An old hot tub is one of the worst pieces of junk a homeowner can deal with. It is heavy, awkward, hardwired to electrical, and far too big for the curb. Across Los Angeles, Orange County, the Inland Empire, and the San Fernando Valley, thousands of spas installed in the early 2000s are reaching the end of their lifespan. If yours is leaking, won’t heat, or simply hasn’t been used in years, this 2026 guide walks through what removal really costs in Southern California, how the process works, and how to avoid the common mistakes that turn a one-day job into a weekend nightmare.
For most SoCal homeowners, expect to pay between $250 and $800 for full-service hot tub removal in 2026. The national average sits near $400, but Southern California pricing trends a bit higher because of labor rates, dump fees at LA County and Orange County transfer stations, and the access challenges typical of older neighborhoods.
Here is what drives the price:
When you book a junk removal company in Southern California, the price typically covers all labor, equipment, and disposal. A standard hot tub removal job includes:
What it usually does NOT include: a licensed electrician to fully remove the 220V circuit, permits for deck demolition, or repair of any concrete pad underneath. If you need those, ask up front.
A standard 400-gallon spa takes 2–4 hours to drain with a garden hose or sump pump. Drain to a landscaped area or sewer cleanout — never the street, since most SoCal cities (including LA, Long Beach, Anaheim, and Riverside) prohibit chlorinated water in storm drains.
Hot tubs run on a dedicated 220V GFCI breaker. Flip it off before the crew arrives. If you want the wiring removed back to the panel, hire a licensed electrician separately — junk removal crews are not licensed to do that work in California.
Walk the route from the spa to where the truck will park. Note gate widths, fence panels that can be removed, low branches, and step counts. The more info you give the crew, the faster (and cheaper) the job.
A 2-person crew typically completes a standard tub removal in 60–90 minutes. They cut, haul, sweep, and load. Most companies in Southern California — including 911 Junk CA — offer same-day or next-day service depending on the route.
Acrylic shells, fiberglass, and foam insulation usually head to the landfill. Motors, pumps, copper wiring, and metal frames go to recycling. A good junk removal company recycles 40–60% of every spa by weight.
You can absolutely remove a hot tub yourself. Here is the honest tradeoff:
For most homeowners in Los Angeles, Orange County, and the Inland Empire, the time and back-pain savings make professional removal the easy choice. If you are handy and have a truck, DIY can work — just plan two full days and verify your local dump (such as the Sun Valley or Stanton transfer stations) accepts spa debris.
911 Junk CA handles hot tub and spa removal across all of Los Angeles County, Orange County, Riverside, and San Bernardino — from a 2-person plug-and-play unit to an 8-person in-ground swim spa. We bring the saws, the crew, and the truck, and we recycle whatever we can.
Call 1-888-888-4911 for a free upfront quote, or book online at 911junkca.com. Same-day and next-day appointments available across Southern California seven days a week.
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