Mattress Removal Cost in Beaverton, OR Honest Prices, No Hidden Fees
In Beaverton, mattress removal costs between $99 and $200 for most residential pickups. The starting price is $99. Final cost depends on size, floor access, and whether a box spring is included. Every quote includes labor, Oregon recycling fees, and disposal—no hidden charges.

We picked up a king mattress in Bethany last spring—the homeowner was genuinely surprised the quote was over $150. She’d assumed it would be closer to $50 because she’d heard Oregon recycles for free. That gap between what the state program covers and what a pickup actually costs is the most common point of confusion we run into. This article exists to close that gap with real numbers.
What Affects Mattress Removal Cost in Beaverton
Most people assume mattress removal is flat-rate. It’s not — and the variables are specific enough that they’re worth understanding before you call anyone.

Mattress size
Larger units cost more to remove than smaller ones within the $99–$200 range. A king or California king takes two people to carry safely, occupies significantly more truck space than a twin or full, and takes longer to maneuver through doorframes and hallways. Those are real labor and capacity inputs that affect where your quote lands within the range. A twin at the ground floor with clear access is going to land near the bottom. A California king on a second floor with a narrow stairwell is going to land near the top.
Floor and stair access — what it actually adds to the quote
Ground floor or garage access with a clear path is the baseline. When it is on a second or third floor, the crew carries it downstairs, which takes longer and increases physical labor. Stair access is assessed during the quote call based on the specific building—hallway width, number of landings, and how the mattress needs to be angled through the stairwell. You won’t see an unannounced surcharge on arrival. If stair access applies to your job, it will be in the quote before any work begins.
For a detailed look at how access affects junk removal pricing more broadly, our guide on what drives junk removal quotes in Beaverton covers that in full.
Single mattress vs. bundled load
If you’re only removing one unit, the $99 minimum charge applies. If you’re clearing a full bedroom at the same time—mattress, box spring, bed frame, and other furniture—the cost gets absorbed into the overall load price. Bundling items into a single job is almost always more cost-effective than multiple separate pickups.
How much does it cost to remove a king mattress in Beaverton?
King and California King mattresses sit at the upper end of the $99–$200 range. They require two people to carry safely, take up more truck space than smaller sizes, and take longer to maneuver through hallways and doorframes. Memory foam construction adds to the difficulty. The exact quote depends on floor access and what else is being removed at the same time—text a photo to (971) 297-3939 for a firm number.
Mattress Removal Cost by Size — Beaverton Price Breakdown

The verified price range for removal in Beaverton is $99–$200. What moves your quote within that range comes down to a small number of specific factors. Understanding those factors is more useful than any size-specific number — because they’re what your actual quote will reflect.
What moves the price toward the lower end of the range:
- Smaller size — less weight, easier to carry, less truck space used
- Ground-floor access with a clear path to the exit
- Single only, no additional items
- Standard hallway width and doorframe clearance
- Weekday scheduling with advance notice
What moves the price toward the upper end of the range:
- Larger size—a king or California king takes two people and more truck space than a twin or full
- Stair access—carrying down one or more flights takes additional labor time, assessed during the quote call
- Adding a box spring, bed frame, or adjustable base to the same pickup
- Tight hallways or difficult turns that slow the carry
- Memory foam construction — heavier and harder to grip than innerspring
Why size matters within the range
A twin and a California king both fall within the same $99–$200 window, but they don’t land at the same point in it. A larger one occupies more space in a 15-yard truck, requires more physical effort to carry and maneuver, and takes longer to load safely. The difference between the smallest and largest sizes won’t double your quote, but it will move it — typically toward the upper portion of the range for kings and California kings and toward the lower portion for twins and fulls.
The most accurate way to know your number
Text a photo of your mattress and your ZIP code to (971) 297-3939. We’ll come back with a firm quote based on your actual situation—size, floor, access, and any additional items—not a generic range.
What the Oregon Mattress Stewardship Fee Actually Means for Your Wallet
This is the part most people get wrong — and it’s worth getting right before you call around for quotes.
Oregon passed legislation—HB 2358—establishing the Oregon Mattress Stewardship Program. Under this program, when you buy a new one from a retailer in Oregon, a $22.50 stewardship assessment is added to the purchase price. You may have seen it on a receipt and not noticed it, or a salesperson may have mentioned it.
Here’s what that fee actually does: it funds the Bye Bye Mattress program, which operates drop-off locations across Oregon where residents can leave old mattresses for recycling at no additional cost. Washington County has participating locations. The program is real, the recycling is real, and the infrastructure it funds is genuinely useful.
Here’s what that fee does not do: it does not pay for anyone to come to your home and pick up.
That $22.50 covers the collection and recycling infrastructure — the facilities, the processing, the transportation from drop-off points. It does not cover the labor cost of a crew driving to Raleigh Hills, carrying a queen mattress down two flights of stairs, loading it onto a truck, and hauling it to a certified facility. Those costs are separate, and they’re what you’re paying for when you hire a removal service.
So when someone tells you Oregon recycles mattresses for free, they’re technically correct—if you drop it off yourself at a Bye Bye Mattress location. The moment you need someone to come to you, that’s a different service with a different cost structure.
For a full list of where you can take it yourself in Washington County, see our upcoming guide on where to take junk in Beaverton.
Does adding a box spring increase the removal price?
Yes. A box spring takes up truck space and requires labor to carry, so it adjusts the quote upward. However, scheduling a mattress and box spring together as one job is more cost-effective than two separate pickups—the crew is already there, and the per-item cost drops when everything is handled in a single trip. Mention any additional items upfront when you call or text a photo so the quote reflects the full job.
Full-Service Pickup vs. Self-Haul vs. Bye Bye Mattress Drop-Off — Real Cost Comparison

Three real options exist for getting rid of it in Beaverton. Here’s what each one actually costs and requires.
| Full-Service Pickup | Self-Haul to Metro South | Bye Bye Mattress Drop-Off | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total cost | $99–$200 | $0 for up to 4 mattresses per day | $0 |
| Who does the lifting? | The crew | You | You |
| Vehicle needed | None | Truck or large vehicle | Truck or large vehicle |
| Time required | 30–60 min total | 45–90 min round trip plus wait | 30–60 min plus transport |
| Oregon recycling compliant | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes |
| Works without a vehicle | ✅ Yes | ❌ No | ❌ No |
| Same-day availability | ✅ Often | ✅ During station hours | Depends on location hours |
| Best for | No vehicle, tight timeline · heavy · multi-item load | You have a truck. · time · physical ability | You have transport· no time pressure |
Removal
The self-haul option at Metro South is genuinely worth considering if you have a truck and the physical ability to load it yourself. Metro South accepts up to four standard mattresses per customer per day at no charge under the stewardship program. For everything you need to know about going that route — including the mistakes that turn a free drop-off into an expensive trip — our Metro South Transfer Station guide covers it in full.
For residents in Cedar Hills, Five Oaks, or Aloha without access to a pickup truck, full-service removal is usually the only realistic option. And for anyone dealing with a same-day mattress pickup situation—lease inspection tomorrow, new foam unit arriving this afternoon—the self-haul route rarely fits the timeline.
The Box Spring Question—Does Adding One Change the Price
Short answer: yes, adding a box spring or bed frame to a mattress pickup will affect the quote — and bundling everything together in one job is the more cost-effective approach.
Here’s what most people don’t realize. If you’re booking a single-bed unit removal and add a box spring to that same pickup, the quote adjusts to reflect the additional item. A box spring is a real piece of furniture—it takes up truck space and requires labor to carry. It’s not a free add-on.
Now here’s the part that surprises people: if you’re removing the mattress, box spring, and bed frame together as one job, the total quote for all three together often comes out cheaper per item than scheduling them separately. That’s because the crew is already there, the truck is already loaded, and the per-item labor drops when everything is handled as a single job.
The mistake people make is calling to schedule a mattress removal, hanging up, then calling back a week later for the box spring. Two trips, two minimum charges, more money spent overall. If the box spring and any bed frame components are going at the same time, mention it upfront when you call or text a photo—the quote will reflect the full job, not individual items.
One thing to know: adjustable bases are treated differently from standard box springs. They’re heavier, often require disassembly, and are priced accordingly. If you have an adjustable base, mention that specifically when you reach out so the crew can quote it accurately.
What’s Actually Included in Your Pickup Quote in Beaverton
This is worth knowing because it’s where the difference between a legitimate local quote and a low-ball number becomes obvious.
A full-service mattress removal quote in Beaverton should include all of the following:
- Labor — carrying it from wherever it is to the truck
- Loading — securing in the truck
- Transportation — driving it to a certified disposal or recycling facility
- Oregon state recycling fee — the processing cost passed through in the quote, not added at the door
- Disposal at a Washington County-certified facility — Tualatin Valley Waste Recovery or an approved recycling partner
- Sweep-up — leaving the pickup area clean
That Oregon recycling fee is a real cost that every legitimate hauler pays on your behalf. When a quote comes in unusually low, it’s often because that fee is being hidden and will appear at the door—or it is being dumped illegally to avoid it entirely. Both happen in Washington County. Our junk removal scams guide covers the red flags to watch for before you book anyone.
For a full breakdown of what’s included across all item types, see our complete pricing guide.
Is it cheaper to drop off a mattress myself?
If you have a truck and can physically load and transport, self-hauling to Metro South Transfer Station costs $0 for up to four standard foam units per day under the stewardship program. Bye Bye Mattress drop-off locations are also free if you provide your own transportation. The real cost is your time, fuel, and physical labor. For a king-size on an upper floor without a truck, full-service removal is almost always the practical choice. The comparison table above breaks down exactly what each option requires.
Common Mistakes That Push Your Removal Cost Higher in Beaverton

Three specific mistakes consistently push the final price higher than the original quote—or create friction on the day of pickup.
Mistake 1 — Not disclosing bedbug status when booking
If a mattress has or recently had bedbugs, it needs to be sealed in thick plastic with all seams taped before the crew arrives. When that hasn’t been done, the crew has to stop, source materials, seal it on-site, and follow contamination protocols that add time to the job. That added time is reflected in the final cost. Disclosing it upfront during booking costs nothing extra — it just means the crew arrives prepared. Surprising them with it on the day does.
Mistake 2 — Blocked access on the day of pickup
That needs to come through a bedroom with boxes stacked in the doorway, down a hallway filled with furniture, or out of a garage with a car parked in front of it that takes longer to remove than one with a clear path. Every extra obstacle adds labor time, and labor time affects cost. Clearing a path before the crew arrives takes ten minutes and can save real money on the final quote. Our junk removal preparation guide walks through exactly what to have ready.
Mistake 3 — Booking a mattress alone when a box spring or bed frame is also going
Splitting one job into two separate pickups means two minimum charges. If the box spring is going eventually, schedule it. If the bed frame is metal, it may qualify for our metal recycling service and can be handled in the same trip. Mention everything that’s going on when you first reach out—the quote will reflect the whole job, and it’ll cost less overall.
Frequently Asked Questions
Full-service pickup is not free. Oregon’s $22.50 mattress stewardship fee — collected when you buy a new one — funds the Bye Bye Mattress drop-off program, which lets you recycle at no additional cost if you transport it yourself to a participating location. That program does not cover the labor cost of a crew coming to your home. If you have a truck and can transport it yourself, drop-off is genuinely free. If you need pickup, the range is $99–$200 depending on size and access. For free disposal options more broadly, see our free junk removal guide.
It’s a $22.50 assessment added to the retail price of every new sale in Oregon under HB 2358. The fee funds the Bye Bye Mattress program — the statewide infrastructure for recycling and drop-off collection. It does not pay for home pickup services. Legitimate removal companies pass the recycling processing cost through in your quote rather than adding it as a surprise charge at the door.
It can. Ground-floor pickup is the baseline for every quote. When it is on an upper floor, the crew carries it downstairs—that additional labor is real and reflected in the quote. The exact amount depends on your specific building: hallway width, number of landings, and how the mattress needs to be angled through the stairwell. Stair access is assessed during the quote call. You won’t see a surcharge appear on arrival that wasn’t in the original quote.
A complete quote includes crew labor, carrying it from its current location, loading, transportation, the Oregon state recycling fee pass-through, disposal at a certified Washington County facility, and sweep-up of the pickup area. No additional fees should appear on arrival that weren’t in the original quote.
Ready to Get a Price on Your Mattress
If you’re in Beaverton or anywhere in Washington County — Cedar Hills, Bethany, Five Oaks, Raleigh Hills, or Aloha — our crew can give you a firm quote in under 30 minutes. Text a photo of the mattress and your ZIP code to (971) 297-3939 and we’ll come back with a real number, not a range that doubles at the door.
Looking for accurate mattress removal cost Beaverton estimates? Visit our mattress disposal service page to book, use our free cost calculator to estimate your job, or contact us directly.
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