§ Alaska · Volume 8

Dumpster rental
in Alaska.

13
Haulers
8
Cities
$325
Median, 20-yd
§ 01

About Alaska.

Alaska's 663,268 square miles make it by far the largest U.S. state, but most construction activity is concentrated in the Southcentral region around Anchorage and the Mat-Su Valley. Permafrost underlies approximately 80% of the state's land area, creating extraordinary construction challenges — building on frozen ground requires pilings, insulated foundations, and specialized techniques to prevent thaw settlement. The freeze-thaw cycle in Anchorage and Fairbanks is severe, with freeze depths of several feet driving significant infrastructure repair demand each spring. Seismic activity is another major factor; Alaska experiences more earthquakes than any other U.S. state, and post-earthquake debris removal is a recurring need.

Alaska's construction market operates under constraints unlike any other state — the short building season (roughly May through September in most regions), extreme material and labor costs, and the logistical complexity of serving remote communities shape every project. The Anchorage metro accounts for the vast majority of statewide residential and commercial construction activity. Fairbanks, Juneau, and Wasilla are secondary markets. Military installations including Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson and Fort Wainwright generate significant construction and renovation activity. Oil industry infrastructure on the North Slope and in the Kenai Peninsula also creates periodic large-scale debris and waste removal needs.

Dumpster rental in Alaska is heavily concentrated in the Anchorage Bowl and the Mat-Su Valley. Anchorage requires permits for containers placed in public rights-of-way through the municipality's Development Services Department. Given the state's geography, many rural and remote communities are not served by standard dumpster rental companies, and waste disposal often relies on transfer stations and barge transport. The construction and demolition waste stream in Alaska is regulated by the Alaska Department of Environmental Conservation. Major metro markets include Anchorage, Wasilla, Palmer, Fairbanks, and Juneau, with smaller markets in Kenai, Soldotna, and Kodiak.

§ 02

Biggest cities in Alaska.

Sorted by number of local haulers serving each metro. A–Z index
§ 03

What you'll pay in Alaska.

Average price for a 7-day rental from local haulers in the state. Alaska cost guide
10 yd
Bath / small cleanout
$300–$450 / week
20 yd
Kitchen / roofing
$400–$550 / week
30 yd
Whole-home reno
$450–$625 / week
40 yd
New construction
$475–$725 / week
§ 04 · Every city

All 8 Alaska cities.

A1 city
F1 city
J1 city
K2 cities
W1 city