Debris and outdoor loads · Dallas–Fort Worth

Light demolition debris.

Somewhere between 'junk pickup' and 'demolition contractor' lives the small tear-out: a rotted deck, a dead fence line, torn-out cabinets. Photograph it and we review the fit.

Not every demolition needs an excavator. Some just need a crew with pry bars and a truck.

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What 'light demolition' actually covers

Already-loose or easily broken-down materials: a deck that's mostly pried up, fencing pulled from the line, cabinets unscrewed from walls, a collapsed shed. Crews finish the breakdown where it's hand-tool work and haul it all. Structural demolition — load-bearing walls, full structures, anything permitted — belongs with a demo contractor.

The review step matters here

This category gets photo-reviewed more carefully than most because 'small tear-out' means different things to different people. Show the structure or debris from several angles, note what's still attached versus loose, and describe what you want the space to look like after. The review determines crew fit honestly before anything is scheduled.

Concrete, brick, and the heavy stuff

Broken concrete, brick, and masonry are quoted by weight reality — small amounts ride along fine, but a full patio's worth is its own logistics. Photograph the pile with something for scale and let the review decide. Clean concrete often routes to crushing and reuse rather than landfill, which is the better ending for it.

How it works

Four steps. No guesswork.

01

Send photos

Upload 3–5 photos of the items and the access area.

02

Get a clear quote

Priced on volume, weight, item type, stairs, access, and disposal.

03

Schedule pickup

We coordinate availability with a local hauling crew.

04

Items removed

The crew completes pickup and confirms the space is cleared.

Questions

Asked before every pickup.

Can the crew do the tear-out itself?

Hand-tool-level tear-out — prying deck boards, unscrewing cabinets — can be part of a reviewed request. Anything structural needs a demo contractor first.

Where's the line on 'light'?

If it needs machinery, permits, or touches structure, it's beyond this service. If it needs pry bars, sledgehammers, and a strong crew, photograph it and ask.

Do you haul dirt or soil?

Clean fill dirt is generally outside junk-hauling scope. Bagged soil in small amounts can ride with yard waste — flag it in photos.

Photos in. Quote back. Done.

Send photos of the job and get an upfront quote before any crew is dispatched.