Residential and Commercial Junk Removal Companies in Chester County, PA

Contact JunkRats to hire us for any of the removal services above at affordable and flat rates.

Hands-Free or Hands-on
Whether you want us to do everything, from hauling to disposal or a junk pickup, we have diverse plans suitable for your needs. See them all below;
● Full-service Junk removal: When you call for our full services, we will take care of everything, from gathering all the unwanted items to removing and disposing of them responsibly. You won’t have to lift a pin if you choose this plan. Just rest easy and point out all the junks you don’t want lying on your properties.
● Curb or Garage pickups: You can move all the things you need to get rid of and have us pick them up. That works when you can carry the unwanted items yourself or do not want us entering the building.
● Ratbags: You may also buy different sizes of ratbags to dump all your trash and have us pick them up. Renting ratbags works when you need to get rid of small items that are easy to move. We will not have to gather the trash ourselves since everything is already in the ratbag.
● Disposal only: You can also do all the hauling and loading up into your own vehicle and bring it to us for disposal.

Looking for a reliable junk removal service in Chester County, PA? Contact Junkrats for any type of junk removal services that you need. Our expert haulers will be over to give you a free estimate and pick up the unwanted items.

Chester County (Pennsylvania Dutch: Tscheschter Kaundi), colloquially known as Chesco, is a county in the southeastern part of the U.S. state of Pennsylvania. As of the 2020 census, the population was 534,413, increasing by 7.1% from 498,886 in 2010. The county seat and most populated municipality are West Chester.[4] Chester County was one of the three original Pennsylvania counties created by William Penn in 1682. It was named for Chester, England.
Chester County is part of the Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD Metropolitan Statistical Area. Eastern Chester County is home to many communities that comprise part of the Main Line western suburbs outside of Philadelphia, while part of its southernmost portion is considered suburban Wilmington, along with southwest Delaware County.

Philadelphia, Bucks, and Chester were the three Pennsylvania counties initially created by William Penn on August 24, 1682. At that time, Chester County’s borders were Philadelphia County to the north, the ill-defined western edge of the colony (approximately the Susquehanna River) to the west, the Delaware River to the east, and Delaware and Maryland to the south. Chester County replaced the Pennsylvania portion of New Netherland/New York’s “Upland”, which was officially eliminated when Pennsylvania was chartered on March 4, 1681, but did not cease to exist until June of that year. Much of the Welsh Tract was in eastern Chester County, and Welsh place names, given by early settlers, continue to predominate there.

The fourth county in the state, Lancaster County, was formed from Chester County on May 10, 1729. On March 11, 1752, Berks County was formed from the northern section of Chester County, as well as parts of Lancaster and Philadelphia counties.
The original Chester County seat was the City of Chester, a center of naval shipbuilding at the eastern edge of the county. In an effort to accommodate the increased population of the western part of the county, the county seat was moved to a more central location in 1788; in order to mollify the eastern portion of the county, the village, known as Turk’s Head, was renamed, West Chester. In response to the new location of the county seat, the eastern portion of the county separated and formed the new Delaware County in 1789, with the City of Chester as its county seat.