves, branches, and brush is standard cargo, alongside fence tear-out scrap metal and barn-cleanout junk. Sod and dirt are different: they are heavy material, and loading them takes instructions from the crew first.
Wherever the driver judges safest and accessible — a gravel approach, a barn apron, the wide spot by the shop. Leave about 4 feet of clearance on all sides and mark the spot; you do not need to be home for delivery.
New construction runs the 30 yard with 5 tons of included disposal. A shop or barn cleanout usually fits the 20 or 25 — bulky-light junk wants volume. Concrete and dirt want a phone call before anything is loaded.
Up to 7 days is included in the published price, and $10 per day extends it — useful when a fence-line clearing project meets an Oklahoma rain week.
By law: no paint, herbicides, pesticides, asbestos, chemicals, oil, tires, fuels, electronics, or appliances with Freon — which covers most of a barn's chemical shelf, so set those aside for a hazardous-waste drop-off. Tires and mattresses can carry an additional fee.
One call: the right size, the exact price for your rental, and a delivery window. No pressure, no obligation.
(918) 555-0102