A driveway-friendly roll-off for the cleanout, the remodel, or the yard project — loaded on your schedule.
A garage cleanout, an estate clear-out, a kitchen gut, a fence tear-down — the debris from one weekend of real work outruns months of trash pickup. A residential roll-off puts the whole mess in one container on your driveway: you load it on your schedule, and it disappears in one haul when you are done.
What fits in a residential box: furniture and other large appliances, household appliances like stoves, microwaves, and refrigerators (no Freon units), construction materials like old drywall and insulation, yard waste such as leaves and branches, and scrap metal down to copper and aluminum. The stuff that cannot go — paint, chemicals, oil, tires, fuels, electronics — is banned by law, and you hear the full list before you book.
Sizing a cleanout versus a remodel? The sizes & pricing page shows all four boxes with published starting rates. Roofing or demo debris? That is construction dumpster rental.

Call and describe the project — what you are clearing, roughly how much, and where the box should sit. You get the right size, the exact price for your rental, and a delivery window. Ordering at least 24 hours ahead is the crew's own recommendation, and same-day delivery service is offered when a container is available.
The price includes delivery, pickup, and disposal up to the weight limit — and a rental period of up to 7 days, so a weekend project gets the whole week. If it runs long, $10 per day extends it. When you finish, one call schedules pickup; just keep the box accessible on the scheduled day.
The problem: A midtown Tulsa family inherited a house with 30 years of everything in it — furniture, boxes, two dead appliances, and a garage nobody had parked in since the 90s.
What was done: A 25 yard roll-off landed on the driveway Friday morning with boards under the rails. The family loaded all week — the 7-day window meant no rushing — and flagged the fridge up front so the Freon rule was handled correctly.
The result: One container, one pickup, one clean driveway — instead of six weekend dump runs in a borrowed truck.
A midtown bungalow with a narrow shared drive, a Brookside lot with mature trees over the approach, a wide-open Broken Arrow cul-de-sac — placement is a judgment call, and a driver who drops containers across the Tulsa metro every week has seen your driveway before. Describe it on the phone and the hard part is already done.
Yes — the driveway is the standard spot. The driver places the container in the safest accessible area, and it is preferred but not required that someone be home for delivery. Leave about 4 feet of clearance on all sides so the truck can set it clean.
Damage is unlikely, but a loaded container is heavy and the possibility is real — you should hear that before you book, not after. Many homeowners lay boards under the rails as a simple precaution, especially on newer concrete.
No — moving a roll-off drags steel across your driveway and damages the container's underside, and any damage that occurs while it is on site is the renter's responsibility. Get the placement right at delivery: describe your driveway on the phone and the driver handles the rest.
Household junk, furniture, large appliances without Freon, boxes, carpet, drywall, insulation, yard waste like leaves and branches, and scrap metal including copper and aluminum. If you are unsure about an item, ask on the phone — the answer is a straight yes or no.
By law: no toxic or hazardous waste — paint, herbicides, pesticides, asbestos, chemicals, oil, tires, fuels, electronics, or appliances with Freon. Tires and mattresses can carry an additional fee, so mention them when you book.
Preferred, but not necessary. For delivery, the driver uses best judgment and places the container in the safest accessible spot. For pickup, the container needs unobstructed access on the scheduled day — a blocked box means a $50 trip charge for the extra run.
Roll-offs do not include a cover or lid. A tarp secured with bungee cords is the recommended move — it keeps rainwater from adding weight to your load and keeps neighborhood debris out of your container.
The price includes a rental period of up to 7 days, and 3-day starting rates are also published for the smaller sizes. Projects run long — extending costs an additional $10 per day, and one call handles it.
Same-day delivery service is offered, and ordering at least 24 hours in advance is the crew's own recommendation so a container is available — typically delivery lands the day after your agreement is made.
Typically not for your own driveway. Permits usually come into play only when a container sits on public property — a street, easement, or sidewalk. If street placement is your only option, check with the City of Tulsa before delivery day.
One call: the right size, the exact price for your rental, and a delivery window. No pressure, no obligation.
(918) 555-0102