The brush pile from last fall, the fence the windstorm flattened, the hot tub that hasn't held water in years. We cut, carry, load, and haul it all.
Call or text with what's out there and we'll give you a free, no-obligation estimate. Serving Spokane, Spokane Valley, Mead, Cheney, and Liberty Lake.
Drag the handle to compare a debris-choked Spokane yard and the same yard after the crew hauled everything out.


Illustrative example. Drag to compare.
Between the windstorms that rearrange the pines, the winters that crack fence posts, and the summers that inspire big landscaping plans, a Spokane yard generates debris like it's getting paid to. The brush pile behind the shed was supposed to be one trip to the transfer station. That was two years ago. Now it's a habitat.
We haul the stuff your yard waste bin laughs at: branches too big to cut down, fence sections, deck boards, old sheds' worth of lumber, dead grills, rusted patio sets, and the hot tub that's been a very expensive rain barrel since before you bought the house. The crew does the cutting, the carrying, and the loading. You keep the yard.
Call (509) 236-8749, describe what's out there, and get a free, no-obligation estimate on the spot.
A hot tub is the single hardest thing in a backyard to get rid of. It weighs several hundred pounds empty, it doesn't fit through the gate, and no one at the transfer station is going to help you unload it. Here's how we do it:
Above-ground spas, swim spas, and the wooden gazebo frames around them are all fair game. In-ground tubs are a different animal, call and describe yours and you'll get a straight answer on what's possible.
Heavy fill like dirt, sod, rock, and concrete is weight-limited on any truck, so call and describe the quantity before assuming, and you'll get an honest yes, no, or how-much on the phone.
Storm just came through and the yard's a mess before an event? Same-day junk removal in Spokane is available, morning calls have the best shot at a slot.
Yard waste gets routed to the proper green-waste stream rather than dumped in with the trash, metal from fences, grills, and hot tub frames goes to recycling, and reusable items like patio furniture in decent shape go to local donation. The landfill is the last stop, not the first. It's the same donate-and-recycle-first approach we bring to every residential junk removal job in Spokane.
One call beats twelve trips to the transfer station. Get a free estimate and hear the full price before a single branch moves.
Get my free estimate: (509) 236-8749Yard debris and hot tub jobs are priced like everything else we haul: by the truck space the load fills. A few branches cost less than a whole flattened fence, and a hot tub is priced for the disassembly work plus the volume. You hear an estimate when you call, the crew names a firm number on-site before touching anything, and there are no hidden fees. The Spokane junk removal cost guide shows how volume pricing shakes out across job sizes.
Serving Spokane, Spokane Valley, Mead, Cheney, Liberty Lake, Airway Heights, and surrounding Spokane County.
That pile isn't shrinking on its own, and winter has a way of showing up early around here. Call or text now, get a firm price, and have the yard clear before the weekend.
How much does hot tub removal cost in Spokane?
It depends on the tub's size, where it sits, and how much disassembly it needs, a tub with easy gate access costs less than one wedged behind a gazebo. Call with the basics and you'll get a free estimate, then a firm on-site price before any cutting starts. The number you approve is the number you pay.
Do you cut up hot tubs on-site?
Yes. The crew disassembles the tub right where it sits, shell, cabinet, and cover, into sections that fit through a standard gate. You don't need to rent equipment, recruit neighbors, or knock down a fence panel to get it out.
Does the hot tub need to be drained and disconnected first?
Yes. Have the tub drained and its electrical connection professionally disconnected before the crew arrives. Hardwired spa circuits should be handled by an electrician, we do the hauling, not the electrical work.
Do I need to bundle branches or bag yard waste?
No. Skip the twine and the yard bags, the crew loads brush and debris loose from wherever it's piled. If you've already bagged leaves or clippings, we'll take those too.
Can you clean up after a windstorm?
Yes, storm cleanup is a Spokane staple for us. Downed limbs, scattered branches, and flattened fence sections are all standard loads, and same-day service is often available. Call in the morning for the best shot at a same-day slot.
Do you take dirt, rock, sod, or concrete?
Sometimes, in limited quantities. Heavy fill is weight-limited on any truck, so it comes down to how much you have. Call and describe the quantity and you'll get an honest yes, no, or how-much before we book anything.
Will you tear down my old fence or deck?
We haul the debris from fence and deck tear-outs, and light disassembly like cutting panels to loadable size is part of the job. Full structural demolition is a contractor's project, but once it's down, we'll make it disappear.
Can you take an old shed?
Often, yes. A collapsed or already-dismantled shed is straightforward hauling. A standing shed depends on its size and construction, so call and describe it, and you'll hear on the spot whether the crew can break it down or a demo contractor should go first.
Do you take trampolines, playsets, and above-ground pools?
Yes to all three. The crew disassembles what needs disassembling, trampoline frames, swing sets, pool walls, and hauls the pieces. Metal components go to recycling rather than the landfill.
Where does the yard waste go?
Green waste goes to the proper yard-waste stream, metal goes to recycling, and usable items like patio furniture in decent shape go to local donation. Only what can't be reused or recycled ends up at the transfer station.
What if the debris is in the backyard with no gate access?
The crew carries debris through the house or over tight side yards when there's no other route, it just gets factored into the walkthrough. If the crew can reach it on foot, it can go on the truck.
How do I pay?
Cash, check, or any major credit or debit card, paid on-site after the work is done and you've looked the yard over. The invoice matches the firm price you approved before the crew started, with no hidden fees.