
West Texas Dumpsters delivers roll-off containers across Reeves County, supporting oilfield operations, agricultural producers, pipeline crews, and contractors working from Orla in the north down through Toyah, Balmorhea, Saragosa, and Coyanosa.
With over a decade of work across the Permian Basin and Delaware Basin, our team handles container delivery, swap-outs, and disposal for jobs across the unincorporated parts of the county and the smaller communities on the edges. To schedule a delivery into Reeves County, call 800-996-9862.
If your project is inside Pecos city limits, our Pecos Service Area page has the city-specific information regarding permits and deliveries.
Our service area covers Reeves County in full, including Orla in the northern part of the county along Highway 285, Toyah on I-20 west of Pecos, Balmorhea and Saragosa to the south near the state park and the surrounding farming country, and Coyanosa to the southeast near the Pecos River.
The unincorporated stretches between these communities are where the bulk of our oilfield deliveries go: lease pads, gas plants, compressor stations, and pipeline staging yards on private surface.
Highway 285 runs the spine of the county from Pecos north through Orla and into New Mexico, and it’s one of the most active oilfield trucking corridors in the Permian Basin. I-20 cuts east-west across the southern half, connecting Pecos and the I-20 communities to the broader basin. We dispatch deliveries off both corridors based on driver routing and project locations across the county. For projects inside Pecos itself, the Pecos Service Area page has those service details.
The Reeves County customer base reflects the county’s economic mix: oilfield, agricultural, industrial, and rural construction, each playing a distinct role across the county.
Oilfield operators and pipeline crews account for the largest share of our work, especially in the northern half of the county where Delaware Basin drilling and gathering activity is most concentrated. That includes pad construction debris, well site cleanups, completion phase trash, decommissioning waste, frac liner pulls, and ROW cleanups along the Highway 285 corridor and out across the lease properties surrounding Orla.
Agricultural producers make up a meaningful and distinct segment of our Reeves County work. Pecos-area melon operations, the cotton acreage around Coyanosa, and the alfalfa fields toward Balmorhea and Saragosa generate seasonal cleanout volume during harvest, post-harvest field clearing, and packing-house turnover.
A 30 yard container dropped at a packing shed for a few weeks during melon season looks different from a 40 yard sitting on a lease pad, but both are part of the Reeves dispatch mix and we plan routing accordingly.
Industrial contractors servicing the gas processing plants, compressor stations, and tank batteries across the county pull containers for turnaround work, scheduled maintenance, and unplanned cleanouts. This segment overlaps with the oilfield work but follows its own scheduling rhythm tied to plant shutdowns and unit-level maintenance windows.
Rural contractors and property owners working in the smaller communities and on county-road frontage round out the customer mix: residential remodels in Toyah and Balmorhea, commercial expansions, and small-scale demolition or construction projects across the unincorporated parts of the county.
We deliver three roll-off sizes across Reeves County, each subject to a 10-ton DOT weight cap that applies to all Texas roads regardless of container size. For deliveries outside Pecos city limits, the standard delivery fee is $250 to reflect the haul out of our Odessa yard.
Pecos-specific delivery fees and pricing are on the Pecos Service Area page. Rental rates depend on container size, included tonnage, and project specifics, with overages billed at $85 per ton beyond the included amount.
Call 800-996-9862 for a current quote on your job.
Dimensions: 22’L x 8’W x 4’H
Ideal For: Smaller-volume oilfield, harvest, and contractor jobs
Typical Use Cases: Lease pad housekeeping, smaller well site cleanups, packing-house and equipment yard cleanouts during harvest, and residential remodels in the smaller communities. The lower side height makes hand loading easier where space is tight.
Price: $695 (first 3 tons, then $85/ton)
Dimensions: 20’L x 8’W x 6’H
Ideal For: Mid-volume lease, agricultural, and pipeline work
Typical Use Cases: Standard pad cleanups, packing-shed turnover during melon and cotton seasons, pipeline crew job sites, gas plant maintenance work, and mid-sized completion or decommissioning jobs. The workhorse size for most projects in the county.
Price: $795 (first 4 tons, then $85/ton)
Dimensions: 22’L x 8’W x 8’H
Ideal For: Major industrial, decommissioning, and large-scale work
Typical Use Cases: Frac pit liner removal, lease decommissioning, large-scale demolition, gas plant turnaround work, and major construction debris. Even at this size the DOT 10-ton cap still applies, so the 40 yard is best matched to bulky-but-lighter materials like wood, drywall, sheet metal, and brush rather than dense materials like dirt or concrete.
Price: $895 (first 5 tons, then $85/ton)
Note: Dimensions may vary slightly depending on current fleet stock.

For most of roll-off rentals on private property in Reeves County, no permit is required. The Reeves County Road & Bridge department publishes its full list of permits, and dumpster placement is not on it.
For the rare case of placement inside a public road right-of-way, call us at 800-996-9862, and we’ll coordinate with the relevant authority before the truck rolls.
Acceptable Materials:
Prohibited Items:
Unsure? Call 800-996-9862 for clarification.
Material collected from Reeves County jobs is hauled to Diamondback Landfill in Odessa, a facility owned by our parent company TXP Environmental. The vertical integration matters here for two distinct customer types.
For oilfield and industrial operators running compliance-sensitive work, the chain of custody runs from your lease in Reeves County straight to a TXP-owned facility under documented procedures, without a third-party tipping handoff in the middle.
For contractors and agricultural producers running ordinary disposal, the same TXP system means consistent disposal pricing that doesn’t get passed through third-party rate hikes the way it does for haulers without their own facility.

West Texas Dumpsters operates under credentials that go beyond what standard roll-off rental companies carry, giving Reeves County customers proper documentation, accurate manifests, and a defensible audit trail on every job.
We hold:
We ensure every job in Reeves County meets state and federal environmental standards. For a complete overview of TXP’s credentials, see our permit’s page.
For private property placements, no. Reeves County’s Road & Bridge department publishes the full list of permits it administers (driveways and culverts, utility facilities in county right-of-way, on-site sewage, food operations, manufacture home rental communities, subdivisions, and 911 address requests), and dumpster placement isn’t on that list.
The exception is the rare case of a placement inside a public road right-of-way, where state highways like 285 and I-20 fall under TxDOT and county roads route through Reeves County Road & Bridge. Inside Pecos city limits, jurisdiction shifts to the city, and the Pecos Service Area page covers that scenario.
Use the Pecos page if your job site is inside Pecos city limits. The Pecos page covers city-level delivery details, jurisdiction inside the municipal boundary, and the portable toilet, contaminated soil, and man camp work we run specifically for Pecos-area customers.
Use this Reeves County page for anywhere else in the county: Orla and the Highway 285 corridor, Toyah and the I-20 communities, Balmorhea and Saragosa to the south, Coyanosa to the southeast, and the lease properties and ranches scattered between them. If you’re not sure which page applies to your site, call 800-996-9862 and we’ll route the question.
Yes. Highway 285 through Reeves County is one of the most active oilfield trucking and pipeline corridors in the Permian Basin, and we run regular delivery routes off it for spread crews running tie-ins, gathering systems, and lateral builds north of Pecos toward Orla and up to the New Mexico state line.
Our Pipeline Construction Rentals page covers the full scope of how we work with pipeline projects across the basin.
Yes. Reeves County’s agricultural footprint runs across Pecos-area melon farms, the cotton acreage around Coyanosa, and the alfalfa fields toward Balmorhea and Saragosa, and we deliver containers for harvest cleanouts, post-harvest field clearing, packing-house turnover, and equipment yard reorganization across all of these operations.
The 20 and 30 yard containers handle most agricultural volume well, since the material tends to be bulky but light enough to stay under the 10-ton DOT cap. Timing-sensitive harvest jobs are common in this customer segment, so call 800-996-9862 in advance of harvest start dates and we’ll work the schedule around when the containers actually need to be on site.
Five days of notice is the recommended cadence because of the haul distance from the Odessa yard, but we’re set up to handle short-notice deliveries when active schedules shift.
Drilling, completion work, harvest timing, pipeline tie-ins, and plant turnarounds all run on their own clock, and we’d rather get a call at 7 AM and run a same-day or next-day delivery than make a crew sit on a backed-up location.
Call 800-996-9862 directly for short-notice requests and dispatch will work the schedule from there.
To schedule a roll-off container anywhere in Reeves County, call 800-996-9862 or request a quote online. Our team confirms container size, delivery location, and rental period before the drop, and we coordinate with rig schedules, harvest windows, pipeline spread moves, and turnaround timelines across the Delaware Basin and the broader county.
