Construction
Non-structural wall removal across the Golden Isles.
Partition walls, drywall, and non-load-bearing studs torn out and hauled. We open the room — a licensed contractor handles the load-bearing and permit work.
Part of our Construction Debris Removal service
Opening up a room usually starts with one wall that was never doing much. A partition between a bedroom and a closet, a half-wall that boxed in a kitchen, a stud wall someone framed years ago to split a single big room into two small ones. When that wall carries no load, we can take it out — drywall, partition framing, the paneling on it — and haul every bit of the debris away.
This is the whole point of this page, so we’ll say it plainly: we only remove non-structural, non-load-bearing walls and partitions. We do not remove load-bearing walls or framing, and we do not do electrical, plumbing, HVAC, or any permit-required work — those require a licensed contractor. We are a junk-removal and light-demolition crew, not a remodeling or construction contractor. Non-structural wall material and partition removal is the work; structural removal is not.
Before we tear out, we strongly recommend you confirm the wall is non-load-bearing — and that any wiring, plumbing, or ductwork inside it has been cleared and rerouted by the right trade. We can take out the material once that’s settled. What we won’t do is guess that a wall is safe to remove and pull it down on a hope. If there’s any question whether a wall carries load, that’s a question for a contractor or engineer first, not for us.
What we haul
Specifically, what we take for non-structural wall removal.
- Drywall and sheetrock from non-load-bearing partition walls
- Partition framing — studs and plates of a confirmed non-load-bearing wall
- Wood paneling and trim mounted on a partition wall
- Insulation pulled from inside a non-structural partition
- Old half-walls, pony walls, and room-divider stud walls
- The mixed debris the tear-out leaves behind — broken board, fasteners, dust
How we work
How we actually handle it.
The first part of any wall job isn’t demolition — it’s confirming the wall is non-load-bearing. We ask how you know, and the honest answers are things like a contractor or engineer told you, the wall runs parallel to the floor joists above and carries nothing, or it was framed in well after the house was built to divide an existing room. If the answer is “it doesn’t look like it’s holding anything up,” we slow down. We don’t remove a wall we can’t treat as clearly non-structural, and a real load-bearing question goes to a licensed contractor before we touch it.
Once the wall is confirmed non-load-bearing and any wiring, plumbing, or HVAC inside it has been cleared by the right trade, the work itself is straightforward. We cut and pull the drywall, take down the non-load-bearing framing, pull the paneling or trim, and bag and haul the debris. You get an open span where a partition used to be, swept and ready for whatever comes next.
What needs a contractor instead of us: anything load-bearing, any new framing or beams to carry load, and any electrical, plumbing, HVAC, or permitted work tied to the wall. We tear out non-structural material and remove the debris. We don’t reroute a circuit, cap a pipe, or pull a permit — and if your wall involves any of that, get the licensed trade in first.
Pricing
How pricing works.
Non-structural wall removal scales with how big the wall is, what it’s made of, and what’s behind it. A single drywall partition in an empty room is the lightest version. A longer paneled stud wall with insulation, in a finished and furnished space that has to be protected, is heavier work — more careful cutting, more dust control, more debris to haul.
We come look at the wall — or you send photos and rough dimensions plus what you’ve confirmed about it being non-load-bearing — and we give you a real number. We don’t quote a wall sight unseen, and we don’t price a tear-out until we know it’s a wall we’re cleared to remove.
Ready when you are
Need non-structural wall removal hauled away? We can help.
The honest exceptions
What we won’t take — for this item.
A short, honest list of edge cases we either won’t take or want to discuss before we show up. When in doubt, call us — we’ll walk through it before scheduling.
- Load-bearing walls or any wall we cannot treat as clearly non-load-bearing — that’s contractor and engineer territory, not ours
- Structural framing, beams, posts, or anything carrying load
- Electrical, plumbing, or HVAC work — disconnecting, rerouting, or capping inside the wall needs the licensed trade first
- Any permit-required demolition or remodeling work — we are not a licensed construction contractor
Questions
Frequently asked questions about non-structural wall removal.
Related items
Other things people pair with this haul.
Wood Paneling Removal
Two kinds of paneling, two very different days.
Read moreDrop Ceiling Removal
A drop ceiling comes down in layers, and most of the job is bulk rather than weight.
Read moreFlooring Removal
Tile is the slow, dusty one.
Read moreFireplace Mantel Removal
A typical mantel comes off in a predictable order.
Read moreBathtub Removal
The deciding factor on most tub jobs is what the tub is made of and where it sits.
Read moreBuilt-In Cabinet Removal
A built-in comes out in roughly the reverse order it went in.
Read more
Common in
Where we haul non-structural wall removal most.
We haul non-structural wall removal regularly across the Golden Isles, especially in Brunswick, St. Simons Island, Kingsland, Darien, and Jekyll Island.
Ready when you are
Ready to get it out of your driveway?
Free quote in 60 seconds. Same-day pickup available across the Golden Isles.
Open Mon–Sat 8am–5pm · Sunday 12pm–5pm
Last reviewed: June 25, 2026
