Best Junk Removal in Crosby, TX

Crosby's sprawling mix of 1970s–1990s Lake Houston subdivisions, rural tracts along the San Jacinto River corridor, and newer communities like Cedar Pointe creates a junk-removal landscape unlike any other pocket of Harris County — one where your HOA rules (or total lack of them) and your parcel's proximity to the 500-year floodplain determine exactly how, and how fast, debris must leave the property. Permits flow through the Harris County Engineering Department, not the City of Houston, and disposal must land at a TCEQ-permitted facility — details that matter when a hauler quotes you a price. Read on to understand the four issues Crosby homeowners actually run into.

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See the 10 Junk Removal Serving Crosby
Junk Removal serving Crosby, TX
Median home built
1985
Median home value
$202,700
FEMA flood zone
X500 (moderate)
Typical cost (est.)
$200–$650
Most common local issue
Storm woody debris and cut-and-leave slash from derecho and Beryl tree damage in mature lakefront subdivisions

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Based in Crosby

Also serving Crosby

Highly-rated pros based nearby who cover Crosby. Distance shown from the Crosby area.

Junk Removal in Crosby: What You Should Know

No City Bulk Pickup: Unincorporated Harris County Leaves You on Your Own

Why it matters to you

Because Crosby is entirely unincorporated Harris County, residents do not receive City of Houston scheduled bulk-item collection. Rural tracts and older town-core lots along FM 2100 that have no HOA private collection contract can find themselves with a broken appliance or an old sofa sitting in the driveway for weeks with no free municipal option to fall back on.

What a good pro does

A reputable junk-removal company operating in unincorporated Harris County must be registered with TCEQ as a municipal solid waste transporter and must deposit loads at a TCEQ-permitted transfer station — not an illegal roadside drop. Ask your hauler for their TCEQ registration number before scheduling. Single large-appliance pickups typically run $75–$150 (estimate); a full truckload of household junk averages $400–$650 (estimate).

Sources: Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Local HOA / deed restrictions (see area profile)

Subdivision-by-Subdivision HOA Rules on Dumpsters and Curbside Staging

Why it matters to you

Crosby has no area-wide HOA, but Indian Shores Property Owners Association, Crosby Farms Homeowners Association, and Sundance Cove Homeowners Association each maintain their own deed restrictions — some prohibiting roll-off containers in driveways outright, others limiting how long debris may sit curbside before triggering fines that fall on the homeowner, not the hauler. Directly adjacent rural lots often have zero restrictions, making the rules entirely lot-dependent.

What a good pro does

Before booking a hauler, pull your specific subdivision's deed restrictions from the Harris County Clerk's deed records and confirm whether a roll-off permit or written HOA approval is required. A good hauler will ask for your subdivision name at quote time, schedule same-day or next-day removal to stay inside any curbside window, and avoid staging on grass or landscaping that architectural review committees flag.

Sources: Local HOA / deed restrictions (see area profile), Municipal permit office (see area profile)

Post-Storm Woody Debris from Mature Lakefront Tree Canopies

Why it matters to you

The May 2024 derecho and Beryl in July 2024 hit the mature oak and pine canopy surrounding Lake Houston hard, dropping large limbs and whole trees across 1970s–1990s lakefront lots in communities like Indian Shores. Tree services typically cut and section the timber but leave the resulting slash piles, fence pickets, and damaged pergola framing for homeowners to address — and Harris County's unincorporated curbside collection does not reliably handle oversized woody debris.

What a good pro does

Hire a junk-removal crew specifically equipped with a wood-chipper or a dedicated debris trailer rated for slash, not just a standard household junk truck. Confirm the hauler will transport woody debris to a composting or green-waste facility rather than a standard landfill — TCEQ-permitted green-waste facilities often charge lower tipping fees than C&D landfills, a savings that should pass through to your estimate. Partial truckloads of storm debris typically run $200–$350 (estimate).

Sources: Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, Harris County Flood Control District

Aging-System Haul-Away in 1970s–1990s Lake Houston Subdivisions

Why it matters to you

Crosby's median home was built around 1985, and many Lake Houston subdivisions still carry original R-22 HVAC systems, galvanized water heaters, and oversized chest freezers accumulated over decades. Winter Storm Uri (February 2021) accelerated a wave of water-heater and air-handler replacements across these tracts, and slab-on-grade construction means every bulky unit must be wheeled through the living space with no basement or side-door egress — increasing labor time and damage risk to flooring.

What a good pro does

Look for a hauler who quotes a walk-through rate that accounts for stair-free but narrow-hallway slab homes, and confirm they handle R-22 equipment legally — refrigerant recovery is an EPA-regulated step that must occur before the compressor leaves the property. Whole-house estate clearouts in these older subdivisions, which often surface CRT televisions and fluorescent fixtures alongside HVAC units, typically run $400–$650 for a full truck (estimate) and may require a secondary e-waste drop under EPA rules.

Sources: Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, EPA Lead Renovation, Repair and Painting (RRP) Rule

Junk Removal in Crosby: What You Should Know

Hiring junk removal in Crosby? Crosby is a sprawling unincorporated community spanning decades of housing stock—from older town-core homes and 1970s–1990s Lake Houston subdivisions to 2010s–2020s new-build communities. Homeowners here face a patchwork of HOA requirements, deed restrictions, and flood risk that varies dramatically from lot to lot. Contractors should verify whether a property is in a deed-restricted subdivision, an unrestricted rural tract, or a lakefront community before scoping any project.

Housing era
Mixed
Foundation
Predominantly slab-on-grade for post-1960 subdivisions
Flood zone
FEMA Zone X500 (moderate flood risk) - source
Permits
Harris County Engineering Department (unincorporated Harris County)

Housing stock & systems

  • Building era

    Mixed: mid-20th-century town core, 1970s–1990s lake-oriented subdivisions, and 2000s–2020s new construction.

  • Typical style

    Production one- and two-story brick or brick-and-siding traditional suburban homes; ranch-style and lake-house variants near Lake Houston.

  • Foundations

    Predominantly slab-on-grade for post-1960 subdivisions; some pier-and-beam in older pre-1960 town-core and rural structures.

  • Common systems

    Older subdivisions (1970s–1990s) commonly have original copper or galvanized plumbing, R-22 HVAC systems nearing or past end-of-life, and 100–150 amp electrical panels. Newer communities like Cedar Pointe feature modern R-410A systems and 200-amp service.

  • What that means for repairs

    Older Lake Houston subdivisions see frequent storm-damage repair, HVAC replacement, and plumbing repiping. Newer subdivisions typically require only cosmetic updates. Flood-damaged properties in low-lying areas may need extensive drywall, insulation, and flooring restoration.

Permits & restrictions

  • Permit jurisdiction

    Harris County Engineering Department (unincorporated Harris County). Projects do not go through City of Houston permitting.

  • HOA & deed restrictions

    No single area-wide HOA. Individual subdivisions have mandatory HOAs including Indian Shores Property Owners Association, Crosby Farms Homeowners Association, and Sundance Cove Homeowners Association. Many rural tracts and older lots have no HOA at all.

  • Historic districts

    No City of Houston historic district designation confirmed. Crosby is unincorporated and not subject to HAHC oversight.

  • Contractor note

    Crosby is unincorporated Harris County, so permits are pulled through county engineering rather than the City of Houston. Contractors must verify subdivision-specific deed restrictions and HOA architectural review requirements, which vary widely from one community to the next.

Flood & weather

  • FEMA flood zone

    FEMA Zone X500 (moderate flood risk) - source: fema_nfhl. Proximity to the San Jacinto River, its tributaries, and Lake Houston creates localized high-risk flood exposure, particularly for lakefront subdivisions like Indian Shores.

  • Hurricane Harvey impact

    Crosby was within the broader San Jacinto River and Lake Houston flood impact area during Hurricane Harvey (2017). Lake-adjacent and low-lying neighborhoods experienced flooding, though specific street-by-street damage data for Crosby subdivisions is not confirmed in available records. Recurring flood risk exists along river and bayou corridors throughout the community.

  • Heat & humidity load

    Houston's extreme summer heat and humidity stress aging HVAC systems in 1970s–1990s homes, driving high demand for AC repair and replacement. High humidity also accelerates mold growth in flood-prone or poorly ventilated structures, and slab-on-grade foundations in clay soils are susceptible to seasonal expansion and contraction cracking.

Working with contractors here

Crosby's diverse housing stock creates a wide range of contractor needs. In older 1970s–1990s Lake Houston subdivisions, plumbing repiping (replacing galvanized lines), HVAC system upgrades from R-22 to modern refrigerants, and electrical panel upgrades are the most common jobs. Flood mitigation and storm-damage restoration are recurring needs given the area's proximity to the San Jacinto River and Lake Houston. New-construction communities like Cedar Pointe generate warranty-period work and landscaping/hardscaping projects. Contractors should always confirm whether a property is in an HOA-governed subdivision with architectural review requirements or on an unrestricted rural tract, as this significantly affects permitting and project scope.

Local Tip

Always ask for a written estimate before work begins. Texas contractors are required to provide one on jobs over $1,000.

About Crosby

Crosby is a sprawling unincorporated community spanning decades of housing stock—from older town-core homes and 1970s–1990s Lake Houston subdivisions to 2010s–2020s new-build communities. Homeowners here face a patchwork of HOA requirements, deed restrictions, and flood risk that varies dramatically from lot to lot. Contractors should verify whether a property is in a deed-restricted subdivision, an unrestricted rural tract, or a lakefront community before scoping any project.

Median year built
1985
Median home value
$202,700
Owner-occupied
66.9%
Population
3,038
Housing units
1,216
Median income
$43,795

Source: U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 5-Year 2023

Flood & storm risk

FEMA Zone X500Moderate flood risk

Crosby carries FEMA Zone X500 (moderate flood risk): outside the 100-year floodplain but inside the 500-year, so heavy-rain events still reach homes and flood-aware work pays off; risk climbs sharply on blocks nearest the San Jacinto River, where it varies parcel to parcel.

Source: FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer (NFHL). Flood zones vary by parcel — verify your individual FIRM panel.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does a junk removal hauler in Crosby need a permit from Harris County Engineering to haul debris off my property?
No permit from the Harris County Engineering Department is required for a private hauler to load and transport junk from your Crosby property — county permitting applies to construction and land-use work, not debris hauling. What does matter is where the load ends up: under Texas law, any hauler transporting solid waste for hire must be registered with the TCEQ as a municipal solid waste transporter, and disposal must occur at a TCEQ-permitted facility such as the Westpark or McCarty Road transfer stations. Ask your hauler for their TCEQ transporter registration number before they load the truck.

Sources: Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

My Crosby home is in FEMA Zone X500 near the San Jacinto River — if flooding hits and I need a gut-out, how quickly should debris leave the property?
Even in Zone X500, waterlogged drywall, insulation, and flooring can begin supporting mold growth within 24–72 hours in Crosby's high-humidity Gulf climate, so debris should stage curbside or be hauled within days, not weeks. Because Crosby is unincorporated Harris County with no city bulk pickup schedule, you cannot rely on a municipal truck arriving — a private hauler is your only option for rapid removal. Confirm the hauler can handle wet, heavy loads and that they'll dispose at a TCEQ-permitted facility, since post-flood debris weight surcharges are common and can push a full-truck load to an estimated $500–$900.

Sources: FEMA National Flood Hazard Layer (NFHL)Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

My 1980s Indian Shores subdivision home has an old R-22 HVAC unit and a dead chest freezer to haul away — can a standard junk removal crew take those?
Yes, but with an important caveat on the HVAC unit: R-22 refrigerant is a regulated substance, and EPA rules require that refrigerant be recovered by a certified technician before the unit leaves your property — the junk removal crew themselves typically cannot do this unless they hold EPA Section 608 certification. For the chest freezer, a standard junk removal crew can haul it, though appliances with intact refrigerant also require proper handling. Budget an estimated $75–$150 per appliance for pickup, and arrange refrigerant recovery through your HVAC contractor first for the old air handler.

Sources: EPA Lead Renovation, Repair and Painting (RRP) Rule

I'm in Sundance Cove — can I have a roll-off dumpster dropped in my driveway for a garage cleanout, or will the HOA fine me?
Sundance Cove Homeowners Association, like most Lake Houston subdivision HOAs in Crosby, maintains deed restrictions and architectural review requirements that can restrict or prohibit roll-off containers in driveways or curbside staging beyond a short window — specific rules vary by community and are enforced against the homeowner, not the hauler. Before scheduling a dumpster drop, contact your HOA board or architectural review committee in writing and request confirmation of any container restrictions and time limits. A full-service junk removal crew that loads and leaves in a single visit is often the cleaner solution in deed-restricted Crosby subdivisions.

Sources: Local HOA / deed restrictions (see area profile)

I have a cracked concrete patio behind my Crosby ranch-style home that heaved from the clay soil — will a standard junk removal quote cover that rubble, or is concrete priced separately?
Concrete rubble is almost always priced separately from standard household junk because it is charged by weight at disposal facilities, and Crosby's Beaumont clay soil means patio slabs that have heaved and cracked can be exceptionally dense and heavy. Expect haulers to quote a per-ton surcharge for C&D concrete debris, typically an estimated $60–$120 per ton above base rates, on top of any standard load fee. Get a written estimate that specifies whether concrete is included and at what weight threshold additional charges kick in — don't assume a flat-rate quote covers hardscape rubble.
When is the busiest time of year for junk removal in Crosby, and does that affect how fast I can get a crew out?
Demand spikes sharply in two windows in the Crosby area: immediately following major storm events (historically late summer hurricane season, as seen with Harvey 2017 and Beryl in July 2024) and in spring when residents tackle garage and yard cleanouts before the worst heat arrives. After a major storm, wait times for a crew can stretch from same-day to a week or more as haulers work through post-storm backlogs across the unincorporated Harris County area. Booking early in the week and confirming the crew is familiar with lakefront subdivision access roads — some of which narrow significantly near Lake Houston — can save significant delays.
Written & reviewed by the HHSG Editorial Team Updated 2026 Our sourcing standards