
Roofing dumpster rental in Clinton
Need a roll-off dumpster set quick for a roof tear-off in Clinton? We drop a 20-yard container, then pull it clean the day your crew finishes.
Roofing Tear-off Dumpster Sizing by Squares
How big a roll-off do you actually need for a roof tear-off in Clinton? The math for asphalt shingles is simple: one square equals roughly two-thirds of a cubic yard. Our low-wall 20-yard container handles most residential jobs; it keeps your tonnage within limits. Fill the roll-off evenly, and we will set it for you.

15-Yard Roofing Dumpster
- Capacity: 15 cubic yards
- Fits: 15–20 squares of asphalt shingle
- Best for: Single-layer ranch and bungalow tear-offs
The 10-yard can fits a tight driveway for small roofing tear-offs while keeping shingle weight under legal tonnage.

20-Yard Roofing Dumpster
- Capacity: 20 cubic yards
- Fits: 25–30 squares of asphalt shingle
- Best for: Most two-story residential tear-offs
The 20-Yard Container works well for roofing crews because low side walls allow them to ground-throw shingles with ease.

30-Yard Roofing Dumpster
- Capacity: 30 cubic yards
- Fits: 35–45 squares of asphalt shingle
- Best for: Multi-layer tear-offs and small commercial roofs
Call us for the 30-yard bin on larger tear-offs where a second haul-out would delay crew demobilization.
Asphalt Shingle Weight and Tonnage Planning
Most roofers know three-tab shingles average 250 pounds per square while architectural laminate runs closer to 400; a 25-square tear-off lands between three and five tons before underlayment is added. How does that translate to a 10-yard dumpster? The hooklift truck’s weight limit caps each haul, so roofing dumpsters have lower side walls to keep the load inside the legal route weight.
When you mix shingle debris with framing or sheathing offcuts, we route the container to our general C&D debris service. Pure asphalt tear-offs stay on the standard roofing lineup—we make sure the job site stays organized and efficient.

Driveway Placement for Roofing Crew Workflow
We place the roll-off so the swing-door end faces the eave where your crew starts; this allows them to ground-throw shingles directly into the can. We always set Driveway Boards under all rollers before the container touches your concrete in Clinton. Our team maintains a six-foot tarp perimeter for an easy nail sweep. Review our roof tear-off container sizing or check the asphalt shingle disposal best practices guide for help.
Drop angle
Rear door toward the roof line
Set the swing-door end facing the eave where the crew is working so walk-in loading and ground-throw share one path.
Surface protection
Wooden planks under every roller
Loaded shingle weight can gouge concrete; driveway boards stay under the rear rollers for the full rental window.
Sweep zone
Six-foot tarp perimeter
Stage magnetic sweepers on the tarp side so nail cleanup runs in parallel with loading your roofing materials.

Tile, Slate, and Metal Roof Tear-off Containers
Concrete tile, natural slate, and standing-seam metal weigh heavily: they punish a standard bin that was not built for the load. For these jobs, we route in a reinforced 30-yard low-wall container with a heavier floor plate; we cap the fill volume well below the visual rim to ensure legal axle weight. We set this gear using a lowboy, which differs from our general construction debris service for lighter mixed loads.

Same-day Pickup for Fast Roof Project Turnover
Tear-offs run on tight schedules; the roll-off shouldn’t be the bottleneck. Dispatch coordinates the swap-out around the crew’s demobilization window so the driveway clears for inspection or gutter reinstall before the homeowner signs off; Clinton crews handle it the same day!