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Expert Junk Removal Solutions for Concord's, MA Diverse Property Needs

Tailored Cleanouts for Every Concord Home and Business

Concord’s unique blend of historic neighborhoods and scenic landscapes means junk removal needs shift with the seasons. In winter, residents often require post-storm cleanup, safe disposal of salt-damaged outdoor items, and removal of old snow equipment. Spring brings renovation debris, especially in neighborhoods like West Concord, Thoreau Hills, and Barrett Farm, while summer sees yard waste pile up near popular spots such as Emerson Playground and the banks of the Concord River. Fall demands leaf and branch cleanup in tree-lined communities like Monument Street, along with outdoor furniture disposal. Year-round, we assist with basement flooding cleanouts near the Sudbury and Assabet Rivers, help growing families clear out outgrown items, and manage estate cleanouts with care and discretion.

For Concord’s commercial clients, we provide regular hauling services for retail corridors, business districts, and office parks, addressing everything from seasonal inventory disposal to equipment upgrades and fixture removal. Our commitment to responsible disposal supports community cleanliness and environmental stewardship, connecting businesses with local resources and programs. To learn more about Concord’s environmental initiatives and community services, visit the Village/City of Concord Official Website.

Junk Removal

Our Concord Residential & Commercial Junk Removal Services

Why Choose Concord Junk Removal Services

Junk Removal Services
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    Comprehensive Junk Removal Solutions

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    Competitive Pricing

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    Experienced and Professional Team

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    Fast and Reliable Service

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    Eco-Friendly Disposal

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    Flexible Scheduling

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    Personalized Customer Service

Understanding Concord’s Waste Management Infrastructure & Municipal Disposal Requirements

Concord, MA manages municipal waste services through Concord Public Works, with subscription-based curbside solid-waste and recycling service, route-based collection, and separate town programs for yard waste, hazardous waste, mattresses, paint, Styrofoam, sharps, medications, and construction debris. Residents may subscribe through the New Curbside Application. The current base service is $42.67/Month plus a one-time deployment fee of $150.00, and the charge appears on the Concord Municipal Utility Bill. Additional carts cost $8.27 per month each, with a one-time deployment fee of $65 for a 35-gallon solid-waste cart and $85 for a 96-gallon recycling cart. Collection day is assigned by street through the Route Schedule Alphabetically and Route Schedules 2025. Subscribers may request a one-time swap from the 96-gallon recycling cart to a 64-gallon recycling cart through the Recycling Cart Swap Request; the initial swap is free, and changing back to a 96-gallon cart carries an $85.00 deployment fee. Eligible residents may apply for a 50% subscription discount through the Curbside Collection Discount Application, which states the discounted rate as $255.99 annually, or $21.33 monthly. For missed pickups or assistance, residents may call (978) 318-3240. Concord also operates the Yard Waste Compost Site at 755 Walden Street, where seasonal hours are Wednesdays 3:00 PM-6:00 PM and Saturdays 9:00 AM-3:00 PM, and supports special collection and recycling programs throughout the year.


Department of Public Works
133 Keyes Road, Concord, MA 01742
Phone: (978) 318-3240
Official Website: Department of Public Works

  • Weekly curbside collection is available to subscribers to the municipal solid-waste and recycling program
  • Collection day is determined by the official street-route schedules
  • Special materials are routed through separate town programs rather than mixed into ordinary curbside trash

What Neighborhoods Do We Serve Throughout Concord, MA?

West Concord: This area features a mix of historic homes and newer developments. Narrow streets and mature trees can complicate access for large vehicles, especially during winter months.

Concord Center: The town’s historic core, with many pre-1940s buildings, often requires special attention to lead paint and asbestos during cleanouts. Permit requirements may apply for work in preservation zones.

Thoreau Hills: Suburban neighborhood with wide driveways and detached garages, ideal for large-scale appliance and furniture removal projects.

Nashawtuc Hill: Characterized by larger lots and estate properties, this area generates higher volumes of yard waste and construction debris, especially during renovation season.

Barrett’s Mill: Rural setting with farm properties and outbuildings; seasonal cleanouts and agricultural waste are common, and access roads may be unpaved.

Nine Acre Corner: Residential area with a mix of single-family homes and small businesses; move-out and renovation debris are frequent, particularly in spring and summer.

Emerson Hospital Area: Proximity to medical facilities and multi-unit housing leads to ongoing demand for regulated waste removal and compliance with health and safety standards.

Partnering with Concord’s Environmental & Recycling Initiatives

Concord supports waste diversion through recycling, composting, reuse, and material-specific drop-off programs. The town’s Recycling page directs residents to recycle fluorescent bulbs, rechargeable batteries, mercury fever thermometers, and thermostats at 133 Keyes Road during business hours, and it also provides links to Hazardous Waste Collection Events, Mattress Recycling, and Paint Reuse & Recycling. The Yard Waste Recycling page states that the compost site accepts brush and branches less than 4 feet long and 4 inches in diameter, leaves, grass, rakeable yard debris, invasive plant species, usable oil-based and latex paint, Styrofoam in pre-purchased bags, and mattresses by appointment only. Concord also promotes home composting through Backyard Composting, where Concord Public Works sells two styles of home compost bins, and supports reuse and education through REUSIT. The town’s Plastic Bag Reduction Bylaw bans thin-film, single-use checkout bags at Concord retail and grocery stores, and the Polystyrene Ban Bylaw restricts polystyrene food service ware and packaging in Concord food establishments.

  • Special recycling at 133 Keyes Road covers bulbs, rechargeable batteries, mercury fever thermometers, and thermostats
  • The compost site at 755 Walden Street handles yard waste, Styrofoam in pre-purchased bags, usable paint, and mattresses by appointment only
  • Concord’s diversion efforts include recycling, composting, reuse, and local reduction bylaws for plastic bags and polystyrene

Concord’s waste programs operate through different schedules, routes, and access rules, so planning depends on the service being used. Curbside collection follows the official street-route schedules, while the compost site at 755 Walden Street is open only during posted seasonal hours. Mattress recycling at the compost site requires an appointment through Concord Public Works, and household hazardous waste collection requires preregistration for events held at 60 Hartwell Avenue in Lexington, MA. The DropOff Days page states that preregistration is required for the semiannual DropOff/SwapOff program, with posted flyers, price lists, and site maps. Residents and property managers should confirm the specific program requirements before transporting materials.

  • Curbside collection depends on the official route schedules by street name
  • Some programs require preregistration, appointments, or travel to off-site regional facilities
  • Seasonal hours and material-specific rules should be checked before drop-off or pickup

Concord Municipal Regulations & Permits for Junk Removal Services

Junk removal and debris handling in Concord must follow town permit procedures whenever work affects the public right-of-way or involves building-related activity. Concord uses the online Permit Applications & Forms system for Building Inspection permits and advises applicants to allow at least 48 hours for review. Any disturbance or work within the public right-of-way requires a Right-of-Way and Driveway Permit. Concord lists right-of-way permit application fees from $50.00 to $200.00, with additional costs possible for road openings, and the permit season runs from April 1 – November 15. Concord’s Construction Noise Bylaw allows non-public construction activity only between 7:00 AM and 8:00 PM on weekdays and Saturdays and between 8:00 AM and 6:00 PM on Sundays and listed holidays.


Code Enforcement Division
141 Keyes Road, Concord, MA 01742
Phone: (978) 318-3280
Official Website: Permit Applications & Forms

  • Right-of-way permits are required before occupying or disturbing the public way
  • Building-permit review should be planned with at least 48 hours of lead time
  • Debris-related work must comply with the town’s permit and construction-noise requirements

Electronics Disposal & E-Waste Recycling Laws in Massachusetts

Massachusetts bans disposal of electronics such as cathode ray tubes in ordinary disposal streams through the MassDEP Waste Disposal Bans. Residents and businesses should use approved recycling pathways identified through the Commonwealth’s How & Where to Recycle guidance instead of placing electronic devices in regular trash. Concord’s local recycling and diversion pages separate batteries, fluorescent lamps, mercury-containing devices, and other special materials from ordinary solid waste, and the town’s Holiday Recycling Tips page notes that the Goodwill trailer at Crosby’s Marketplace accepts desktop computers, printers, scanners, and speakers for recycling.

  • Electronics should not be placed in ordinary trash loads
  • State guidance for approved recycling options is provided through How & Where to Recycle
  • Concord also separates bulbs, batteries, and mercury-containing devices through designated drop-off programs

Mattress Disposal Regulations & Recycling Options in Concord

Concord provides two official mattress-recycling options through the Mattress Recycling program. For curbside pickup, the town partners with UTEC, which offers pickup once a month at a cost of $45 per item, with payment made directly to UTEC online. On pickup day, the mattress must be placed on the curb by 7am, and drivers do not enter private property to collect mattresses or box springs left on porches, behind locked gates, or in similar locations. For drop-off, residents may schedule an appointment with Concord Public Works at (978) 318-3240 and bring mattresses and box springs to the compost site at 755 Walden Street during operating hours of 3-6 PM on Wednesdays and 9 AM to 3 PM on Saturdays. The compost-site fee is $36.00/Unit, and the town states that each mattress or box spring is a separate item.

  • Monthly curbside pickup is available through UTEC at $45 per item
  • Drop-off at 755 Walden Street is by appointment and costs $36.00/Unit
  • Mattresses are banned from disposal in Massachusetts and must be recycled through the designated program

Appliance Removal & Refrigerant Recovery Requirements in Concord

Appliances that contain refrigerants must be handled under federal Clean Air Act Section 608, which prohibits intentional venting during servicing or disposal. Massachusetts also bans disposal of white goods in ordinary disposal streams through the MassDEP Waste Disposal Bans. Concord’s waste pages separate restricted materials from ordinary municipal solid waste, so appliances should be routed through compliant recycling or recovery channels rather than mixed junk loads. Residents and property managers handling cooling equipment should make sure refrigerants are properly recovered before disposal.

  • Refrigerant-containing appliances must comply with EPA Section 608
  • White goods are included in Massachusetts waste-disposal restrictions
  • Appliances should be separated from ordinary junk loads and routed to proper recovery programs

Construction Debris Sorting & Material Separation Requirements in Concord

Construction and demolition debris is not collected at the curb in Concord. The town’s Construction & Demolition Recycling page states that materials such as wood, metal, asphalt, clean gypsum wallboard, brick, and concrete are banned from disposal at landfills in Massachusetts and should be recycled through appropriate outlets. The page also notes that additional materials, including asphalt shingles, carpeting, and ceiling tiles, are under consideration for classification as waste-ban materials. Concord identifies recycling pathways for these materials, including asphalt shingles recycled into hot-mix asphalt for paving, drywall used in cement or gypsum wallboard manufacture, wood re-milled or recycled into particle board, mulch, furniture, and other wood products, and concrete recycled into pavement aggregate and cinder blocks.

  • Construction and demolition debris must be kept out of curbside collection
  • Wood, metal, asphalt, clean gypsum wallboard, brick, and concrete are landfill-banned materials in Massachusetts
  • Debris loads should be sorted for recycling rather than mixed into ordinary solid-waste disposal

How Massachusetts Statewide Waste Reduction Goals Impact Concord Services

Massachusetts is working toward a statewide goal of diverting 780 thousand tons of food waste and organic material from disposal per year by 2030, and the state says food waste makes up approximately 20% of trash from homes and businesses through Home and Municipal Composting. Concord’s local programs support those goals through yard-waste recycling, backyard composting, reuse, and special recycling programs. The Backyard Composting page explains that Concord Public Works sells two styles of home compost bins and states that organic material begins to turn to compost in 3 to 6 months. The Food-Waste Drop-Off Pilot page states that the Community Compost Pilot Program ended in July 2025 after contamination and overflow issues, and that 9.6% of Concord households currently have contracts for curbside composting through private vendors.

  • Massachusetts is targeting diversion of 780 thousand tons of food waste and organics per year by 2030
  • Concord promotes backyard composting, yard-waste drop-off, reuse, and recycling as part of local diversion efforts
  • The town’s food-waste pilot has ended, but private curbside composting remains available


Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection
One Winter Street, Boston, MA 02108
Phone: (617) 292-5500
Official Website: Massachusetts Department of Environmental Protection

Regional & Federal Oversight: EPA Region 1 and RCRA Compliance

Concord falls under the jurisdiction of EPA Region 1 – New England, and federal hazardous-waste oversight is governed through the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act (RCRA). EPA Region 1 lists its main office at 5 Post Office Square, Suite 100, Boston, MA 02109-3912 and provides regional regulatory assistance for New England communities and businesses. The EPA’s RCRA program governs hazardous-waste identification, storage, and disposal and also covers universal-waste categories such as batteries, fluorescent lamps, and mercury-containing devices that require separate handling.

  • RCRA governs hazardous-waste management and related federal compliance requirements
  • EPA Region 1 provides regional oversight and assistance for regulated waste issues in New England
  • Universal waste includes batteries, bulbs, and mercury-containing devices


EPA New England (Region 1)
5 Post Office Square, Suite 100, Boston, MA 02109-3912
Phone: (617) 918-1111
Official Website: EPA New England