What the Walkthrough Looks Like
House cleanouts go better when people know what to expect. The walkthrough is the part most customers haven’t seen before — here’s exactly how it works.
We go room by room and you show us everything that's coming out. Point to what stays, point to what goes. If you're unsure about something, tell us — we'll give you an honest read on whether it's worth hauling or could be donated instead.
Based on volume, we quote a final price before anything moves. No adjustments at the end, no "we found more than expected." If the price doesn't work for you, we walk away — no obligation.
You don't carry a thing. The crew does all the lifting, disassembly, and loading. We're careful with walls, floors, and doorframes — especially on occupied homes where the structure matters to you.
We do a final walk of every area we worked in and sweep out debris. We don't leave when the truck is full. What the space looks like when we leave is part of the job.
A written receipt is provided at job completion. If you need photos for estate, probate, or real estate purposes — request them when we arrive and we'll document the cleared space.
What Whole-House Cleanouts Usually Involve That People Don’t Expect
Beyond the obvious furniture and appliances, most whole-house cleanouts also include:
- Attic and crawl space contents — boxes, old luggage, holiday items, and insulation debris
- Garage items beyond standard junk — paint cans and chemicals need special handling (see what we don’t take for restricted items)
- Shed and outbuilding contents — lawn equipment, tools, outdoor furniture
- Closet items from prior occupants — clothing, shoes, personal effects left by previous owners or tenants
We work through the whole property systematically. If something turns out to be restricted — certain chemicals, hazardous materials — we’ll flag it on the walkthrough, not after loading has started.