Two cars used to fit but now you'd be lucky to walk through it. We've been there ourselves so we know how it goes. Whether you're getting the space back, selling the house, or finishing a renovation, a garage cleanout gets the room usable again.
Most garages collect the same kinds of things: a workbench buried under decades of small parts, a push mower that hasn't started in years, half-empty bags of grass seed, coolers, fishing rods, holiday lights, scrap lumber from a project that didn't happen, a deep freezer somebody forgot they owned. Pull what you're keeping into one corner before the visit if you can. The rest can go with us.
Garages collect items that don't belong in a regular load. Old gas-powered engines, push mowers, snowblowers, generators, motorcycle parts. Car batteries, tires, and propane tanks we can take. Liquid paint, motor oil, and gasoline we can't. Those have to go through your town's hazardous waste collection day in spring or fall.
For a one-day clearout where you want it done and gone, a crew with a truck is the right move. If you'd rather work through it across a weekend (or you're combining the garage with a basement or yard project), a dumpster on the driveway gives you the time and capacity.
If you've got tools, a mower, or shop equipment in working condition that you don't want, the cleanest move is to pull them aside and drop them at a local charity before our visit. If you call around you might find a charity that can come pick up larger donatable items. Whatever's left goes on the load.
Cost depends on the volume, the access, and whether the job runs a truckload or a dumpster. We'll quote after a walk-through, in person or over the phone with photos.
Yes, they go on the load with the rest. If you'd rather see usable items donated, the cleanest move is to pull them aside and drop at a local charity before our visit. If you call around you might find a charity that can come pick up larger donatable items.
Car batteries we can take. Motor oil and gas cans can't go in a roll-off or on the truck. Those are hazardous liquids and go to your town's spring or fall hazardous waste collection day.
Liquid paint is hazardous waste and has to go through your town's hazardous waste program rather than a roll-off. Bone-dry empty cans are usually fine, but rules vary by town so call to discuss the specifics.
Tires we can take.
Yes, group them on the same call. Tell us roughly what's in the shed when you book so the quote covers both spaces.
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Tell us roughly what's in the garage and we'll give you a quote. We can walk it in person if it's easier.
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