The $3,500 build, for dumpster rental and hauling businesses

The Website the Broker Sites Can't Fake

We design and build a custom dumpster rental website: 40+ pages answering size, price, and delivery date for every town you serve, with booking, chat, a reviews engine, and instant callback wired in at launch, for $3,500 one-time. At handover you own all of it outright, the design, the pages, the domain, with no subscription required and no middleman between the search and your yard.

One-time payment · no subscription required · you own everything at launch

Every rental the brokers capture could be your truck at their price.

When a homeowner finally clears the garage or a roofer schedules a tear-off, the search is 'dumpster rental prices near me' or 'what size dumpster for a remodel,' and increasingly it is typed into ChatGPT or answered by Google's AI before a results page ever loads. Those engines read the pages that exist, and in most metros what they find is a national broker network's page, not the hauler who actually owns the cans.

Look at your current site the way a renter does. Can it say what a 20 yard commonly runs in your county, whether a driveway can take a 30, what a roofing tear-off needs, or whether a can is free this week? Most independent hauler sites are a homepage, a phone number, and one photo of a truck. The renter's three questions, size, price, date, go unanswered, so they land on a broker page that answers all three with your own service marked up.

A dumpster is rarely researched for weeks. The buyer often decides in one sitting, calls whoever answered their question, and books the first company that commits to a real delivery date. When a broker wins that moment, they resell the haul to a local truck at a discount, sometimes yours, and keep the difference. The hauler who out-answers the brokers on his own pages is the one positioned to keep the full rate, the customer, and the swap-outs that follow, instead of handing the broker the margin.

What your 40+ pages would be

01

A page for every can and every service

Individual pages for your 10, 15, 20, 30, and 40 yard roll-offs with real dimensions, weight limits, and what each size actually fits: a garage cleanout, a kitchen remodel, a 30-square tear-off. Plus pages for residential driveway rentals, construction containers, jobsite swap-out service, and cleanout hauling, each written to answer, not just list.

02

A page for every town your trucks reach

'Dumpster rental in [town]' pages for each community in your delivery radius, with delivery fees, driveway placement notes, and that town's permit reality. Brokers fake local with a forwarding number; a page that knows the county transfer station and which streets need a street-placement permit reads like the local company it is.

03

The price and size questions renters actually type

Pages built around the real searches: dumpster rental prices near me, what size dumpster for a remodel, do I need a permit to put a dumpster on the street, what can't go in a roll-off, how tonnage overage works. Published plainly with commonly-quoted ranges, these are the questions broker sites dodge and answer engines can actually read and cite.

04

Same-week delivery and the jobs that can't wait

Pages for the urgent triggers: same week dumpster delivery, a can on site before the roofing crew starts Monday, estate cleanouts on a closing deadline, storm debris hauls. Many of these renters aren't comparison shopping, they're checking who can commit to a date, so every one of these pages pairs the answer with live booking.

05

Proof you're the hauler, not the middleman

An anti-broker page that says it straight: our cans, our trucks, our drivers, with photos of the actual yard. Plus a printed fee table showing base rate, included tonnage, and overage cost, punctuality reviews from real drop-offs, and a contractor accounts page for the roofers and remodelers who need a fresh can every week.

A renter with a full driveway rarely fills out contact forms.

Dumpster rental is won on commitment, so booking with real dates matters most here. The renter doesn't want 'we'll get back to you,' they want to know a 20 yard can be in the driveway Saturday. Your booking system shows actual availability and takes the reservation with a delivery date, size, and address in hand, the same transaction the broker sites use to capture your market, working while you're at the transfer station or under a tarp on a tear-off.

The rest of the layer covers how this trade's calls actually happen. Instant callback is the sleeper: a renter often calls down a list and books with whoever responds, so a ring you miss mid-haul triggers an automatic callback within moments. Chat fields the 9pm 'what size for a deck tear-out' question using your real sizing guidance. And the reviews engine asks after every on-time drop, building the punctuality record renters check before trusting a date.

The Math on a $3,500 Build

The arithmetic is short. If your average haul commonly runs $450, the $3,500 build is covered after 8 hauls. With swap-out repeats, that is commonly a single contractor account's first month: one roofer who opens an account and swaps cans through a busy stretch can cover the whole website before his second invoice. Everything after that is a page you own, producing at full margin, with no broker skim on any of it.

Compare that to ad spend, where the meter runs every month and the calls stop the day the budget does. Pages don't work that way: once a town page or a size guide earns its place, it keeps answering searches without another dollar behind it. The honest part: new pages typically need two to four months to earn that place in results, so the time to build is before roofing season and spring cleanouts, not in the middle of them.

Straight answers.

Why is this $3,500 when agencies quote me $8,000 and site builders charge $50 a month?

Agencies price by the hour and commonly deliver a brochure: five pages, a stock photo of a dumpster that isn't yours, and a contact form. Site builders are cheap because you become the writer and the wiring crew: you are the one describing what a 20 yard actually fits and hand-building the booking form between hauls. This is a fixed-scope product we've built the process for: 40+ pages written around real dumpster searches, your can sizes, and your towns, plus booking, chat, reviews, and callback installed at launch. One price because the scope doesn't wander, and no subscription because you own the finished thing outright.

My domain is painted on every can I own. Do I have to start over?

No, and you shouldn't. A domain that has been on your cans and invoices for years carries history worth keeping, so we build on it and the new site goes live at the same address. If your current site already has a size guide or a town page that pulls calls, we keep and sharpen it instead of tossing it. And if you have no site at all, that works too: we register a domain in your name, not ours, and get it can-and-invoice ready, so there is never a day when someone else holds the keys to your own web address.

How long until the pages start pulling calls away from the brokers?

The build itself typically takes a few weeks from kickoff to launch. After that, honesty: new pages commonly need two to four months to earn their place in results, because engines have to find, read, and trust a page before they cite it, and nobody can promise when a given page overtakes a broker network in your metro. Booking and callback start functioning at launch for anyone who reaches the site. The brokers won your market by publishing the answers first; the same move is available to the company that actually owns the trucks.

Do I need your monthly plan to keep the site working?

No. The $3,500 build stands on its own: pages, design, booking, callback, and domain, fully handed over with nothing that expires. The monthly plan exists for owners who want us to keep operating it, feeding the reviews engine after every haul, adding town and question pages as your radius grows, and tracking how AI engines answer dumpster questions in your metro. Plenty of haulers take the build, run it themselves, and call us back when contractor season gets too busy to touch it.

One build. Yours forever.

Custom design for your dumpster rental and hauling business, 40+ pages built for how your customers search, and the infrastructure to catch every call.

One-time payment · kickoff this week · launched in about four weeks