Shingles are a weight problem, not a space problem — the right box is smaller than you think.
A tear-off is the one job where the debris arrives on a schedule you cannot pause — once the roof is open, the old shingles come off today. Green Country hail seasons keep Tulsa roofers busy, and every one of those jobs starts with the same question: where do 25 squares of old asphalt go? The answer is a roll-off tight to the eave, sized by weight math instead of guesswork.
The math is simple and it is published: the 15 yard dumpster holds about 45 squares, the 20 yard about 60. Both include 2 tons of disposal, and overweight loads run $60 per ton over the limit — which is why the honest recommendation for most single-family tear-offs is the 15, not the 30. A big box invites a heavy overload; a right-sized box fills to the rim and weighs out on target.
Full pricing for every size lives on the sizes & pricing page. Mixed demo beyond the roof? That is construction dumpster rental.

The problem: A Bixby homeowner's insurance re-roof came with a roofer who needed the debris handled — 26 squares of twenty-year-old architectural shingle.
What was done: One call the day before: 26 squares means a 15 yard box, placed on the driveway edge under the working eave. The crew called for heavy-material loading instructions first and loaded level.
The result: The tear-off dropped straight from roof to box, the load weighed inside the included 2 tons, and the driveway was clear before the first bundle of new shingles went up.
Call with the square count and the address — you get the right size, the exact price for your rental, and a delivery window, with delivery typically the day after the agreement. The price includes pickup and disposal up to the weight limit, and if weather pushes the job, $10 per day keeps the box on site.
The 15 yard dumpster holds about 45 squares of shingles and the 20 yard about 60 squares. Most single-family Tulsa roofs run 20 to 35 squares, which sits comfortably inside the 15 yard — bigger is not better here, because shingle weight hits the limit before volume does.
Heavy enough that weight, not space, decides the box. The 15 and 20 yard sizes include 2 tons (4,000 lbs) of disposal, and overweight loads are charged $60 per ton over the limit — so matching the box to the square count is what keeps the invoice flat.
Yes — shingles are on the same call-first list as dirt, rock, concrete, and brick. If you are loading heavy materials, contact the crew for instructions on loading the dumpster before you start; it is a short conversation that protects you from an overage.
The driver places the container in the safest accessible spot, and for tear-offs that is usually tight to the working eave so shingles drop straight in. Leave about 4 feet of clearance on all sides and mark the spot if no one will be on site.
The price includes a rental period of up to 7 days — and most tear-offs are measured in days, not weeks. If weather stalls the job, the rental extends for an additional $10 per day with a call before the window ends.
Yes — tear-off debris loads together: shingles, underlayment, flashing, and the scrap metal that comes off a roof, including copper and aluminum. Keep the load level with the rim; loads are tarped for transport by law, so nothing rides over the top.
Either works. Homeowners doing an insurance re-roof often book their own box to control the line item; crews book directly on bigger jobs. Payment is due prior to delivery either way — cash, major cards, CashApp, Apple Pay, Venmo, or the secure online payment option.
Overweight loads are charged $60 per ton over the included tonnage — published up front, not discovered on the invoice. The honest fix is sizing by square count before delivery: tell the crew the number and the box will match it.
One call: the right size, the exact price for your rental, and a delivery window. No pressure, no obligation.
(918) 555-0102