Need portable toilets in Wilson or nearby? From construction crews in Goldsboro and Tarboro to event organizers in Greenville and Smithfield, infrastructure projects near Kinston, and jobsites scattered across Johnston County—we can often deliver same-day, and typically within 24 hours. Emergency situation? Immediate response.

Construction sites. Weddings. Festivals. Emergency needs.
Standard units, ADA-compliant options, and short- or long-term rentals available.
No scheduling runaround. No skipped service runs. Just clean, dependable portable restroom rentals across Wilson and Eastern North Carolina—when you need them and where you need them.
Serving Wilson, Rocky Mount, Greenville, Goldsboro, Tarboro & surrounding counties
Eastern North Carolina runs on cycles — and every one of them creates portable restroom demand that can't wait. Tobacco gets pulled from the fields in late summer with a workforce that appears seemingly overnight. The food processing infrastructure anchoring Wayne County around Goldsboro operates on schedules that treat downtime as a financial event. Road crews are pushing utilities and subdivisions across a twelve-county region where jobsite sanitation has to be in place before the first shift, not figured out mid-week.
Priority Waste Inc. delivers portable toilet rentals across Wilson, Nash, Wayne, Johnston, Pitt, Greene, Edgecombe, and Lenoir counties — and we've built our operation around this economy specifically. When a general contractor outside Clayton needs portable restrooms on a rural lot before Monday's crew arrives, or a festival organizer in Tarboro needs a firm unit count before the weekend, the answer shouldn't require a callback.
The agricultural and industrial economy of eastern North Carolina doesn't negotiate with a portable toilet provider's routing calendar. Harvest season in Greene and Lenoir counties brings temporary labor concentrations that need portable restroom facilities in place before the first day of work — not provisionally arranged, not promised for later in the week. Road construction along the US-264 corridors between Wilson and Greenville carries inspection timelines that make sanitation compliance failures expensive fast.
We've been delivering portable toilet rentals across this region long enough to know which roads wash out after a heavy rain, which routes can't support a full-sized service truck in February, and which sites need early-morning drop-off before the 6 a.m. shift starts. That operational knowledge runs from the tobacco country around Nashville and Spring Hope all the way east to the Neuse River basin communities near Kinston — and it's what separates a portable restroom provider who knows this region from one who's still figuring it out on your timeline.
Eastern North Carolina construction sites don't deal in beach road weight limits or coastal setback rules. They deal in clay-heavy soil that holds water for days after rain, ungraded subdivision lots outside Kenly, and rural Johnston County parcels where the only paved reference point is the highway entrance a half-mile back. When soft ground follows heavy rain, portable restroom servicing can become a real access problem — one that compounds through the rest of the week if it isn't accounted for upfront.
OSHA's construction site sanitation standards carry real inspection exposure, and they catch up fast with sites that treat portable toilet logistics as an afterthought. Priority Waste Inc. handles unit counts, placement, and service frequency from the project outset — so your site isn't carrying a compliance gap while the superintendent manages material deliveries, subcontractors, and weather delays simultaneously. We work with builders, road crews, and utility contractors throughout the region, including the US-70 reconstruction corridors east of Goldsboro and the residential expansion pushing north through Johnston County. Most contractors running active build sites across Wilson, Wayne, and Johnston counties find it makes sense to bundle portable restroom rental with or dumpster rental service — one provider, one call, both handled before the first crew arrives.
Not every portable toilet rental involves a complex site plan or a multi-week project timeline. A backyard renovation in Elm City with the plumbing offline. A one-day church fundraiser in Bailey where the facility can't handle the attendance. A weekend project near Middlesex that runs three days longer than expected. These are straightforward needs — a clean porta potty delivered when confirmed and picked up without a scheduling argument.
Standard portable restroom rentals are the majority of what Priority Waste Inc. deploys across this region. Units arrive stocked and ready, and service during extended rentals is scheduled around actual usage demand — not a generic calendar optimized for the provider's routing efficiency. Communities further from the Wilson and Rocky Mount corridors — Nashville, Spring Hope, La Grange — get the same unit condition and service reliability as high-volume commercial accounts. Eastern North Carolina summer heat degrades a portable toilet on a rural lot outside Farmville just as fast as anywhere else, and our service intervals are built around that reality.
The outdoor event calendar in eastern North Carolina doesn't follow coastal logic, and neither does the events portable restroom planning. Harvest festivals tied to tobacco and sweet potato production in Greene County draw significant crowds in early fall. Community events in Farmville and Ayden, festivals along the Tar River in Tarboro, and large outdoor gatherings connected to the food processing economy in Wayne County all demand portable toilet solutions sized to specific venues, not generic headcount formulas.
A 350-person harvest festival spread across an open agricultural field has completely different throughput dynamics than a 350-person road race finishing at a single staging area near Selma. Priority Waste Inc. works through attendance windows, alcohol service, site layout, and ground conditions before the truck leaves the yard — so portable restroom placement holds up from the opening hour through the last. Multi-day events across Pitt and Lenoir counties can be scheduled for mid-event servicing to maintain consistent facility conditions throughout.
Agricultural festivals and outdoor events in eastern North Carolina rarely happen inside a defined perimeter. Open fields outside Snow Hill, fairgrounds in Edgecombe County, riverside event spaces along the Tar in Tarboro — these venues have no fixed infrastructure dictating where equipment goes. That's an advantage only if placement is planned deliberately. Unit positioning across a wide-open site without natural traffic anchors requires a different approach than a fenced urban festival with a single entrance. We plan for the terrain your event actually sits on.
The eastern NC event calendar peaks in fall, when harvest festivals, county fairs, and agricultural celebrations draw their biggest crowds. Fall in this region brings its own service variables — cooler temperatures extend unit viability, but heavy seasonal rain turns open field ground soft fast, affecting both service vehicle access and unit stability. Mid-event servicing schedules for multi-day events are built around those conditions.
Agricultural and community events in Wilson, Greene, and Lenoir counties don't follow the arrival pattern of a ticketed festival with a fixed gate time. Attendance builds gradually, peaks mid-afternoon, and thins unpredictably as families come and go throughout the day. Unit counts and placement that work for a fixed-start event often underserve that pattern at peak. We size and position portable restroom facilities around how your specific crowd actually moves — not how a standardized formula assumes it will.
ADA-compliant portable restroom facilities are required at public events, municipal projects, and most commercial build sites — and functional compliance is what actually matters, not just technical compliance. Grab bars positioned for real use. Ground stable enough to prevent settling mid-event. Clearance that allows practical maneuvering, not just enough to satisfy a written spec. Town-sponsored events in Wilson and Rocky Mount, infrastructure construction along US-70 between Mount Olive and Kenly, public gatherings in Greenville and Kinston — the demand for accessible portable toilet units across this region is consistent, not occasional.
Priority Waste Inc. maintains ADA-compliant portable restroom inventory as a standard part of operations — available on normal lead times, not as a specialty order that leaves an event coordinator scrambling. Placement is coordinated in advance with level ground confirmed, approach clearance mapped, and proximity to primary pedestrian traffic established before the unit is loaded onto the truck.
Priority Waste Inc. delivers portable toilets across a service territory that most providers look at on a map and route around — twelve counties, long drives between population centers, and rural parcels that don't appear in any navigation system built around urban routing logic. From the tobacco communities near Nashville and Spring Hope in Nash County, east through Snow Hill and Ayden toward Kinston, north along the Tar River through Tarboro and Edgecombe County, and south through the expanding residential footprint outside Clayton and Smithfield in Johnston County — we run portable restroom service across all of it, every week.
The road conditions are familiar. The seasonal demand patterns tied to harvest cycles, agricultural fairs, and post-winter construction sprints are built into how we plan routes and allocate inventory — not discovered mid-project. When you call (252) 246-9065), you reach someone who can answer your question directly, and when we commit to a portable toilet delivery time, we meet it. Need dumpster rental alongside portable restroom service? We handle both, coordinated from the start.