Service across 10065, 10021 and 10075 — the pre-war co-ops along Park and Fifth Avenue, the doorman high-rises on Lexington, Third and Second, and the hospital district between 70th and 77th. COI paperwork, service-elevator slots, and white-glove estate downsizing are the everyday here.
Photo of your junk → exact total → COI and service-elevator coordination handled.
Upload Photos & Get Quote →The defining fact of hauling in Lenox Hill is the buildings: pre-war co-ops along Park and Fifth Avenue, grand limestone-and-brick houses converted to apartments off Madison, and a dense run of doorman high-rises on Lexington, Third, and Second. Almost none of these let a vendor through the door without a Certificate of Insurance and a booked service-elevator slot. So the job here starts before the truck does — with the right paperwork to the managing agent.
We send a $1M general-liability COI (plus umbrella), naming the co-op and managing agent as additional insured, within an hour of booking — and we've already filed with most of the major Park, Fifth, and Madison Avenue agents. The removal itself runs on the service elevator, booked through the super for a weekday window, loading at the service entrance or dock. Doorman check-in, elevator padding, no front-lobby traffic.
The other half of Lenox Hill work is generational. This is long-tenured, older-resident territory, and a large share of our jobs are estate downsizing — clearing decades of furniture, books, china, and stored belongings from an apartment after a move to assisted living or a passing. Much of it is genuine antique case goods, so careful handling is the default, and we work around whatever an auction house or appraiser is taking separately.
| Item | Price |
|---|---|
| Sofa / Couch | $170 |
| Sectional Sofa (3-Piece) | $249 |
| Mattress — Queen | $139 |
| Mattress — King / Cal King | $154 |
| Mattress + Box Spring Set | $192 |
| Refrigerator | $221 |
| Dining Table (6-8 Seat) | $174 |
| Cabinet / China Hutch | $215 |
| Dresser (Large / Double) | $199 |
| Wardrobe / Armoire | $165 |
| Bed Frame (any size) | $92 |
| TV (42–65") | $91 |
| Treadmill | $155 |
| Window AC Unit | $107 |
Per-item base prices, same across all NYC boroughs and all floors — no elevator or doorman-building surcharge. $75 minimum order. 10% bulk discount on 5+ items. Full-cleanout truck-fill pricing also available — from $295 for 1/4 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.
Within about an hour of booking. We email a $1M general-liability COI with umbrella, naming your co-op and managing agent as additional insured. We've already filed with most of the Park, Fifth, and Madison Avenue agents, so it's usually a quick turnaround for them to approve.
That's the standard. We book the service-elevator window through your super or resident manager, check in with the doorman, pad the cab if required, and load at the service entrance or dock. Front lobby stays clear.
Yes — that split is routine for us in Lenox Hill. Tell us (or tag) what the auction house, dealer, or appraiser is collecting, and we'll work around those and clear the rest: the furniture, books, china, electronics, and the closets full of stored belongings.
No. Pricing is flat — no elevator fee, no doorman-building surcharge, no floor charge. A sofa is $170 whether it's a ground-floor walk-up or a 14th-floor Park Avenue co-op. The COI and elevator coordination are included in the service.
"Park Avenue co-op, and the building is strict. The COI was with our managing agent within the hour, the freight slot was Tuesday morning, and they cleared my late aunt's apartment with real care for the antique pieces going to auction."
"Downsizing from a big Fifth Avenue apartment to something smaller. They coordinated with my movers, took only what I was leaving behind, and ran the whole thing on the service elevator without bothering the front desk."
"Lexington Avenue high-rise. Old sofa, mattress, and a broken treadmill gone in under an hour. The price was exactly the quote, and there was no nonsense about an elevator fee like the last company tried."