Most residential hot tubs weigh between 500 and 1,000 pounds when empty. Add water that wasn’t fully drained, electrical connections that need a licensed hand, and a deck they’re bolted into, and you’ve got one of the most demanding removal jobs on any residential property. We know. Our crews run into it every day across the country.
Jiffy Junk has been removing hot tubs since 2014, starting in Suffolk and Nassau County on Long Island before expanding nationwide. We’ve handled everything from freestanding above-ground spas to built-in units cemented into decks and patios. A hot tub removal service sends a professional crew to your property to disconnect, disassemble, and haul your old spa away. Drainage, electrical disconnection, full breakdown, and responsible disposal are all included. You point to it, and we take care of the rest.
This page covers what hot tub removal costs, walks you through how the process works, and explains why professional removal almost always makes more financial sense than going it alone.
TL;DR Quick Answers
What Is a Hot Tub Removal Service?
A hot tub removal service sends a licensed, insured crew to your property to drain, disassemble, and haul away your old spa — no heavy lifting on your end. A full-service removal covers every step: electrical disconnection, plumbing, full breakdown, and responsible disposal or recycling of components. Most residential jobs take one to three hours. Costs typically run $150 to $600+, depending on the size of the unit, how it’s installed, and how accessible your property is. At Jiffy Junk, your upfront quote is the price you pay — no adjustments after the job.
Top Takeaways
- Hot tubs weigh between 500 and 1,000 pounds when empty. DIY removal without proper equipment is a genuine safety risk.
- Professional hot tub removal typically costs $150 to $600+, depending on size, access, and installation type.
- Full-service removal covers drainage, disassembly, haul-away, and responsible disposal. You do nothing.
- Jiffy Junk has operated as a licensed and insured removal company since 2014, now serving homeowners nationwide.
- Your upfront quote is what you pay. No hidden fees, no surprise charges after the job.
- Hot tub components are recycled or donated whenever possible. Our eco commitment applies to every job, not just the ones where it’s easy.
- Book at jiffyjunk.com/booking in 60 seconds, or call 844-JIFFY-JUNK.
Table of Contents
- TL;DR Quick Answers
- Top Takeaways
- What Is a Hot Tub Removal Service?
- How Much Does Hot Tub Removal Cost?
- Hot Tub Removal Cost vs. DIY Disposal
- How Our Hot Tub Removal Service Works
- What Types of Hot Tubs Do We Remove?
- Why Choose Jiffy Junk for Hot Tub Removal?
- What Happens to Your Hot Tub After Removal?
- The 7 Resources Every Homeowner Needs Before Booking a Hot Tub Removal Service
- 1. Start Here: Why Hot Tub Electrical Systems Require Licensed Hands
- 2. Know Your Rights Before You Hire Anyone
- 3. Know the Legal Standard for Responsible Disposal
- 4. Make Sure “Eco-Friendly” Means Something
- 5. Understand the Safety Standards Behind Heavy-Item Removal
- 6. Vet Any Removal Company Before You Commit
- 7. See What Responsible Appliance Recycling Actually Looks Like
- The Numbers You Need to Know
- Final Thoughts & Our Take
- Frequently Asked Questions
- How much does hot tub removal cost?
- How long does hot tub removal take?
- Do I need to drain my hot tub before the removal crew arrives?
- Can you remove a hot tub from a backyard with no gate access?
- What happens to my hot tub after you haul it away?
- Do you offer same-day hot tub removal?
- Is hot tub removal covered by homeowner’s insurance?
- What’s the difference between hot tub removal and hot tub disposal?
- Ready to Stop Researching and Start Reclaiming Your Space?
What Is a Hot Tub Removal Service?
Hot tub removal means a trained, licensed crew comes to your property, drains the spa, disconnects the electrical and plumbing, breaks the unit down, and hauls every piece to a licensed recycling or disposal facility. No equipment to rent, no contractors to coordinate, and no heavy lifting on your end. You point to it, and we handle the rest.
Full-service hot tub disposal differs from a simple haul-away. Full removal covers plumbing and electrical disconnection, safe drainage, and careful disassembly — particularly important for built-in units or spas attached to a deck. Our White Glove Treatment covers all of it, including the cleanup before we leave.
How Much Does Hot Tub Removal Cost?
Pricing depends on four things: the size of the hot tub, where it sits on your property, how it’s installed, and how quickly you need it gone. For most homeowners, professional hot tub removal runs between $150 and $600. Built-in or oversized spas with limited backyard access tend to land toward the higher end.
Here’s what to expect: For a standard above-ground hot tub — the most common removal scenario — you’re typically looking at $150 to $350. If you’ve got a large or built-in spa, expect $300 to $600 or more, since those jobs may require deck work or craning to get the unit out safely. If the tub is already disconnected and you just need it hauled away with no disassembly, hot tub haul-away only runs $100 to $250. Pairing your removal with a full yard cleanup brings the range to $350 to $700+, depending on the scope of the debris. And if you need it gone today, same-day removal is available in most areas for a modest premium of $50 to $100, subject to crew availability.
Final pricing is always based on an upfront quote before we begin. Jiffy Junk does not charge hidden fees.
Factors That Affect Hot Tub Removal Cost
- Size and weight: Larger units need more crew and heavier equipment, which increases time on-site.
- Property access: A fenced backyard, narrow side yard, or raised deck adds complexity to the job.
- Disassembly required: Built-in or hard-plumbed spas take longer to break down safely.
- Disposal destination: Eco-responsible recycling may affect cost depending on local facility access.
- Timing: Same-day service is available in most areas and comes with a modest premium.
Hot Tub Removal Cost vs. DIY Disposal
DIY hot tub removal looks affordable until you price it out. Equipment alone (a flatbed dolly, reciprocating saw, and heavy-duty straps) runs $150 to $300 in rentals. Most municipal facilities have restrictions on full hot tub drop-offs, so you’ll need a private disposal option on top of that. And this is a 500-to-1,000-pound unit. Back injuries and deck damage are real costs, too. When you add it up, a professional hot tub haul-away typically costs less and eliminates the risk.
How Our Hot Tub Removal Service Works
Book online or call 844-JIFFY-JUNK. Schedule at jiffyjunk.com/booking in 60 seconds. Tell us what you’ve got, and we’ll confirm your appointment right away.
We show up on time with the right equipment. Our licensed, insured crew arrives in your scheduled window ready to work. We do a quick walk-through, confirm your upfront quote, and get started. No surprise charges after the job.
We remove it, haul it away, and dispose of it responsibly. We break the unit down, load every piece, and take it to the appropriate recycling or disposal facility. You get a clean, open yard.
What Types of Hot Tubs Do We Remove?
Short answer: all of them. Our teams are equipped for every configuration:
- Above-ground freestanding hot tubs and portable spas
- In-ground and built-in hot tub installations
- Hot tubs attached to decks or patios
- Large 6–8 person whirlpool spa systems
- Inflatable or soft-sided hot tubs
- Commercial-grade hot tubs and jetted spa tubs
- Broken, non-functioning, or aged-out hot tubs
Why Choose Jiffy Junk for Hot Tub Removal?
We started in 2014, serving Suffolk and Nassau County on Long Island, and built our reputation on showing up, doing the job right, and leaving customers genuinely satisfied. That’s how we still operate, now across the country.
Our crews are fully licensed, insured, and trained specifically for heavy item removal. The White Glove Treatment isn’t a marketing phrase. It means we clean up the work area before we leave, every time. We also handle TV disposal service and electronics removal alongside hot tub jobs, so you can clear out more than one thing in a single visit.
Pricing is upfront. The quote we give you before we start is the price you pay. No adjustments afterward.
What Happens to Your Hot Tub After Removal?
Here’s where it goes. Jiffy Junk routes every removed hot tub through a responsible disposal process:
- Metal components (pumps, jets, frames) go to licensed scrap metal recyclers.
- Fiberglass and acrylic shells are routed to appropriate disposal facilities.
- Working parts and accessories are donated wherever we can find a recipient.
- Our crews actively work to keep materials out of landfills on every job.

“Most homeowners expect the big built-in spa to be the expensive job — and it often is — but in our experience, the trickiest cost variables are almost always access and timing, not the size of the tub itself.” -The Jiffy Junk Team
The 7 Resources Every Homeowner Needs Before Booking a Hot Tub Removal Service
1. Start Here: Why Hot Tub Electrical Systems Require Licensed Hands
Your hot tub is hardwired into your home’s electrical system with components — underwater lighting, pump wiring, and GFCI circuit breakers — that pose serious safety risks if disconnected incorrectly. The CPSC’s official guidance explains exactly why this is a job for a licensed, insured crew, not a DIY afternoon.
Source: U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission: Electrical Safety for Pools, Spas & Hot Tubs
2. Know Your Rights Before You Hire Anyone
The FTC’s official guidance on hiring home contractors covers exactly what a legitimate service should and shouldn’t do — from upfront quotes to insurance requirements. Consider only contractors who are licensed and insured, and never pay the full amount for a project upfront.
Source: FTC Consumer Advice: How to Avoid a Home Improvement Scam
3. Know the Legal Standard for Responsible Disposal
Not every removal company disposes of your old spa the right way. The EPA’s official guidance spells out what compliant handling of electrical components and large appliance materials actually requires — giving you the questions to ask before you hand anyone the job.
Source: U.S. EPA: Appliance Disposal
4. Make Sure “Eco-Friendly” Means Something
We recycle and donate on every job we run. If you want to confirm that any removal company — including us — has licensed local facilities to back up that claim, this tool lets you search by material type and zip code. Transparency matters, and this resource makes it easy.
Source: Earth911: Recycling Locator
5. Understand the Safety Standards Behind Heavy-Item Removal
Hot tubs can top 1,000 pounds. OSHA’s materials handling guidance covers the equipment, crew training, and safe lifting protocols that licensed removal teams are held to — and that a general labor crew often isn’t. It’s the clearest explanation of why credentials matter on a job this size.
Source: OSHA: Materials Handling and Storage Safety
6. Vet Any Removal Company Before You Commit
The BBB’s contractor hiring guide walks you through exactly what to check before handing the job to anyone — licensing, insurance, written quotes, and complaint history. Ensure that the company you work with has the necessary licenses and insurance to operate in your region, and always get estimates in writing before any work begins.
Source: BBB: How to Hire a Reliable and Trustworthy Contractor
7. See What Responsible Appliance Recycling Actually Looks Like
ENERGY STAR’s recycling guidance explains how old electrical appliances — including hot tubs — should be handled at the end of life, what components can be recovered, and what questions to ask any service provider about their disposal process. Properly recycling electrical products permanently removes them from the electric grid, conserves resources, and makes room for more energy-efficient models.
Source: ENERGY STAR: Recycle Old Appliances
The Numbers You Need to Know
500 to 1,000+ Pounds: The Weight of a Standard Residential Hot Tub — Empty
Most homeowners picture outdoor furniture. What they’re actually looking at outweighs most compact cars. Here’s what that weight means in practice:
- Professional equipment isn’t optional — it’s the baseline
- A trained crew accounts for weight, access, and property obstacles before anyone lifts a finger
- That four-inch gap between the fence and the property line matters more than the tub itself
Lifting heavy items is one of the leading causes of injury in the workplace — and loads heavier than about 50 pounds significantly increase the risk of back sprains, muscle pulls, and spinal injuries. A hot tub is ten to twenty times that threshold. That’s the number that explains everything else on this page.
Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics — Back Injuries and Heavy Lifting
292.4 Million Tons: Annual U.S. Municipal Solid Waste
A hot tub doesn’t have to be part of it. Here’s how we keep it out, on every job we run:
- Metal frames and pump components go to licensed scrap recyclers
- Working accessories are donated wherever we can find a recipient
- Fiberglass shells are routed to appropriate disposal facilities — not landfills
None of that happens automatically. It happens because we built the process to work that way, starting in 2014 and refining it across thousands of jobs since.
Source: U.S. EPA — Reducing and Reusing Basics
$43,000: The Average Cost of a Single Medically Consulted Workplace Injury
That number changes how you think about DIY hot tub removal. After thousands of removals, here’s what actually pushes homeowners into that risk category:
- Underestimating the weight and losing control of the unit mid-move
- Attempting electrical disconnection without proper training
- Navigating a tight access point without the right lifting equipment
The tub itself rarely causes the injury. The access does. That’s why we confirm your upfront quote before anyone picks up a tool — and why that quote is almost always a fraction of what one ER visit costs.
Source: National Safety Council — Work Injury Costs

Final Thoughts & Our Take
Here’s what more than a decade of hot tub removal across the country has taught us: this is a job where the cost of getting it wrong adds up fast. Damaged decking, disposal fines, days of recovery from moving a 1,000-pound unit that didn’t cooperate — it’s a lot to absorb when a professional crew could have handled the whole thing in under three hours.
We’ve seen homeowners try both routes. The ones who call us after a failed DIY attempt usually spend more than they would have from the start. The ones who call us first get their yard back quickly, cleanly, and for a price they knew going in.
If you’re comparing removal companies, three things matter: upfront pricing with no post-job adjustments, proof of licensing and insurance, and a clear eco-disposal policy. At Jiffy Junk, we check all three, and we back it up with our brand promise: “We’re not happy until you are happy!”
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does hot tub removal cost?
Most residential hot tub removals run between $150 and $600, with above-ground units typically landing in the $150 to $350 range and larger or built-in spas reaching $300 to $600 or more. Cost depends on the tub’s size, how it’s installed, and how accessible your property is. At Jiffy Junk, we give you an upfront quote before we touch anything. What we quote is what you pay.
How long does hot tub removal take?
Most jobs take one to three hours. The range depends on the size of the unit, whether it’s freestanding or built-in, and how easy it is to access your property. Our crews arrive with the right equipment so we can work efficiently without cutting corners.
Do I need to drain my hot tub before the removal crew arrives?
Leave it as-is. Our team handles drainage as part of the removal process. If your tub is already empty when we arrive, that may speed things up slightly. Either way, you’re covered.
Can you remove a hot tub from a backyard with no gate access?
Yes, and we handle difficult-access properties regularly. If your backyard has no gate, a narrow side yard, or a raised deck, our teams work around it. In some cases, we’ll disassemble the unit in place before moving it out. If access is a concern, mention it when you book, and we’ll walk through your options.
What happens to my hot tub after you haul it away?
Metal components (pumps, jets, frames) go to licensed scrap metal recyclers. Fiberglass and acrylic shells are routed to appropriate disposal facilities. Working accessories get donated where we can find a recipient. Our goal on every job is to keep as much material as possible out of landfills.
Do you offer same-day hot tub removal?
Yes, in most of our service areas. Call 844-JIFFY-JUNK or book at jiffyjunk.com/booking to check same-day availability near you. Next-day scheduling is also available if same-day timing doesn’t work.
Is hot tub removal covered by homeowner’s insurance?
Standard homeowner’s insurance typically doesn’t cover the elective removal of a working hot tub. If your spa was damaged by a covered event — a storm, flooding, or structural damage — your policy may apply. Check with your insurance provider directly. Terms vary, and we’re not in a position to advise on specific coverage.
What’s the difference between hot tub removal and hot tub disposal?
Removal is the physical work: disconnecting, disassembling, and extracting the unit from your property. Disposal is what happens after: where the materials go. At Jiffy Junk, our service covers both. We haul your old spa away and route it to the appropriate recycling or donation destination, so you don’t have to coordinate anything on the back end.
Ready to Stop Researching and Start Reclaiming Your Space?
You now know what hot tub removal costs, what the process looks like, and what to ask before you hire anyone — so the only thing left is booking a licensed, insured crew that shows up on time, quotes you upfront, and leaves your yard clean. Call 844-JIFFY-JUNK or book in 60 seconds now.