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Dumpster Weight Limits Explained

The single most common surprise on a dumpster bill is an overage fee — and it almost always comes down to weight. Here’s how weight limits work and how to stay under yours.

Every rental includes a weight allowance

Your flat rental price includes a set amount of weight, measured in tons. Rough guide:

Go over that allowance and you pay a per-ton overage fee on top of the base price. The container is weighed at the disposal facility, so there’s no guessing.

Why heavy debris goes in a smaller dumpster

This surprises people: for concrete, dirt, brick, and shingles, you want a 10-yard, not a big one. Dense material hits the weight limit long before it fills the space — put it in a 40-yard and you’d owe massive overage fees for a container that looks half empty. A smaller container keeps the weight (and the bill) in check.

How to avoid overage fees

  1. Match the size to the material, not just the volume — see our size guide.
  2. Separate heavy debris into its own container.
  3. Don’t overfill — loads must sit level with the top rail to be hauled legally.
  4. Ask for a heavier allowance up front if you know the load is dense; sometimes it’s cheaper than the overage.

Not sure how heavy your load is?

Describe your project when you book and we’ll recommend a size and weight allowance that keeps you out of overage territory.

Renting a dumpster in Yonkers? We deliver across Yonkers & Westchester and help you pick the right size.

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