
Roofing dumpster rental in Bowling Green
Need a 20-yard roll-off dropped quickly for your Bowling Green roofing crew? We use a lowboy for fast delivery and swap-out.
Roofing Tear-off Dumpster Sizing by Squares
How big a container do you actually need for a 25-square roof tear-off in Bowling Green? The rule is simple: one square of asphalt shingles equals roughly two-thirds of a cubic yard. Our low-wall roll-off works well for loading; a 20-yard container handles the tonnage for most homes. We set the bin exactly where you need it.

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 in a tight driveway and keeps shingle weight within legal tonnage for 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 is our roofing workhorse, featuring low side walls so crews can ground-throw shingles without extra 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
A 30-yard bin keeps big tear-offs moving when a second haul-out would stall crew demobilization on tight timelines.
Asphalt Shingle Weight and Tonnage Planning
The three-tab shingle averages 250 pounds per square; architectural laminate runs closer to 400, so a 25-square tear-off lands between three and five tons before underlayment. Most roofers route that tonnage in a roofing dumpster sized to stay inside the hooklift truck’s weight limit on a single pickup run. How does that translate to a 10-yard?
When you mix shingle debris with framing or sheathing offcuts, we route that container to our general c&d debris service—it is a different process than a pure asphalt tear-off, so just let the dispatcher know what you are loading.

Driveway Placement for Roofing Crew Workflow
We angle the swing-door of your roll-off toward the eave to keep the working lane clear in Bowling Green. By placing Driveway Boards under all rollers before the container touches concrete, we protect your driveway from heavy loads. Our crew stages a six-foot tarp perimeter for a clean nail sweep after the job. Use our roof tear-off container sizing guide to plan your site, and check the asphalt shingle disposal best practices guide to finish correctly.
Drop angle
Rear door toward the roof line
Set the swing-door end facing the eave where your crew is working to align walk-in loading with the ground-throw 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 the stress. For these jobs, we route a reinforced 30-yard bin with a heavier floor plate; we cap the fill volume well below the visual rim to keep axle weight legal. Our lowboy transport ensures this setup sits level on-site. We also manage your general construction debris service for mixed loads when the roof is finished.

Same-day Pickup for Fast Roof Project Turnover
Tear-offs move fast; the roll-off shouldn’t slow crews down. Dispatch coordinates same-day haul-out to match the crew’s demobilization window so the container frees the driveway for inspection or gutter reinstall before the homeowner arrives. Our Bowling Green crews route the swap-out for a clean site!