Construction Cleanup Providers

The construction cleanup providers maintained on this reference cover active and verified service providers operating across the United States in post-construction cleaning, debris removal, final clean phases, and specialty site restoration. The providers serve property owners, general contractors, project managers, and facility teams who require structured access to qualified providers within a defined trade category. Each entry reflects the professional classification standards and regulatory context that govern construction cleanup work at the federal, state, and local levels.


How currency is maintained

Provider Network providers in a specialized trade sector require continuous verification to remain operationally useful. Provider contact details, licensing status, service scope, and geographic coverage change as businesses expand, contract, or cease operations. Providers on this reference are subject to periodic review against publicly available state contractor licensing databases — including those maintained by individual state licensing boards that administer contractor registration under applicable state statutes.

For construction cleanup providers specifically, relevant licensing categories vary by jurisdiction. In California, the Contractors State License Board (CSLB) classifies certain cleanup and debris removal operations under specific license classifications, while states such as Texas and Florida maintain their own licensing structures through the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation and the Florida Department of Business and Professional Regulation, respectively. Providers cross-referenced against these sources carry a higher confidence rating for active status.

Hazardous material removal — including asbestos, lead paint disturbance, and silica-generating operations — carries additional regulatory triggers under OSHA 29 CFR Part 1926, Subpart D (construction safety standards) and EPA National Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollutants (NESHAP) rules for asbestos under 40 CFR Part 61, Subpart M. Providers verified under hazardous cleanup categories are expected to carry applicable certifications, and providers note when this certification status has been verified against a named state or federal database. For context on how this provider network fits within the broader service reference structure, see .


How to use providers alongside other resources

The providers function as a locator layer, not a qualification endorsement. A provider entry identifies that a provider operates in a given trade category and geography — it does not substitute for independent due diligence, permit verification, or contract review.

Professionals using these providers productively will cross-reference against 3 additional verification layers:

  1. State licensing lookup — Confirm active license status through the relevant state contractor board. License classifications relevant to construction cleanup include general contractor licenses (for project-level cleanups under a GC umbrella), janitorial or specialty cleaning licenses (in states that require separate registration), and hazardous material abatement licenses issued through state environmental agencies.
  2. Insurance certificate verification — Post-construction environments involve slip-and-fall risk, airborne particulate exposure, and proximity to incomplete structural elements. General liability minimums for commercial post-construction cleanup typically exceed $1,000,000 per occurrence, though contract requirements vary by project type.
  3. Permit and inspection records — Final clean phases on new construction projects typically precede the certificate of occupancy (CO) inspection conducted by the Authority Having Jurisdiction (AHJ). Providers familiar with AHJ inspection sequencing in their local market are better positioned to coordinate timing with general contractors.

For guidance on navigating this reference's full structure, the page How to Use This Construction Cleanup Resource covers the organizational logic in greater detail.


How providers are organized

Providers are organized across 4 primary classification tiers based on service scope, site type, and regulatory exposure level:

Tier A — Rough Cleanup Contractors
Providers specializing in bulk debris removal, construction waste hauling, and site clearing following framing, drywall, or structural phases. Work at this tier typically involves dumpster coordination, debris sorting under applicable municipal solid waste regulations, and compliance with EPA Construction and Demolition (C&D) debris rules under 40 CFR Part 257.

Tier B — Final Clean Contractors
Providers performing the finish-phase interior cleaning required before CO inspection. This includes glass polishing, hard-surface floor cleaning, fixture wipe-downs, and HVAC vent cleaning following drywall dust contamination. Final clean work intersects with OSHA's Respirable Crystalline Silica Standard (29 CFR 1926.1153) due to residual silica dust from concrete and masonry work on site.

Tier C — Specialty and Hazardous Cleanup Providers
Providers certified under EPA and state-level abatement programs for lead-containing paint disturbance under EPA's Renovation, Repair and Painting (RRP) Rule (40 CFR Part 745) and asbestos NESHAP compliance. These providers operate under a distinct regulatory framework compared to standard cleanup contractors and are verified in a separate classification.

Tier D — Commercial and Industrial Site Restoration
Large-scale post-construction site restoration providers covering industrial facilities, warehouse interiors, and multi-building commercial campuses. Projects in this classification frequently exceed 100,000 square feet and involve coordination with facility managers, GCs, and AHJ inspectors across extended timelines.


What each provider covers

Each provider entry in the Construction Cleanup Providers database includes a standardized set of fields designed for professional use:

Providers do not include customer reviews, star ratings, or comparative performance rankings. The reference maintains a factual record format consistent with a professional provider network rather than a consumer review platform. Entries that cannot be cross-referenced against at least 1 publicly accessible licensing or registration record are marked accordingly, allowing users to weight their reliance appropriately before engaging a provider for permitted construction work.

References