Check your name before filing
Your Junk Removal LLC name must be unique in North Dakota's registry. A duplicate name means instant rejection. This check is free and takes 30 seconds.
Market Overview
Is North Dakota a Good State for a Junk Removal Business?
Fargo is the primary ND market. Bismarck is the state capital market. Oil patch communities (Williston, Dickinson) have cyclical demand tied to oil prices.
For Junk Removal specifically, North Dakota offers a competitive market with defined seasonal demand. With Fargo, Bismarck, Grand Forks as major population centers, there is consistent demand across the state.
Annual Revenue
$60,000β$200,000
Per Job
$182β$390
Jobs/Month
60β120 loads (solo operator, 3β6 jobs/day)
Operator-reported data. Results depend on local pricing, competition, and marketing.
State Operational Insight
Extreme winters limit operations significantly NovemberβMarch. WSI workers comp enrollment is mandatory and state-run β register before hiring.
Entity Decision
Do You Need an LLC for a Junk Removal Business in North Dakota?
You are not legally required to form an LLC. You can operate as a sole proprietor from day one. Most Junk Removal owners form one for one reason: vehicle accident liability, property damage while hauling, and employee injury exposure.
North Dakota Asset Protection
If a junk removal truck causes an accident on I-94 in Fargo, or if your crew damages property in a Bismarck commercial space, an LLC protects your personal savings and property under N.D.C.C. Β§ 10-32.1-26. A sole proprietorship offers zero protection.
Federal Penalties: The EPA's RCRA (Resource Conservation and Recovery Act) imposes civil fines up to $124,426 per day per violation for improper waste disposal. A junk hauler who dumps materials at an unlicensed site even once faces the same federal exposure as an industrial polluter. The LLC does not protect against criminal penalties, which include fines up to $50,000/day and up to 5 years in federal prison for knowingly transporting hazardous waste to an unpermitted facility.
Ready to form your North Dakota LLC?
Northwest: filing + registered agent + compliance reminders
$39 + $135 state fee Β· 1 year agent free
Formation Guide
How to Form an LLC in North Dakota β Step by Step
$135 filing fee Β· 3β4 weeks to process Β· Filed with the Secretary of State
Choose a Name for Your LLC
Your LLC name must be unique in North Dakota's registry and include "LLC" or "Limited Liability Company." It does not need to match your trading name β many owners form "Smith Holdings LLC" and operate as "Junk Removal of Fargo."
Check Your LLC Name AvailabilityβAppoint a Registered Agent
North Dakota requires every LLC to designate a registered agent with a physical North Dakota address. Must have physical ND address or use commercial registered agent
File Your Articles of Organization
File online with the Secretary of State or let an expert form your North Dakota LLC to avoid common rejection errors.
Recommended Filing Service
Northwest Registered Agent Top Pick
File your LLC instantly directly through Northwest. They handle the state paperwork and include premium essentials for just $39 + $135 state fee.
- β Free 1 Year Agent
- β Free Business Phone
- β Free Business Email
- β Free Domain
Get Your EIN (Federal Tax ID)
Free and takes ~10 minutes at irs.gov. Needed to open a business bank account, hire employees, and file taxes. Apply MonβFri 7amβ10pm ET for instant approval.
Open a Business Bank Account
The step most new junk removal owners skip β and the one that voids LLC protection if skipped. Commingling personal and business funds is the primary reason courts pierce the corporate veil. Bring: EIN letter, Articles of Organization, government-issued ID.
Get Business Insurance
Minimum requirements: $1M general liability + commercial auto. Personal auto policies explicitly exclude commercial hauling.
Est. annual cost in North Dakota: $2,400β$6,500/year
General Liability
Required by most commercial clients and property managers before hiring. Covers property damage while hauling items through homes and customer injuries.
Commercial Auto
Required by law in 49 states for business vehicles. Personal auto policies EXPLICITLY exclude commercial use β a denied claim after a truck accident could bankrupt an uninsured operator.
Workers Compensation
Required in most states once you hire employees. Junk removal has above-average injury rates due to heavy lifting, sharp debris, and unpredictable working conditions. Back injuries are the most common claim.
Business Owner's Policy (BOP)
Recommended for established operators. Cheaper than buying GL and property separately.
Pollution Liability
Optional but recommended if handling any hazardous materials, paint, chemicals, or electronics. Standard GL policies exclude pollution events β a chemical spill from your truck onto a customer's driveway would be denied without this coverage.
Need to save time?
Hire Northwest to handle filing, registered agent and compliance. $39 + $135 state fee.
Regulatory Requirements
Waste Permits & Licenses in North Dakota
North Dakota does not require a statewide solid waste transporter permit for standard junk removal. The ND Department of Environmental Quality regulates solid waste facilities.
State Permitting Agency:
North Dakota Department of Environmental Quality (NDDEQ)- State Permit Required: Varies by county/service
- Estimated Cost: Varies
- Renewal: Varies
Local Municipal Rules
Fargo and Bismarck require local business licenses.
Items to Refuse (RCRA Liability)
Under federal law, knowingly transporting these items to unpermitted facilities carries extreme penalties. Always inspect loads.
- β Asbestos (requires licensed abatement contractor)
- β Medical or biohazard waste
- β Radioactive materials
- β Unknown chemicals in unlabeled containers
- β PCB-containing equipment (old fluorescent ballasts, capacitors)
- β Lead-acid batteries (except in states where you hold appropriate recycler registration)
- β Mercury-containing devices beyond CFL bulbs
- β Explosives or ammunition
Financial Overview
Total Cost to Start a Junk Removal Business in North Dakota
One-Time Setup Costs
Annual Recurring Costs
Variable Cost: Disposal Fees (Tipping)
ND tipping fees below national average
$25β$55 per load
jobs to break even
At $182β$390/job Β· 60β120 loads (solo operator, 3β6 jobs/day) Β· approximately ~1 months to recover first-year costs.
Avoid These
Common Mistakes Junk Removal Business Owners Make in North Dakota
- 1
Skipping commercial auto coverage
Personal auto policies explicitly exclude commercial use. If you hit a car on the way to a job, your personal insurance will deny the claim immediately.
- 2
Underestimating disposal costs
Tipping fees eat into profit margins fast. Many new operators quote $300 for a load without realizing the dump will charge them $150 to drop it.
- 3
Not inspecting loads before quoting
Hazardous materials like wet paint, chemicals, or unsealed batteries can trigger massive fines if taken to a standard transfer station.
- 4
Ignoring local hauler permits
Many municipalities require a specific solid waste transporter permit to legally move debris within city limits.
- 5
Skipping the operating agreement
Even solo owners need this document. Without it, your LLC defaults to state rules, which may not favor your business structure.
- 6
Using your home address on public records
Your address appears in the state's public LLC registry. A registered agent keeps your home address private.
Quick Answers
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does it cost to start a Junk Removal business in North Dakota?
Do I need a license to start a Junk Removal business in North Dakota?
How long does it take to form an LLC in North Dakota?
Can I run a Junk Removal business from home in North Dakota?
What is the difference between an LLC and a sole proprietorship for a Junk Removal business?
Ready to start?
Form Your North Dakota Junk Removal LLC Today
Northwest handles filing, registered agent, and annual compliance reminders. File directly with the Secretary of State for $135, or let Northwest do everything for $39 + $135.
* Northwest is a third-party service. State fees go directly to the Secretary of State.