Of all the materials that leave a construction or demolition site, metal is the one most likely to make you money rather than cost you money. While concrete, drywall, and mixed debris generate disposal fees, metal generates revenue. Scrap dealers pay for steel, rebar, copper, and aluminum - often coming to your site to pick it up and writing you a check on the spot.

Despite this, surveys consistently find that 20–30% of the metal generated on construction sites still ends up in mixed-debris dumpsters and goes to landfill. The reason is almost always logistics: no dedicated bin, no established relationship with a scrap dealer, and no one designated to manage the metal stream. This guide covers what you are leaving on the table and how to stop leaving it.

Why Metal Should Be Your First Diversion Priority

Metal diversion is the easiest win in construction waste management for three reasons. First, it generates revenue rather than disposal cost - every ton of steel you divert to a scrap dealer is a ton you are not paying $55–100 in landfill tipping fees, plus you receive payment for the material. Second, scrap dealers make the logistics simple - they come to you, they handle the transport, and they pay immediately. Third, metal is easy to identify and sort even by untrained labor - steel, copper, and aluminum are visually distinct and do not require contamination management the way gypsum or clean wood do.

On a mid-size commercial renovation, the metal stream can be worth $1,500–5,000 in direct scrap revenue. On a full structural demolition - where you are removing structural steel, HVAC equipment, electrical infrastructure, and plumbing - that number can reach $20,000–50,000 or more. This is not a secondary concern. It belongs on the project's financial summary alongside labor and materials.

Key Takeaway

Metal diversion generates revenue, not disposal cost. Establishing a scrap dealer relationship and providing a dedicated metal container before demo starts is the single highest-return action in construction waste management.

Ferrous Metals: Steel, Iron, and Rebar

Ferrous metals - those containing iron - are the most common metals on construction sites by weight. They include:

Current ferrous scrap prices range from approximately $150–250 per ton for clean steel, with light iron and mixed metals often fetching $100–150/ton. These prices fluctuate with steel markets - they peaked significantly higher in 2021–2022 and have moderated since. Check current pricing with your local dealer before estimating project revenue.

Non-Ferrous Metals: Copper, Aluminum, Brass

Non-ferrous metals are dramatically more valuable per pound than ferrous metals. They are also present in smaller volumes, which is why sorting them out rather than mixing with steel is critical to maximizing recovery.

Copper

Copper is typically the highest-value metal on a construction site. Sources include:

Bare bright copper wire commands $3.50–5.00/lb at most scrap dealers. Insulated wire brings $1.50–2.50/lb depending on insulation weight. Copper plumbing pipe averages $3.00–4.50/lb. Even small volumes add up quickly: 100 lbs of copper plumbing pipe from a bathroom gut generates $300–450 in scrap revenue.

Aluminum

Aluminum appears in window frames, curtain wall systems, door frames, electrical conduit, and roofing components on commercial projects. It also appears as aluminum wiring in older residential buildings (1965–1973). Aluminum scrap brings approximately $0.50–1.00/lb depending on grade and form. Cast aluminum (motor housings, equipment components) is worth more than sheet or extruded aluminum at some dealers.

Brass

Brass appears in plumbing fixtures, valves, faucets, door hardware, and electrical connectors. It brings $1.00–2.00/lb - significantly more than aluminum but less than copper. Keeping brass in a dedicated container rather than mixing with other metals is worth the effort.

Scrap Metal Pricing Reference

Metal Type Common Construction Sources Approx. Price Range Notes
Bare bright copper Stripped electrical wire $3.50–5.00/lb Highest grade; requires removing insulation
Copper pipe (clean) Plumbing, HVAC $3.00–4.50/lb Remove fittings for best price at some dealers
Insulated copper wire Romex, building wire $1.50–2.50/lb Price depends on copper recovery %
Brass Valves, fittings, fixtures $1.00–2.00/lb Mixed brass grades at most dealers
Aluminum (clean) Window frames, conduit $0.50–1.00/lb Cast aluminum commands premium
Structural steel Beams, columns, rebar $150–250/ton Clean, sorted loads; market-driven
Light iron / mixed metal Studs, ductwork, hardware $100–150/ton Lower rate for mixed or contaminated
HVAC equipment Air handlers, boilers, chillers Varies by component Dealer often buys whole units; strips non-ferrous

Prices are approximate and vary by market, grade, and commodity cycle. Always confirm current pricing with your local dealer - prices can move 20–30% in either direction over a 6-month period.

How Scrap Metal Dealers Work

Scrap dealers operate in two modes: pickup and drop-off. For construction sites with significant volume - typically 500 lbs or more - most dealers will come to you. They arrive with a flat-bed or roll-off truck, weigh the load using a portable or truck scale, and pay you on the spot or issue payment within a few days depending on your arrangement.

For smaller volumes or high-value non-ferrous metals, you may choose to haul material to the dealer's yard and get weighed in. This works well for copper and brass where even small quantities represent significant value and where you want to ensure each material is weighed separately for maximum pricing.

Building a dealer relationship: Find a dealer before the project starts. Call and describe the volume and composition of your metal waste. Ask what minimum loads they pick up, how they price mixed versus sorted loads, and what their current buy prices are for your main streams. Dealers who understand you have recurring project work will often give better pricing to retain the relationship.

What to ask before committing:

Sorting Metals for Maximum Value

The decision to sort versus mix comes down to volumes. If your project generates only a few hundred pounds of copper and a few hundred pounds of aluminum, the effort of maintaining separate containers may not be worth it - the dealer will simply downgrade the mixed load slightly. But if you are generating thousands of pounds of copper wire and several tons of aluminum framing, sorting pays for itself multiple times over.

Practical sorting rules for construction sites:

Container Strategy for Metal

At minimum, order a dedicated metal-only bin separate from your general debris roll-off. This single step prevents the most common failure mode: metal ending up in a mixed-debris container that goes to a transfer station rather than a scrap dealer. The bin does not need to be large - a 10-yard container handles the metal output of most residential renovations - but it must be dedicated and clearly labeled.

For larger commercial or demolition projects, consider:

Copper and non-ferrous metals should be stored in a secured, locked area whenever possible. Metal theft from construction sites is a persistent problem in most markets, and a few hundred pounds of copper wire represents a tempting target. Some contractors haul copper off-site daily or have the scrap dealer pick it up as it accumulates rather than leaving it on-site overnight.

Regulatory Requirements

Scrap metal transactions are regulated in most states to combat metal theft from construction sites, utility infrastructure, and public property. Standard requirements include:

As a licensed contractor selling scrap from your own project, none of these requirements are burdensome - you have permits, contracts, and business documentation that clearly establish your right to the material. Simply bring your contractor license, a copy of the permit or contract showing you are the GC or demo contractor, and your ID.

What to avoid: never sell metal from a project where you are not the authorized demolition contractor. Selling fixtures, wiring, or plumbing from a property without explicit written authorization from the owner, even if you believe it is abandoned, is a crime in all states. The "I thought it was okay" defense does not work with metal theft statutes.

Metal Recycling and LEED Credits

Every pound of metal diverted to a scrap recycler counts toward the LEED v4.1 Construction Waste Management credit. Metal is one of the most reliable and easy-to-document diversion streams for LEED purposes because scrap dealers always issue scale tickets with weight and material grade - exactly the documentation the credit requires.

When collecting documentation for LEED:

Metal recycling contributes to the overall diversion percentage alongside concrete, drywall, and wood. On a typical renovation project, metal is often the highest-value but not the highest-weight material. On demolition projects, the combination of structural steel and concrete diversion can push the overall diversion rate to 70–80% by weight without any additional streams. For a full diversion strategy, see Landfill Diversion Strategies for Construction Contractors and the complete LEED Recycling Diversion guide.

Conclusion

Metal recycling is the highest-return, lowest-effort diversion strategy available to construction contractors. The infrastructure is already in place - scrap dealers are in every market, they come to you, and they pay you. All you need to do is designate a container, establish a dealer relationship before the project starts, and give your superintendent a clear directive to keep metal out of the general debris roll-off. On a large demo project, this single decision can generate $10,000–50,000 in scrap revenue that would otherwise be dumped into a landfill at your expense. On a residential renovation, it is a few hundred dollars and a diversion certificate - but those add up across a year's worth of projects.

Estimate Metal Volumes Before Demo Starts

WasteCalc API returns estimated waste by material - including metal - so you can plan your scrap dealer logistics and project your diversion credits before the first wall comes down.

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