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Junk B Gone expands same-day junk removal across Seattle metro

15 hours ago

By AI, Created 7:30 AM UTC, May 21, 2026, /AGP/ – Junk B Gone has expanded same-day and next-day junk removal across Seattle, the Eastside and South Snohomish County, aiming to meet faster turnaround needs for property managers, agents, contractors and homeowners. The company says the broader routing now covers more neighborhoods, with pricing still based on truck volume and service available six days a week.

Why it matters: - Faster junk hauling can keep apartment turnovers, home listings, construction projects and estate cleanouts on schedule. - The expansion gives Seattle-area customers more short-notice access to removal for bulky items, debris and full-property cleanouts. - Junk B Gone says the updated routing model is meant to improve dispatch efficiency and reduce trips per job.

What happened: - Junk B Gone expanded same-day junk removal coverage across the greater Seattle metro, the Eastside and South Snohomish County. - The service now reaches downtown Seattle, surrounding neighborhoods, Eastside cities and north-corridor communities, with bookings handled six days a week. - The expansion is operational immediately and does not require advance enrollment or membership.

The details: - The company offers same-day or next-day pickup for most bookings placed before noon. - Seattle coverage includes Ballard, Capitol Hill, Queen Anne, Magnolia, Fremont, Wallingford, Greenwood, the University District, Ravenna, Wedgwood, Lake City, Northgate, Montlake, South Lake Union, Beacon Hill, Columbia City, Georgetown, West Seattle, Sand Point and Madison Park. - Eastside coverage includes Bellevue, Kirkland, Redmond, Sammamish, Issaquah, Mercer Island, Medina, Hunts Point, Clyde Hill and Woodinville. - North of Seattle, same-day service reaches Bothell, Shoreline, Edmonds, Lynnwood, Mountlake Terrace, Mill Creek, Lake Stevens, Monroe, Snohomish and Everett. - South and east coverage extends into Renton, Maple Valley and surrounding South King County markets. - Coverage maps and area-specific availability can be confirmed by phone or text when scheduling. - The company says it expanded routing density rather than simply adding trucks. - Junk B Gone uses vehicles about twice the size of national franchise competitors in the same regional market, which the company says reduces trips per job and speeds turnaround. - Most residential same-day jobs range from $125 to $600. - Single-item pickups start at $99. - Pricing is based on truck volume, not time, weight or itemized line items. - The company quotes prices on-site before work begins. - Junk B Gone does not add disposal fees, fuel surcharges or labor charges beyond the quoted price. - Customers can call or text 206-722-4285, send photos for a preliminary estimate, or use the online quote form. - Text-based photo quotes are especially common for hot tubs, pianos, refrigerators and oversized furniture. - The company handles furniture, mattresses, appliances, hot tubs, pianos, televisions, electronics, yard waste, scrap metal and old tires. - Whole-room and whole-property jobs include garage, basement and attic cleanouts, full home cleanouts, estate cleanouts and hoarder house remediations. - Commercial work includes office cleanouts, office furniture removal, warehouse decommissioning, retail buildout debris, apartment turnovers and construction debris removal. - Junk B Gone also handles items that Seattle municipal bulk pickup programs often do not accept, including appliances, electronics, construction debris, mattresses, hot tubs and mixed material. - Seattle Public Utilities offers limited bulk item collection on an advance-scheduled basis with category restrictions and curbside placement requirements. - Junk B Gone sorts all collected loads at its Seattle facilities before disposal. - Usable items are routed to Goodwill and Second Spark. - Scrap metals go to local recyclers, yard waste goes to Cedar Grove for composting and electronics go through certified e-waste channels. - The company says about 80 percent of collected items are diverted from landfills. - Junk B Gone also runs a free electronics drop-off program at its Seattle facility for TVs, monitors, computers and small electronics.

Between the lines: - The expansion reflects rising demand from landlords, agents, contractors and homeowners who need same-day action on tight deadlines. - Property managers need fast clears between tenant move-outs and new leases. - Real estate agents benefit when homes are emptied before photography and listing launch. - Contractors need debris removed before follow-on trades and final inspections. - Residential demand is strongest for estate cleanouts, urgent decluttering and oversized-item removal. - The company says many same-day requests arrive on Mondays and Tuesdays after weekend decisions to clean out homes. - The broad service area and larger trucks suggest Junk B Gone is leaning on route density, not just fleet growth, to compete on response time. - The environmental handling message is part of the pitch: speed does not replace diversion and recycling practices.

What’s next: - Customers seeking same-day service are advised to book as early in the day as possible to maximize routing flexibility. - Afternoon and evening pickups are also often available, depending on truck availability and job complexity. - Pricing stays the same across same-day, next-day and standard booking windows. - Junk B Gone plans to keep using its Seattle facility for sorting, recycling and electronics drop-off as part of its disposal process.

The bottom line: - Junk B Gone is betting that faster routing, wider coverage and transparent pricing will capture more of Seattle’s urgent junk-hauling demand without changing its disposal model.

Disclaimer: This article was produced by AGP Wire with the assistance of artificial intelligence based on original source content and has been refined to improve clarity, structure, and readability. This content is provided on an “as is” basis. While care has been taken in its preparation, it may contain inaccuracies or omissions, and readers should consult the original source and independently verify key information where appropriate. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, investment, or other professional advice.

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