A tobacco-barn cleanup outside Bailey that's been on the family's list for a decade. A commercial fit-out on Ward Boulevard with debris piling up faster than the lead carpenter expected. A roofing tear-off on a property near Lake Wilson where the homeowner just wants the mess gone before the weekend's over. Dumpster drop-off and pickup is what Priority Waste Inc. dispatches across Eastern NC every day — one local call, one bin, one pickup when you say so.
What changes the whole experience is that you talk to a local Wilson team on the first call. We confirm the bin size against the scope, set the delivery window, and route the driver around whatever access constraint exists at the property — not from a script, but from years of running the same routes.
Call now to book the drop — and we'll handle the rest from there.
Three things get sorted on the booking call: what size bin fits the project, when and where the driver lands it, and what the rental window looks like. Getting all three right at the start is the difference between a project that runs smoothly and one that stalls waiting on a swap.
Most chain haulers route booking calls through a regional center where the agent has never been to Wilson or Nash County. PWI handles the call differently — you describe the project, we ask the questions that actually matter, and the driver shows up knowing what they're walking into.
Most Eastern NC projects land in either a 15-yard or a 20-yard — the workhorse sizes for whole-room renovations, garage cleanouts, and small-scale jobsite work. Larger scope jumps to a 30-yard; smaller or tighter scope drops to a 12-yard. The five sizes published in PWI's broader waste management service in Wilson cover the range without forcing you into a container that's overflowing or two-thirds empty.
Two things people consistently undersize for: yard debris and bulky outdoor metal. Brush from a single mature tree line fills more bin than expected. Old swing sets, trampoline frames, fence panels — those take up the cubic feet whether they're broken down or not. We flag this on the call.
Heavy material works the other way. Concrete, masonry, asphalt, and roofing tear-offs can hit a bin's tonnage limit before it looks half full. If your project mixes heavy material with general debris, we'll talk through whether one bin or two makes more sense.
Priority Waste runs drop-off and pickup from the Wilson hub across Wilson, Nash, Edgecombe, Halifax, Franklin, Johnston, Wayne, Greene, Lenoir, Pitt, Duplin, and Sampson counties. By the time the truck arrives at your address, the driver has either been to your specific street or two dozen streets like it.
That matters more than it sounds. A property off a gravel road in rural Wayne County has different access than a tight infill lot in downtown Wilson, which has different access than a subdivision lot in Clayton. None of it is hard for a driver who knows the territory. Our Wilson hub anchors the dispatch.
The pattern from repeat customers: the bin arrives in the window we promised, the driver handles the access, and pickup happens fast when called.
When you call PWI, you reach a Wilson-based team. We know the routes, the addresses, and the seasonal patterns. The booking call settles every question in one conversation.
Pricing depends on the bin, the location, and the rental window. Call us with the project and we'll quote it. The number we give you is the number you pay.
The bin stays put until you call for pickup. No daily meter on the standard rental period. When you call, we move — often the same day if scheduled in the morning.
The standard pickup is project-done. The cleanout finishes, the renovation wraps, the storm debris gets staged in the bin, and you call. The truck comes out within 24 hours, often same-day if the call lands in the morning. Most Wilson and Johnston County residential rentals fall here.
The second is the bin-full swap. The container fills before the project is done — common on roofing tear-offs in older Rocky Mount neighborhoods, multi-trade renovations through Tarboro and Goldsboro, and contractor builds in the Clayton growth corridor. One call gets the full bin pulled and a fresh one dropped, often on one trip.
The third is weather-driven. When a tropical system is tracking the region, we coordinate with customers whose rentals are mid-project — we can pull the bin before the storm and re-deliver after it passes. Tar and Neuse river flood zones see this most often.
Eastern NC isn't a market that fits one route or one schedule. Tobacco-heritage communities in Nash and Edgecombe carry a different rhythm than Triangle-spillover growth in Johnston County, and rural agricultural properties through Sampson and Duplin sit on yet another. The Wilson hub runs all of it through the same daily dispatch.
A typical week hits downtown Wilson and Rocky Mount, suburban Johnston County, properties near Greenville, and the rural communities between — Bailey, Middlesex, Sims, Saratoga, Walstonburg. Halifax and Franklin County addresses run on a slightly longer window but the same response standard.
PWI's commitment is straightforward: we hit the delivery window we promised, and we move on pickup when you call.
Most callers have the same handful of questions before they book the first delivery. Quick answers below.
A rough sense of three things: what’s coming out (debris type and approximate volume), where on the property the bin should sit, and how long the rental window needs to be. We refine all three on the call — but having a ballpark gets the conversation moving.
Where you want it. Tell us at booking whether the bin goes in the driveway, on a gravel approach, on a side yard, or a specific staging point on a job site. The driver places it on contact frames; we recommend plywood under the points if the surface is sensitive concrete or older asphalt.
Standard household debris, furniture, mattresses, carpet, drywall, lumber, yard waste, roofing material, concrete, brick, and most construction debris all go in. Excluded: paint, motor oil, fluid-bearing equipment, propane tanks, refrigerants, tires, batteries, asbestos, and hazardous chemicals. Ask on the booking call if a specific item is borderline.
Yes — every quote happens on the call. Pricing depends on bin size, location, and rental period; we don’t publish flat rates because no two jobs are quite the same. Call (252) 246-9065 with what you’re looking at and we’ll quote it on the phone.
Yes. Job sites, second properties, family properties under cleanout, and commercial addresses all run the same workflow. We confirm the delivery address on the booking call.