Construction Debris: What You Can (and Can't) Take to the Dump
Renovating your home? Drywall, lumber, concrete, and roofing materials have different disposal rules than regular trash. Here's what to know.
Read more →Lebanon Landfill is the municipal landfill serving the Lebanon area; trucks and residents needing final disposal use it. Located off N Plainfield Road in West Lebanon, it’s the place where trash gets buried rather than recycled or dropped at a transfer station. Locals, haulers, and businesses that bring larger loads tend to show up here.
There’s a drive-in scale at the entrance and vehicles are weighed - expect to stop twice, once in and once out. A small entrance booth sits near the road and directions from the booth point drivers to the tipping face or drop-off pad. The site is large and mostly open, with compacted berms of soil and working equipment moving loads around; the active tipping area is obvious and usually noisy. Commercial trucks are commonly seen here, so the layout handles big loads alongside smaller residential trucks.
Learn how to properly dispose of common items.

Renovating your home? Drywall, lumber, concrete, and roofing materials have different disposal rules than regular trash. Here's what to know.
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E-waste rules vary wildly by state. Some ban electronics from landfills entirely. Here's how to recycle old TVs, computers, and phones properly.
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Most counties run free household hazardous waste collection events. Here's what qualifies, how to find your local event, and how to store stuff safely until then.
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