
Roofing dumpster rental in Brandywine
Need a roll-off dropped fast when your Brandywine roof tear-off wraps? We set the container on the driveway, then pull it for a clean swap-out.
Roofing Tear-off Dumpster Sizing by Squares
How big a roll-off do you actually need for a 25-square tear-off? Our 20-yard container is the standard for Brandywine roofing jobs; count on two-thirds of a cubic yard per square of asphalt shingles. The low-wall roll-off makes loading easier: you should always watch your tonnage to avoid extra fees. Keep your project moving by choosing the right size.

15-Yard Roofing Dumpster
- Capacity: 15 cubic yards
- Fits: 15–20 squares of asphalt shingle
- Best for: Single-layer ranch and bungalow tear-offs
Our 10-yard can fits a tight driveway and manages heavy shingle weight within a single haul for you.

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 is the roofing workhorse because low side walls let crews ground-throw shingles with less scaffolding.

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
The 30-yard bin handles larger tear-offs so crews can demobilize fast—no second haul-out delay.
Asphalt Shingle Weight and Tonnage Planning
The three-tab shingle averages 250 pounds per square, 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? Hooklift trucks route smaller cans to cap the weight limit inside a single pickup, keeping the haul inside federal road limits without overage fees.
When you mix shingle debris with framing or sheathing offcuts, we route the load into a general c&d debris service. This container requires a different disposal site—one that handles mixed waste rather than pure asphalt tear-offs—to ensure compliance.

Driveway Placement for Roofing Crew Workflow
We position the roll-off so the swing-door faces the eave to allow your crew to ground-throw shingles directly into the bin. We always place wooden planks under the rollers to protect your concrete in Brandywine. By angling the can and setting a six-foot tarp perimeter for the nail sweep, we ensure a clean work lane. Review our roof tear-off container sizing and follow this asphalt shingle disposal best practices guide for your site.
Drop angle
Rear door toward the roof line
Set the swing-door end of the bin to face the eave for efficient walk-in loading and simpler ground-throw debris disposal.
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 the magnetic sweepers on the tarp side so nail cleanup runs in parallel with loading your heavy debris.

Tile, Slate, and Metal Roof Tear-off Containers
Concrete tile, natural slate, and standing-seam metal weigh heavily; these materials 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 so the axle weight stays legal. We haul these using a lowboy to keep transport level. We also provide our general construction debris service for mixed loads.

Same-day Pickup for Fast Roof Project Turnover
Tear-offs run on tight schedules; we sync the same-day haul-out with the crew’s demobilization window to free the driveway for inspection or gutter reinstall. The roll-off gets swapped out fast, and our Brandywine crews route trucks to keep the site clear before the homeowner arrives. No waiting on the container to bottleneck the job.