Junk Removal in Woodstock, NY
Woodstock isn't a suburb of anywhere, and its stuff reflects that. Half of what we load off Tinker Street or up Ohayo Mountain Road wouldn't exist in another town. Kilns, screen-printing frames, half-finished sculpture, sound gear from the last three decades of the local music scene, and the ordinary basement and attic contents underneath all of it.
Our trucks reach the driveways most haulers don't want. Mead's Mountain, Wittenberg Road, the dirt-and-gravel spurs off Zena — if a passenger vehicle can get up it, we can get up it. Second homes owned by weekenders from the city are a real part of Woodstock work: absentee clearouts scheduled by phone, keys left with a caretaker, before-and-after photos sent back.
What we haul in Woodstock
Full attic and basement cleanouts from A-frames and older mountain cottages. Studio cleanouts — furniture, worktables, art supplies, and equipment nobody wants to touch. Old appliances and e-waste from second homes turning over between owners. Storm-downed limbs and yard debris after nor'easters roll through the Catskill foothills.
Absentee-owner clearouts
You don't need to be at the house. Book by phone, tell us where the key is or leave it with a neighbor, and we send a photo when the job's done. Woodstock has more second-home owners than any town on our list, and this is how most of them use us.
The honest DIY option
The Woodstock Transfer Station accepts self-hauled loads with a town permit. If you own a pickup and the load is small, that's usually the cheaper route. Where we come in: no permit, no borrowed truck, no separating scrap from trash from electronics, and no coming back for a second trip when it turns out to be more than one load.
Pricing
Volume-based — you pay for the truck space your load takes up. Free upfront quote, exact price confirmed on arrival before any lifting starts. No hidden fees. No minimum charge — a single item gets the same free upfront quote as a full truckload.
Where it goes
Usable furniture is offered for donation first. Scrap metal is recycled. Electronics ride our certified e-waste route. The remainder goes to the transfer station. That's the honest chain — nothing invented, nothing dressed up.
