Your city almost certainly won't collect that treadmill. Most homeowners find that out only after they've already moved it.
Bulk pickup programs in most U.S. cities cap weight at 75 to 150 pounds. A standard home treadmill starts at 150 pounds and can reach 350. That's why treadmill pickup requests get denied regularly, and why uncollected equipment ends up sitting at the curb for days before anyone notifies you.
Jiffy Junk's full-service treadmill removal runs $100 to $300. Our two-person licensed and insured crew picks it up from any room in your home, handles all the heavy lifting, and disposes of everything responsibly. The price you're quoted is the price you pay, with nothing added at the door.
Is curbside free?
Sometimes — if your city accepts treadmills, which many don't.
Is it cheaper than full service?
Rarely, once you factor in wait time, effort, and risk of refusal.
What does full service cost?
Possible — but at 150–350 lbs, injury risk is real.
Will Jiffy Junk take it from any room?
Yes. Basement, upper floor, garage. All included in your quote.
What happens to the treadmill?
Donated to charity if it still works. Recycled if it doesn't.
How fast can I book?
Same-day or next-day in most areas. Book in 60 seconds online.
Most treadmills weigh 200–350 lbs — above the curbside weight limit in most U.S. cities, which typically caps at 75–150 lbs.
Municipal bulk pickup usually requires 2–9 weeks' notice and may reject treadmills outright without prior warning.
Leaving a refused item at the curb can result in a city fine. Confirm your municipality's rules before you put anything out.
Treadmill motors and electronics make improper disposal an environmental and legal concern — less than 23% of global e-waste is formally recycled each year.
Overexertion is the number-one cause of DIY moving injuries. A treadmill is among the heaviest items in any home.
Full-service removal from Jiffy Junk costs $100–$300, covers any room in the house, and includes eco-friendly disposal — all for a locked-in price.
Same-day and next-day appointments are available in most Jiffy Junk service areas nationwide.
Bulk item pickup is a separate, scheduled service for oversized household items your regular bin won't take. You request it through 311 or your city's website, get assigned a date, and wait. It runs on its own schedule, separate from your weekly collection.
The wait is usually the first surprise. Most cities schedule two to nine weeks out. Spring and post-holiday months push that even further. Miss your assigned window and you start the cycle over again.
Before you request a curbside bulk pickup for a treadmill, confirm these with your municipality:
Many cities charge $25 to $75 per bulk item on top of standard service fees
Same-day requests aren't accepted in most programs
Some cities, Denver and Portland among them, offer no regular bulk pickup program at all — residents must arrange private removal
Treadmills typically exceed the weight limits cities set for curbside pickup. That's the part most homeowners find out too late. Most programs cap bulk items at 75 to 150 pounds. A standard home treadmill starts at 150. Commercial units hit 350 or more.
Weight isn't the only consideration. Treadmill motors and electronic consoles put them in a gray area between standard bulk items and e-waste. Rules vary by city and they're not always easy to find before pickup day.
Getting this wrong comes with real consequences:
Refused items can trigger a fine from your local sanitation department
A rejected pickup means rescheduling and restarting the wait
Improper electronic disposal carries legal risk in some states
Confirm your municipality's exact rules before placing any treadmill at the curb. If the answer isn't clear, our treadmill removal service takes care of everything for you.
Professional treadmill removal is priced by equipment size, location, and how accessible the item is. A compact or folding treadmill under 150 pounds typically runs $100 to $150. Standard home models between 150 and 250 pounds come in at $150 to $250. Commercial-grade units at 250 pounds and above range from $200 to $350. If you're clearing a full home gym with multiple pieces of equipment, volume pricing is available. Jiffy Junk gives you a free upfront quote before we touch anything — the number you're quoted is the number you pay, with nothing added at the door.
When you add up the wait time, the physical effort, and the real risk of rejection, curbside often costs more than it looks on paper. Upfront, curbside can run $0 to $75 if your city accepts the item — but scheduling typically takes two to nine weeks, you're responsible for all the heavy lifting yourself, and many cities decline treadmills outright. Leave a refused item at the curb and you're looking at a potential fine on top of the wasted effort. Jiffy Junk full-service removal runs $100 to $300, with same-day or next-day availability in most areas. Our two-person licensed and insured crew carries it out from wherever it's sitting, donates or recycles it responsibly, and locks your price in before we arrive. No surprises at the door — on either the schedule or the bill.
“We’ve been doing this since 2014. The situation we see most often is a homeowner who got the treadmill to the curb or the driveway, then found out their city won’t collect it. At that point, they’ve already done the hardest part themselves.
Curbside works when the conditions line up: the city confirms they accept treadmills, the equipment is near the front door, and someone is there to help move it. For most treadmills in most homes, that combination doesn’t come together. Upper floors, basements, back of a garage — that’s the typical situation we walk into.
Our crew charges $100 to $300. They go to wherever the treadmill is, carry it out, and make sure it’s recycled or donated responsibly. That price is often less than people expect — and considerably less than the injury costs we’ve seen come from homeowners trying to move 250 pounds down a flight of stairs alone.
Full-service removal tends to be cheaper than it looks. Curbside tends to be harder than it looks. That’s been our experience across thousands of jobs."
We've put together the most useful verified resources to help you make an informed decision, from municipal pickup rules to eco-friendly disposal options.
An authoritative guide covering when to sell, donate, or dispose of fitness equipment, including how recycling rates for exercise equipment compare to other household items and what to check before disposal.
Official NYC DSNY guidance on bulk item curbside collection — what qualifies, how item limits work, and how the scheduling process runs. A useful reference for understanding how municipal pickup programs operate in practice.
https://www.nyc.gov/site/dsny/collection/get-rid-of/large-items.page
WM's official bulk item pickup page, covering scheduling, accepted items, and how large-item hauling complements regular residential collection. Helpful for comparing municipal and private pickup options.
https://www.wm.com/us/en/home/bulk-trash-pickup
A practical guide to how bulk pickup works across U.S. cities, including item eligibility, weight restrictions, scheduling timelines, and what happens when items are refused. Essential reading before placing a treadmill at the curb.
https://trashpickupscheduleday.com/bulk-pickup-rules-scheduling/
An interactive lookup tool from Washington D.C.'s Zero Waste program that shows how to dispose of specific items, including fitness equipment. Check your city's equivalent tool to confirm treadmill pickup eligibility locally.
https://zerowaste.dc.gov/what-goes-where
The typical weight range of a home treadmill — well above the 75–150 lb bulk item limits enforced by most U.S. municipalities. This weight gap is the primary reason curbside pickup regularly fails for fitness equipment, even in cities that accept other large items.
Source: Dropcurb: Exercise Equipment Removal Data
Of the 62 million tonnes of electronic waste generated globally each year, less than a quarter gets formally collected and recycled. Treadmills, with their motors, wiring, and electronic consoles, fall into this category. Choosing a removal service that donates or recycles keeps your old equipment out of that statistic.
Source: WeCycle: How to Dispose of Exercise Equipment
Overexertion injuries account for more than 30% of all moving-related injuries, with most happening during heavy item relocation according to Bureau of Labor Statistics data. A standard home treadmill weighs as much as two full-size refrigerators. Attempting to move one without professional equipment and technique is one of the leading causes of DIY home injury.
Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics via Element Moving & Storage
Curbside treadmill removal is not reliably cheaper than full service. Let's put that plainly.
If your city explicitly accepts treadmills, you can get it safely to the curb, and you're willing to wait two to nine weeks, curbside costs nothing upfront. But that's a specific combination of conditions that doesn't apply to most treadmill removals.
For everyone else, full-service removal from Jiffy Junk costs $100 to $300, includes all the lifting, protects your floors and walls, and guarantees responsible disposal. The math changes when you account for the actual effort and risk involved.
We've handled thousands of treadmill removals since 2014. The customers who called us after trying curbside first are, almost without exception, the most relieved when we show up.
A: Jiffy Junk charges $100 to $300 for treadmill removal, depending on the equipment size, your location, and whether we need to carry it out from a basement or upper floor. You get a free upfront quote before we arrive, and the price you're quoted is the price you pay.
A: Many won't. Most municipal bulk pickup programs cap weight at 75–150 lbs, and a standard home treadmill starts at 150 lbs. Some cities also classify treadmills as e-waste rather than standard bulk items. Always confirm with your local sanitation department before placing one at the curb — unapproved items can result in fines and a missed pickup.
A: Most home treadmills weigh 150–250 lbs, and commercial units exceed 350 lbs. Overexertion injuries account for more than 30% of all moving-related accidents. Moving a treadmill without proper equipment and a trained partner is a real injury risk, especially on stairs. We recommend letting a professional removal team handle it.
A: Yes. Our licensed and insured two-person crew carries equipment out from any room in your home — basement, upper floor, garage, or tight space. That access is included in your quoted price. Nothing extra at the door.
A: We're committed to eco-friendly disposal on every job. If your treadmill still works, we work to donate it to local charities and community organizations. When donation isn't possible, we recycle metal components and dispose of electronic parts responsibly. We keep as much out of landfills as we can — that's the Jiffy Junk difference.
A: Same-day and next-day appointments are available in most of our service areas. Book online at jiffyjunk.com in under 60 seconds, or call 844-JIFFY-JUNK (844-543-3966) for the fastest scheduling.
A: You can, but you'll need to confirm the rental company accepts heavy fitness equipment and e-waste — many have restrictions. You'd also need to do all the heavy lifting yourself. For a single treadmill, full-service removal from Jiffy Junk is typically more cost-effective and requires far less effort on your end.
Jiffy Junk's White Glove Treadmill Removal Service is fast, affordable, and completely stress-free. Our licensed and insured crew picks it up from wherever it's sitting, handles all the heavy lifting, and takes care of responsible disposal — for a price that's locked in before we arrive.