Garage Cleanouts
Garage Cleanouts in St. George, UT
Park a car in there again.
We haul the broken treadmill, the half-finished project, and the moving boxes from 2012. Firm price by text. Most garages done in a couple of hours.
A garage doesn’t become a storage unit on purpose.
It happens slowly. The treadmill that hasn’t been used since the gym opened back up. The kids’ bikes that don’t fit anyone anymore. The boxes you packed for a move three houses ago and never unpacked. Lawn equipment that’s broken but still standing in the corner. Drywall scraps from a project that finished two summers back.
You don’t have to sort it before we get there. We can pull everything out of the garage, set it on the driveway, and have you point at the truck or the keep pile. Or we just clear it all out if that’s easier. Whatever works.
The result is the same: a garage that fits a car, a workbench, or just a clean concrete floor for a change.
How a garage cleanout goes.
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1. Photos and quote.
Text us a few photos. Open the garage door, snap a wide shot, snap a few corners. We send a firm price back by text.
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2. Pull everything out.
We pull the contents into the driveway so you can see what’s there. Or skip this step if you already know what’s going.
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3. You point, we load.
Quick triage. "Toss." "Keep." "Donate." We sort by the truck and load. Donatable items go to local thrifts.
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4. Sweep and gone.
We sweep out the garage so you can see the floor. You pay when the truck pulls away.
Most garage cleanouts run $300 to $700.
Final price depends on how packed the garage is and what’s in it. A one-bay garage with a few bulky items is on the lower end. A two-car garage stacked wall to wall lands higher. A few items by themselves can fit our 1/4 truck tier at $149.
Garages in southern Utah.
A lot of the garages we clear in St. George, Washington, and Ivins belong to folks who downsized into a smaller home, or who finally finished the home renovation and have a corner of leftover materials. Hot summers and dry storage mean stuff lasts longer here than you’d think, which is also why it piles up. We see plenty of working tools and gear that go straight to a thrift store rather than the dump.
If you’re prepping a house for sale, the garage is one of the first places a buyer looks. We can have it clear in an afternoon.
Common questions about garage cleanouts.
Do I need to sort everything before you arrive?
No. We can sort as we load, and you stand at the truck and tell us yes or no. A lot of folks find that easier than going through it alone.
Can you take old paint, propane tanks, or chemicals?
We can take empty paint cans. Liquid paint, full propane tanks, gas, oil, and other chemicals are hazardous and we can’t haul them. Washington County runs a household hazardous waste drop-off program. Search "Washington County Utah hazardous waste" for the current schedule.
What about lawn equipment, bikes, and tools?
Yes to all of it. Working items in good condition can go to a thrift store if you’d rather donate than dump. Tell us up front and we’ll route accordingly.
Can you take the broken garage fridge?
Yes. Refrigerators carry a $35 freon disposal fee at the dump, which we pass through openly. It’ll be on the quote so there are no surprises.
How long does a garage cleanout take?
Most one-bay garages are done in 1 to 2 hours. A two-car garage that’s packed wall to wall can run a half-day. We give you a window when we send the quote.
I just want a few things gone, not the whole garage. Can you still come?
Yes. Our smallest tier is the 1/4 truck at $149. If you only have a few items, that’s the one. We can be in and out in under an hour.
We also handle:
Ready to get the garage back?
Text us a few photos. Firm quote back by text.