§ Louisiana · Volume 64

Dumpster rental
in Louisiana.

138
Haulers
64
Cities
$463
Median, 20-yd
§ 01

About Louisiana.

Louisiana's 52,378 square miles sit almost entirely on the Gulf Coastal Plain, with elevation averaging just a few feet above sea level in most of the state. The Mississippi River Delta, the Atchafalaya Basin, and the coastal marshes make Louisiana one of the most geologically dynamic states — land is simultaneously subsiding, eroding, and (in some areas) actively building. Soft, compressible deltaic clays and organic soils make foundation engineering extraordinarily challenging; most structures in New Orleans and along the coast require deep piles driven to stable soil. The Gulf of Mexico hurricane threat is the single most significant driver of dumpster rental demand, with events like Katrina (2005), Ida (2021), and Laura (2020) each generating millions of tons of debris.

Louisiana's construction market is anchored by the New Orleans-Metairie metro and the Baton Rouge metro. The petrochemical corridor along the Mississippi River between New Orleans and Baton Rouge ("Cancer Alley") hosts one of the highest concentrations of industrial construction in the United States, with refinery turnarounds, chemical plant expansions, and LNG export terminal construction generating substantial contractor activity. The state's port infrastructure — including the Port of New Orleans and the Port of South Louisiana — requires ongoing construction and maintenance. Post-hurricane rebuilding creates periodic surges in residential construction demand, particularly in coastal parishes.

Louisiana municipalities and parishes handle dumpster placement regulations locally. New Orleans requires permits for containers in public rights-of-way through the Department of Public Works. Baton Rouge, Shreveport, Lafayette, and Lake Charles each have their own permit processes. The Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality (LDEQ) regulates C&D waste disposal. Louisiana's unique civil law tradition (derived from French and Spanish law rather than English common law) creates some differences in property and construction law that contractors should understand. Major dumpster rental markets include New Orleans (and Jefferson, St. Tammany, St. Bernard parishes), Baton Rouge, Shreveport, Lafayette, Lake Charles, and Kenner.

§ 02

Biggest cities in Louisiana.

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

What you'll pay in Louisiana.

Average price for a 7-day rental from local haulers in the state. Louisiana cost guide
10 yd
Bath / small cleanout
$325–$475 / week
20 yd
Kitchen / roofing
$375–$550 / week
30 yd
Whole-home reno
$425–$625 / week
40 yd
New construction
$450–$700 / week