
Roofing dumpster rental in Mesa
Need a roll-off dropped fast after your roof tear-off? We set the container on your Mesa driveway and haul it away the same day.
Roofing Tear-off Dumpster Sizing by Squares
How big a container do you actually need for a 25-square tear-off in Mesa? Our 20-yard container is the standard choice: calculate two-thirds of a cubic yard per square of asphalt shingles to manage the tonnage; use a low-wall roll-off to simplify loading. This rule works for most jobs across Maricopa, ensuring you avoid extra fees.

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 for shingle projects while keeping total weight within a single haul.

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 serves as a roofing workhorse with low side walls so crews can ground-throw shingles directly inside.

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
A 30-yard bin keeps bigger tear-offs moving without a second haul-out slowing crew demobilization.
Asphalt Shingle Weight and Tonnage Planning
Roofers know three-tab averages 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. A 10-Yard Roll-Off Container handles this load within its weight limit when the hooklift truck routes to the Dumpster & Roll-Off Container Rental fleet in Mesa, AZ. We set the container with driveway boards for safe placement and schedule a same-day swap-out if needed.
When a project mixes shingle debris with framing or sheathing offcuts, we route that container to a general construction & demolition service. Keeping these loads separate—rather than mixing them—ensures we handle your c&d debris according to local mandates.

Driveway Placement for Roofing Crew Workflow
We angle the swing-door end of each roll-off to face your eave; this allows the crew to drop shingles directly into the container. We place wooden planks under the rollers before the can touches your concrete to prevent any damage. Our team maintains a six-foot tarp perimeter for the nail sweep to keep your Mesa property clean. Check our roof tear-off container sizing or the asphalt shingle disposal best practices guide for more info.
Drop angle
Rear door toward the roof line
Set the swing-door end facing the eave where your crew works so walk-in loading and ground-throw share the same 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 heavy debris.

Tile, Slate, and Metal Roof Tear-off Containers
Concrete tile, natural slate, and standing-seam metal weigh heavily; they punish a container not built for that density. For these tear-offs, we route a reinforced 30-yard bin with heavier floor plates and thicker sides: we also utilize a lowboy for safe transit. We cap the fill volume well below the visual rim to maintain legal axle weight. When you need a general construction debris service for lighter mixed loads, we handle that as well.

Same-day Pickup for Fast Roof Project Turnover
Tear-offs run on tight crew schedules; the roll-off shouldn't be the bottleneck. Dispatch coordinates same-day haul-out around the crew's demobilization window so the container frees up for inspection or gutter reinstall before the homeowner shows up in Mesa. A quick swap-out or route adjustment keeps crews productive.