Same-day pickup across 11360 and 11361 — the Tudor and split-level single-families of Bayside Hills and Auburndale, the Bay Terrace co-op complex along 26th Avenue, and the Bell Boulevard storefronts. Bayside is the most suburban part of NYC: driveways at the door, fewer freight-elevator headaches, and pricing that reflects it.
Photo of your junk → exact total → truck pulls into your driveway. Most jobs done in under an hour.
Upload Photos & Get Quote →Bayside is the most suburban-feeling slice of New York City. Walk a block off Bell Boulevard and you're in front of detached single-family homes with driveways, front lawns, and side yards — Tudors, Cape Cods, split-levels, ranches. The bulk of the neighborhood is residential single-family across two ZIPs, 11360 and 11361, with very little of the urban density that defines the rest of Queens. There is no subway. Manhattan-bound commuters take the LIRR Port Washington branch from the Bayside station; local trips lean on the Q12, Q13, Q27, Q28, and Q31 buses.
North of Northern Boulevard and west of Bell sits Bayside Hills — deeper lots, larger homes, long-tenured Italian-American family ownership. South of Northern, between Bayside Hills and the Long Island Expressway, is Auburndale, where the housing stock tilts toward split-levels and ranches. Along 26th Avenue near the water is the Bay Terrace cooperative complex — a large garden-apartment co-op community with thousands of units arranged around an internal road system, attached to the Bay Terrace Shopping Center. Pre-war and mid-century low-rise apartment buildings hug Bell Boulevard, with newer condo developments mixed in closer to the commercial spine.
Demographically, Bayside skews older — empty-nesters in homes they bought decades ago — with a major Korean-American presence concentrated along Bell Boulevard (one of NYC's three major Korean enclaves, alongside Flushing and Fort Lee) and a growing South Asian community. Recognizable landmarks include Crocheron Park, Oakland Lake, the Bay Terrace Shopping Center, and Bell Boulevard's restaurant strip.
| Item | Price |
|---|---|
| Sofa / Couch | $159 |
| Sectional Sofa (2-Piece) | $190 |
| Sectional Sofa (3-Piece) | $249 |
| Sectional Sofa (4+ Piece) | $307 |
| Mattress — Queen | $139 |
| Mattress — King / Cal King | $154 |
| Mattress + Box Spring Set | $192 |
| Refrigerator | $171 |
| Washer or Dryer (each) | $129 |
| Washer/Dryer Combo (Stacked) | $175 |
| Dining Table (6-8 Seat) | $139 |
| Wardrobe / Armoire | $165 |
| Cabinet / China Hutch | $165 |
| Dresser (Standard) | $106 |
| Bed Frame (any size) | $92 |
| Bunk Bed | $165 |
| TV (42–65") | $91 |
| Peloton / Smart Bike | $108 |
| Treadmill | $155 |
| Window AC Unit | $107 |
Per-item base prices, same across all NYC boroughs (no borough or floor surcharge). $75 minimum order. 10% bulk discount on 5+ items. Full-cleanout truck-fill pricing also available — from $175 for 1/8 of a 16-cubic-yard truck up to $895 for a full truck. Upload a photo at junkrabbit.nyc for the exact total in 7 seconds.
Bayside's defining feature, operationally, is that most of it is single-family with a driveway. The truck pulls up, the crew unloads tools, walks to the basement door or the garage, and starts moving. There's no managing-agent paperwork, no service elevator to book, no doorman to wait on, no fighting for a curb spot. A pickup that would take 90 minutes on Main Street in Flushing takes 35 minutes in Bayside Hills. That's the entire reason the pricing column above is cheaper.
For Bay Terrace, the complex has its own internal road network and a resident-manager office. When you book, tell us your building number — we coordinate with the manager so the truck enters and parks correctly. Most Bay Terrace pickups are first-floor or stair-walk-up (the buildings are 2-3 stories), so it's still significantly faster than a typical NYC apartment job.
Bell Boulevard itself is a different story. It's metered, commercial-busy, and during dinner hours the parking situation gets ugly. For Bell Boulevard restaurant equipment pulls and the mid-rise apartments along the strip, we stage on the residential side streets (35th Avenue, 38th Avenue, 41st Avenue) and load from the rear or side entrance. Northern Boulevard is a state route — same story, we work off the side streets. Anywhere off the two commercial corridors, parking is residential and easy.
"My parents' Tudor in Bayside Hills — they'd been in it 47 years and my dad was moving to assisted living. Basement, garage, shed, attic, all of it. Truck pulled into the driveway and the crew worked across two days. Respectful with the family stuff. Quote held."
"Bay Terrace turnover — old tenant left a couch, a bed, and a pile of boxes. Booked the morning of, the resident manager waved them through, truck pulled right up to my building. Done in 45 minutes."
"Closing my restaurant on Bell Boulevard. Two reach-in fridges, prep tables, broken grills. They handled the refrigerant disposal properly and the crew spoke Korean with my husband, which made coordinating the load-out much easier."