Demolition Debris Removal in Lakeland Florida

Demolition Debris Removal Lakeland FL | My Dumpster Service
← Back to Debris Removal Service

Demolition Debris Removal in Lakeland FL

$325 Starting Price
30-Yard Most Common Size
Swaps Available Mid-Project
Same Day Delivery Available

Demolition projects produce debris faster than almost any other job type. A single day of interior demo can fill a 20-yard container. A full structure teardown requires multiple containers and planned swap-outs to keep the work moving. My Dumpster Service delivers roll-off dumpsters for demolition projects throughout Lakeland and Polk County, from single-room gut-outs to full residential teardowns.

If you also need demolition work performed rather than just debris hauled away, visit our Lakeland demolition contractor page for information on garage demolition, pool removal, interior demo, and full structure teardowns. For debris container delivery and haul-off, you are in the right place. Call (863) 412-5036 or visit our contact page to get started.

What Demolition Debris Consists Of

Demolition debris is mixed by nature. When a structure comes down, every material that went into building it comes back out as debris. The mix determines how containers fill, whether by weight or by volume, and that drives the sizing decision.

Concrete and Masonry

Foundations, slabs, concrete block walls, and brick are the heaviest debris from most demo projects. Concrete runs about 4,000 pounds per cubic yard. On full structure teardowns, the foundation and floor slabs often outweigh all other debris combined. See the concrete disposal page for specific guidance on concrete-heavy loads.

Wood Framing and Lumber

Dimensional lumber, plywood sheathing, OSB, rafters, and floor joists make up the bulk of the volume on wood-frame residential teardowns. Wood-heavy loads fill containers by volume rather than weight, which means you can load more before hitting the weight cap. Clean dimensional lumber sometimes gets salvaged or recycled. Treated lumber requires disposal at facilities equipped to handle it.

Drywall and Interior Materials

Interior demolition produces large volumes of drywall, insulation, flooring, cabinets, fixtures, and trim. These materials are light per cubic foot but take up a lot of container space. For interior-only demo jobs, see the drywall disposal page for loading tips specific to drywall-heavy loads.

Roofing Materials

Asphalt shingles, underlayment, decking, metal roofing, and flashing all come off as part of a full teardown. Shingles are dense and add weight quickly. See the shingle disposal page if roofing debris makes up a large share of the load.

Metal

Steel beams, rebar, HVAC ductwork, plumbing pipes, electrical conduit, window frames, and door frames all come out during demo. Metal is worth separating when the volume justifies it. Scrap metal has recycling value and keeping it out of the general debris container reduces disposal weight. For smaller amounts, mixed metal in the general container is fine.

Realistic Debris Estimates by Project Type

Use these estimates as a starting point. Actual volume depends on the structure's size, construction type, and how much material gets recycled or salvaged before the container is loaded.

Project TypeEstimated DebrisContainer PlanNotes
Single room interior demo1 to 3 tons mixedOne 15 or 20-yardWeight rarely an issue on light interior work
Full interior gut-out (1,000 sq ft)4 to 8 tons mixedOne to two 30-yard loadsConcrete floors push toward heavier estimates
Garage or shed teardown5 to 12 tons mixedOne to three 30-yard loadsConcrete slab drives weight, framing drives volume
Single-story house teardown15 to 30 tons mixedFour to eight 30-yard loadsCall before booking. Swap schedule needed.
Two-story house teardown25 to 50 tons mixedSeven to thirteen 30-yard loadsPlan swap schedule before demo starts
Small commercial building30 to 80 tons mixedMultiple 30-yard loads, call for planVaries widely by construction type
Weight vs. volume on demo jobs: Wood-heavy loads fill containers by volume. Concrete-heavy loads hit the weight limit first. Most full teardowns are mixed, so weight becomes the constraint once the foundation and slab debris starts loading in. For the 30-yard container, the 4-ton weight limit is the planning number.

Which Dumpster Size for Demolition?

Demolition Sizing Guide

15-Yard Single room gut-out, bathroom or kitchen demo only, small outbuilding teardown with light framing and no slab. $325 / 3 tons
20-Yard Multi-room interior demolition, partial gut-out of a floor, or light commercial interior demo without concrete. $385 / 3 tons
30-Yard Full structure teardowns, garage demolition, house demo debris. Most large demo projects require multiple 30-yard loads. $485 / 4 tons

Extensions available at $25 per day. See the full dumpster size guide or call us to plan the container count for larger jobs.

Interior Demolition vs. Full Structure Teardown

Interior Demolition

Interior demolition strips a building down to the studs without touching the shell. Wall removal, ceiling demo, flooring tear-out, fixture removal, and gut-outs of kitchens or bathrooms all fall under interior demo. This type of work produces mostly drywall, lumber, flooring, and fixtures. These are lighter materials that fill containers by volume rather than weight. A 20-yard handles most single-floor interior gut-outs. Multi-floor or commercial interior jobs often need a 30-yard.

If you are scheduling interior demolition and need debris hauled out as work progresses, having the container on site before demo begins is worth the extra day of rental. Debris piling up inside a structure slows the crew down and creates a secondary move-and-load step.

Full Structure Teardown

Full teardowns produce everything at once. Framing, roofing, concrete foundation, insulation, wiring, plumbing, and interior materials all come out mixed together. The container count is driven by the foundation size more than the framing above it. A standard residential slab for a 1,500 square foot home weighs 30,000 to 40,000 pounds on its own. That is seven to ten 30-yard loads for the foundation alone before any framing or roofing debris is considered.

For full teardowns, plan the swap schedule before demo equipment arrives. When the first container fills, work stops if a pickup is not already scheduled. Call us with the structure square footage and construction type and we will build a rotation plan.

Hazardous Materials and Pre-Demo Requirements

Lakeland homes built before 1978: Asbestos-containing materials are common in pre-1978 construction throughout Polk County. This includes floor tile adhesive (especially 9x9 inch vinyl tiles), ceiling texture (popcorn ceilings), pipe insulation, and drywall joint compound. Lead-based paint is also present in most pre-1978 homes. Neither asbestos nor lead paint debris can go into a standard roll-off dumpster. Florida requires licensed abatement contractors to remove these materials before demolition begins.

This is not a technicality. Disturbing asbestos-containing materials during demo without abatement creates an airborne health hazard for workers and neighbors and a legal liability for the property owner. If you are demolishing a structure built before 1978, budget for an environmental assessment and abatement before the demo contractor starts.

Cannot go in demolition dumpsters: Asbestos-containing materials, lead paint debris, chemical contamination, household hazardous waste, paint in liquid form, tires, batteries, electronics with refrigerants, and liquids of any kind. Regular demolition debris including concrete, wood, metal, drywall, roofing, and fixtures is accepted.

Recycling Demolition Materials

Concrete from demolition goes to recycling facilities where it is crushed into aggregate for road base and construction fill. Metal separated from the load goes to scrap yards. Clean dimensional lumber sometimes goes to salvage operations or wood recyclers. Separating these materials at the job site before loading improves the recycling outcome and can reduce disposal costs on large concrete-heavy loads.

Mixed demolition loads that combine concrete, wood, drywall, and roofing go to construction and demolition landfills. These facilities accept mixed debris but do not process it for recycling. For jobs where recycling matters, sorting at the source is the only way to make it happen.

Coordinating Containers With Demo Crews

Demo crews work fast and produce debris faster than most people expect. A two-person crew with a skid steer can fill a 30-yard container in a few hours on a full teardown. If the container is full with no pickup scheduled, the crew stops loading and the job stalls.

The most common mistake on demo jobs is treating the first container as a test run rather than planning the full rotation before work begins. Call us before demo starts, give us the scope, and we will set up a swap schedule that keeps containers turning without the crew waiting.

Demo contractors managing multiple projects who want standing container service can reach us at (863) 412-5036 or through our contact page.

Frequently Asked Questions

What size dumpster do I need for a demolition project in Lakeland?

Interior demolitions such as wall removal, kitchen gut-outs, and ceiling demo typically fit a 20-yard dumpster at $385. Full structure teardowns for a garage or shed usually need one or two 30-yard containers at $485 each. A full house demolition generates enough debris for multiple 30-yard loads. Call us before booking so we can size the job based on the structure type and demo scope.

How many dumpsters does a house demolition need?

A typical single-story home in Lakeland produces 15 to 30 tons of mixed demolition debris. At the 4-ton weight limit per 30-yard container, that works out to roughly four to eight containers depending on how heavy the debris mix runs. Concrete-heavy loads fill the weight limit faster than wood-heavy loads. Call us with the square footage and construction type and we can estimate the container count.

Can I put concrete, wood, and drywall all in the same demolition dumpster?

Yes, mixed demolition loads are accepted. For recycling purposes, separating concrete from other debris is better, but mixed loads go to a construction and demolition landfill. If concrete makes up a large portion of the load, weight fills the container before volume does. Load concrete first at the bottom and stack lighter debris on top.

What hazardous materials need to be removed before demolition debris goes in a dumpster?

Asbestos, lead paint, and chemically contaminated materials cannot go in a standard roll-off dumpster. Homes built before 1978 in Lakeland commonly have asbestos in floor tile adhesive, ceiling texture, pipe insulation, and joint compound, along with lead-based paint. These require licensed abatement before demolition begins. Do not start demo on a pre-1978 structure without an environmental assessment.

Can you swap dumpsters during an active demolition project?

Yes. For projects that need multiple loads, we schedule container swaps in advance. When a container is full, we pick it up and deliver an empty one. For large projects, planning the swap schedule before demo starts keeps the job site clear and avoids delays waiting on pickup.

Demolition jobs move fast. Get the container plan in place before demo starts. Call us or reach out online.

(863) 412-5036 Contact Us

Service Area

We deliver dumpsters for demolition debris removal throughout Lakeland and Polk County. Common delivery areas include:

Projects outside our standard service area are considered case by case. Additional fees may apply for extended delivery distances. Call to confirm availability for your location.