Upfront Rubbish Removal
The quote sheet

Your job, written down

Answer these the way you'd answer at the front door. The sheet takes your job down as you go, reads back the size of the load in plain words, and shows the plan we'd run. The figure itself is set the honest way, by looking, and it goes to you in writing before anything is lifted.

Upfront pencil mark Quote sheet · first copy
The place
The pile
What's behind it?
Anything in the pile? Pick all that apply
Behind the sheet

How the figure actually gets set

Every quote we write comes from looking at the load, not from a rate card of guesses. Three things move a rubbish figure, and none of them is time on the clock:

  • Volume. How much truck the load fills. That's why the sheet reads back van loads and truck loads instead of numbers.
  • Access. A kerbside pile and an under-house crawl are different jobs. Lifts, stairs, docks and long carries all get counted before the figure is written, never discovered after.
  • What's in it. Fridges, TVs and e-waste have their own regulated route to facilities licensed to take them, and dense loads like tile rubble weigh what they weigh. It all goes on the sheet up front.

Once those three are on paper, the figure is one number for the whole job: lifting, loading, tip fees and the sweep on the way out. If a load turns out bigger than described, we re-quote before we keep going. What you agree to is what you pay.

More straight answers in the guides

A straight answer costs nothing

Tell us what needs to go and where it is. We come back with a plan and a fixed price, in writing, and nothing gets lifted until you have agreed it.

Get your price in writing

Your enquiry goes straight to the crew, and we ring you back on the number you leave.

The quote sheet Get a price