Estate cleanouts, garage purges, moving-day triage — one box takes the whole pile, on your schedule.
Every cleanout starts the same way: a room that has to be empty by a date. An estate to settle, a rental to turn over, a garage that swallowed two decades of maybe-someday. The math never works at the curb — a single garage holds 80 to 100 trash bags of volume — but it works instantly in a driveway roll-off: load once, on your schedule, and the whole pile leaves in one haul.
Cleanout cargo is exactly what the container is built for: furniture and other large appliances, household appliances like stoves, microwaves, and refrigerators (flag anything with Freon — that is a legal restriction), boxes and bags, carpet, yard waste such as leaves and branches, and scrap metal down to copper and aluminum. The garage chemical shelf is the one carve-out: by law, paint, pesticides, oil, and fuels cannot ride in the box.
Which box? A garage is a 15, a multi-room purge is a 20, a whole house is usually the 25. The sizes & pricing page shows all four with published starting rates.

The problem: An Owasso family had three weekends to clear a parent's house — furniture in every room, a packed garage, and a fridge nobody wanted to think about.
What was done: A 25 yard box on the driveway with boards under the rails. The fridge was flagged at booking for the Freon rule, the chemical shelf was set aside for a hazardous waste drop-off, and everything else went in the box across a full week.
The result: One container instead of a month of truck trips — and a house ready to list on the family's deadline.
Describe the cleanout — rooms, rough volume, anything unusual — and 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. When the last bag lands, one call schedules the pickup, disposal included up to the weight limit.
A single garage or attic runs on the 15 yard — roughly 6-7 pickup truck loads, or 80-100 trash bags. A multi-room cleanout wants the 20, and a whole-house or estate cleanout usually takes the 25 with its 3 tons of included disposal. Cleanout debris is bulky and light, so volume decides it.
Yes — furniture and other large appliances are exactly what a cleanout box is for, including household appliances like stoves, microwaves, and refrigerators. The one hard rule: no appliances with Freon, which is a legal restriction, so flag the fridge or freezer when you book.
They cannot go in — by law the container cannot accept paint, herbicides, pesticides, chemicals, oil, or fuels, which is most of what lives on a garage chemical shelf. Set those aside for a household hazardous waste drop-off and load everything else.
They can be assessed an additional fee, so count them out loud when you book — two mattresses and a set of dead tires is normal estate-cleanout cargo, and mentioning them up front keeps the invoice boring.
The price includes a rental period of up to 7 days — a full week to work through a house at a human pace. If the sorting takes longer than expected, $10 per day extends the rental; just call before your window ends.
The driver places the box in the safest accessible spot, and damage is unlikely — but a loaded container is heavy and the possibility exists. Boards under the rails are the standard cheap precaution. And once placed, do not move the box: dragging it damages both the container underside and the concrete.
Preferred, but not necessary — describe where the box should sit and the driver uses best judgment. Same for pickup: the box just needs clear access on the scheduled day, or a $50 trip charge covers a wasted run.
Yes — yard waste such as leaves, branches, and brush loads right alongside household debris, and so does scrap metal including copper and aluminum. Everything rides level with the rim: loads are tarped for transport by law, so nothing can stick over the top.
One call: the right size, the exact price for your rental, and a delivery window. No pressure, no obligation.
(918) 555-0102