Water Heater Removal & Disposal in Southern California: 2026 Cost & Disposal Guide

A failing water heater is one of those problems that never picks a convenient time. One morning the hot water is gone, there’s a puddle on the garage floor, and you’re left with a heavy, rusted steel tank you have no idea how to get rid of. If you live anywhere in Southern California — Los Angeles, the Inland Empire, or Orange County — this guide walks you through what old water heater removal actually costs in 2026, how gas and electric units differ, where the metal ends up, and why most homeowners skip the DIY headache.

Water Heater Removal Cost in Southern California (2026)

Pricing depends mostly on one thing: whether the tank is already disconnected and drained, or still hooked up and full of water. Here is what you can expect to pay this year:

  • Junk removal haul-away: $85–$267 for a standard 40–50 gallon tank that’s disconnected and ready to go.
  • Plumber removal + disposal: $100–$500, which includes disconnecting the gas or electrical line, draining the tank, and hauling it off — usually bundled with a new install.
  • Scrap yard drop-off: Free to a small payout ($7–$30) if you haul it yourself and the tank is drained.

The reason full-service junk removal lands in the middle is simple: a drained 50-gallon tank still weighs 120–150 pounds of awkward steel, and getting it out of a tight garage, closet, or attic without scratching walls or flooring is harder than it looks. A two-person crew handles the lift, the stairs, and the truck loading for you.

Gas vs. Electric Water Heaters: What’s Different

Gas Water Heaters

Gas units are the most common in older SoCal homes. Before removal, the gas supply line must be shut off and capped — this is a job for a licensed plumber, not something to improvise. Once the line is safely capped and the tank is drained, the unit is just heavy scrap steel that a junk crew can carry out.

Electric Water Heaters

Electric models are simpler. The breaker is switched off and the wiring disconnected at the unit. There’s no gas line to cap, so disconnection is often quicker, though the tank itself is just as heavy and just as full of water until you drain it.

Tankless Units

If you’re upgrading to tankless, the old wall-mounted unit you’re replacing is far smaller and lighter than a traditional tank — but the old 40- or 50-gallon tank it’s replacing still needs to come out, and that’s where most of the heavy lifting lives.

California Rules You Should Know

Water heaters are classified as major appliances in California, which means they can’t simply be tossed in your regular trash or a curbside bin. A few specifics for SoCal homeowners:

  • Permits for replacement: California requires a permit to install a new water heater, with fees from roughly $75–$250 depending on your city or county.
  • Seismic strapping: State code requires water heaters to be strapped for earthquake safety — relevant when the new unit goes in.
  • Thermal expansion tank: Most replacements now require an expansion tank under California code.
  • Certified recycling: The state’s Department of Toxic Substances Control runs a Certified Appliance Recycler program so the steel, copper, and brass get reclaimed properly instead of landfilled.

Where Your Old Water Heater Actually Goes

A water heater is almost entirely recyclable. The outer shell and inner tank are steel; the connections and heating elements contain copper, brass, and aluminum. A reputable hauler drains the tank, removes plastic components, and delivers the metal to a scrap recycler rather than a dump. At 911 Junk CA, we route appliances like water heaters to scrap and recycling facilities whenever possible — keeping heavy metal out of Southern California landfills.

Why Not Just Do It Yourself?

Plenty of homeowners try, and a few good reasons stop most of them:

  • Weight and bulk: Even drained, the tank is heavy and tall, with sharp edges and a high center of gravity on stairs.
  • Water damage risk: Tanks hold sediment and leftover water that can ruin flooring if the unit tips during the move.
  • Vehicle limits: A water heater won’t fit in most cars, and the metal can damage a trunk or truck bed.
  • Disposal hassle: Many transfer stations won’t take appliances curbside, and scrap yards have hours and prep requirements.

For the price of a couple hours of your weekend and a possible dent in your car, full-service removal is usually the easier call.

Same-Day Water Heater Removal Across SoCal

911 Junk CA picks up old water heaters — gas, electric, and tankless — throughout Los Angeles, the Inland Empire, and Orange County, serving 30+ cities from Pasadena and Torrance to Anaheim, Long Beach, and the surrounding Inland Empire. Our crews handle the lift, protect your floors and walls, load the tank, and recycle the metal responsibly. Just make sure the unit is disconnected (have a plumber cap the gas line on gas models) and we’ll take care of the rest.

Got an old water heater taking up space? Contact 911 Junk CA today for a free, no-obligation quote and same-day pickup across Southern California.

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