Indianapolis offers scheduled bulk item pickup through the Department of Public Works. Residents can request free bulk pickup for items such as furniture, appliances, and mattresses by calling the Mayor's Action Center or submitting a request online. Items must be placed at the curb on the scheduled day. The city also operates the Citizens' Transfer Station where residents can drop off bulk waste for a fee. Electronics and hazardous materials require separate disposal arrangements.
Indianapolis provides bulk item collection on a scheduled basis, either monthly or by appointment through public works. Eligible items include furniture, mattresses, and large appliances with refrigerant removed. Electronics and hazardous materials like paint or batteries are excluded and must go to designated drop-off facilities. Items must be placed curbside on the scheduled date. Excessive piles may require a special hauling fee. Construction debris is not eligible for standard bulk pickup.
Illegal dumping: $500 to $5,000 fines. Placing bulk items out before scheduled date may result in $50 to $200 code enforcement citation.
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis uses a plainly-audible standard combined with a 115 dB amplifier cap under Rev. Code Ch. 391, Article III rather than zone-based dBA limits.
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis does not impose specific leaf blower hours, but Revised Code Sec. 391-302 prohibits operating any blower or power fan in a way that makes unreas...
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis Revised Code Chapter 391, Article III prohibits unreasonable noise from amplified sources and caps sound-producing instruments at 115 decibels m...
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis adopts the Indiana Residential Code under Rev. Code Ch. 536, which requires a minimum 48-inch barrier around residential pools 24 inches deep or...
Indianapolis, IN
Indianapolis does not require a fence permit, but Rev. Code Sec. 744-510 caps front-yard fences at 42 inches and rear/side-yard fences at 6 feet and a separa...
Indianapolis, IN
Marion County Rev. Code Sec. 591-421 and Indiana Code 22-11-18-3.5 require working smoke detectors in every Indianapolis dwelling, with landlords responsible...
See how Indianapolis's bulk item disposal rules stack up against other locations.
Help us keep this page accurate. If you notice an error or outdated information, let us know.