Job-site roll-offs sized by the material — because weight limits, not box volume, decide construction debris.
Demo day produces a mountain; framing, drywall, and punch-out produce a steady stream. A construction roll-off keeps both off the ground and out of the way — delivered on time, placed where the site needs it, and swapped or pulled the day you call. Containers land where the driver judges safest and most accessible, and nobody has to babysit the drop.
The fleet runs 15, 20, 25, and 30 cubic yards. The 30 yard — roughly 22 feet long with 5 tons of included disposal — handles new construction and full-gut renovations. The 25 takes mixed construction debris on mid-size jobs. And the 15 and 20 are the honest roofing boxes: about 45 and 60 squares respectively, sized so the shingle weight stays inside the included tonnage instead of blowing past it.
Pricing for every size is published on the sizes & pricing page. Homeowner project instead? See residential dumpster rental.

The problem: A Jenks remodeling contractor gutting a kitchen and two baths kept losing crew hours to dump runs between demo phases.
What was done: A 25 yard box landed the day before demo — ordered 24 hours ahead, placed clear of the concrete pump path. When it filled after the second bath, one call swapped it for an empty at the published repeat rate.
The result: Zero dump runs, a debris pile that never touched the lawn, and a schedule that ran on trade work instead of truck trips.
Booking runs on one call: material, rough volume, drop location. Payment is due prior to delivery — cash, major cards, CashApp, Apple Pay, or Venmo, with a secure way to pay online for office folks who book from a desk. Ordering at least 24 hours in advance is the crew's own recommendation, and delivery typically lands the day after the agreement.
The rental window runs up to 7 days with the published rates, and $10 per day extends it — useful when an inspection pushes the schedule. On pickup day, keep the approach unobstructed: a blocked container means a $50 trip charge for the repeat run, which no foreman enjoys explaining.
Offices, retail spaces, and property cleanups run on the same fleet and the same published starting rates — a commercial cleanout is just a cleanout with a loading dock. Drop-off and pickup happen on your timeline either way.
Spring storm season turns half-framed builds into debris fields overnight, and summer roofing season books containers fast across the metro. A crew that runs roll-offs through Tulsa, Broken Arrow, Jenks, Bixby, and Owasso every week knows which sites need the short box for weight and which need the long box for volume — and answers the phone with a real person who has seen your job before.
Light demo and single-room renovations run on the 20 yard; multi-room jobs and mixed construction debris want the 25; new construction and full guts take the 30 yard with its 5 tons of included disposal. Roofing flips small: a 15 yard holds about 45 squares and stays inside its weight limit.
The 15 yard dumpster holds about 45 squares and the 20 yard about 60 squares. Shingles are dense — tonnage, not volume, is the constraint — so tell the crew your square count and let the weight math pick the box.
Only with instructions first. Heavy materials like dirt, rock, concrete, brick, sod, and asphalt hit the weight limit while the box still looks half empty, so call before loading — there is a right way to load heavy debris, and it saves you the $60-per-ton overage.
The 15 and 20 yard boxes include 2 tons (4,000 lbs), the 25 yard includes 3 tons, and the 30 yard includes 5 tons (10,000 lbs). Overweight loads are charged $60 per ton over the included limit.
Yes — when a box fills, it can be emptied and returned. The repeat charge equals the amount paid for the previous rental, so on long jobs it pays to size up front or stage the demo phases around the swaps.
Level with the rim — nothing over the top. Loads are tarped for transport by law, so anything sticking above the container has to come off before the truck can take it, and an over-full box means a $50 return trip fee for the second run.
On private property — a lot under construction, a parking area — typically no. Permits usually apply when the container sits on public property like a street, easement, or sidewalk, which is common on tight commercial sites, so check with the City of Tulsa early.
Ordering at least 24 hours in advance is the crew's own recommendation, with delivery typically the day after your agreement — and same-day delivery service is offered when a container is available. For a first-thing-in-the-morning need, schedule delivery for the day prior.
Preferred, not required. Mark the drop zone and the driver places the container in the safest accessible spot — leave about 4 feet of clearance on all sides. On pickup day the box needs unobstructed access, or a $50 trip charge covers the wasted run.
Yes — commercial dumpster rental covers offices, retail, and property cleanups across the Tulsa metro, with the same published starting rates and the same drop-off and pickup on your timeline.
One call: the right size, the exact price for your rental, and a delivery window. No pressure, no obligation.
(918) 555-0102