Used Housing and Building Materials that Can Be Recycled for Cash

C. Jeanne Heida
Are you starting a home remodel? One way to beat the high price of a remodel is by recycling all your unwanted building material and debris for cash.

Aside from sheet rock, particle board, insulation, and some other odds & ends, almost everything found in the construction of a home can be recycled. Some items such as clean, but old carpet can be donated to second hand building material stores for repurposing. Vintage items such as old floor tiles, old cabinets, bricks, wood flooring, doorknobs & hinges, heat grates, fireplace mantels, and light fixtures can be sold for cash at a yard sale or on Craigs List.

There's also quite a few building material components that can be sold to recycling centers for cash. Here are some ideas to get you started:

Carpet pad. While your carpet can't be recycled for cash, the composition carpet pads beneath the carpet is highly recyclable. Composition pads are the ones with a mosaic pattern as opposed to a solid color yellow pad.

Cast iron tubs, sinks, and pipes. In some locations, cast iron plumbing fixtures can also be recycled for cash. If the fixtures are in excellent condition, you might earn more cash selling them at a yard sale instead of recycling them.

Aluminum siding. Clean, rust free aluminum siding is highly marketable and sells for top dollar at recycling centers. Since aluminum siding is worth more per pound than the aluminum trim pieces, soffits, and other siding components, it's best to separate them out from the smaller pieces so as to earn top dollar. Unsorted aluminum siding scrap means you'll earn less money.

Brass plumbing fixtures. Older homes often had brass drains and drain pipes which can be quite are valuable. These are definitely worth separating out and sending out for recycling.

Copper wiring and plumbing. Recycled copper is worth about 90% of its original cost. Copper can be found in electrical wires, tubing, conduits, beneath shower pans, as stove hoods, and other decorative architectural elements.

Stainless steel. Stainless steel sinks, old appliances, faucets, and pipes can also be recycled for cash. Stainless pays out a different rates depending on the thickness of the material; before hauling a huge load of stainless to the recycling center, call ahead to learn how the steel recyclables should be separated to earn the best price.

Other articles by this author:
Disposing of housing construction materials the green way.
Can you recycle aluminum siding?
How to recycle carpeting.

Published by C. Jeanne Heida - Featured Contributor in Business & Finance and Lifestyle

Jeanne is a small business owner with 25 years experience in the real estate industry. A consistent Y!CN Top 100 writer, her articles can be found at Y!Finance, Shine, Your Wisdom, DEX, and the Scripps Net...  View profile

5 Comments

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  • Lorena Richie3/3/2011

    awesome tips! We will probably be remodeling some rooms in the near future.

  • Karen Curley3/3/2011

    Great ideas for homeowners! In my area, people are actually stealing copper piping out of empty houses and construction siets to resell it! I guess it can be a quite lucrative business if you don't get caught!

  • Michele Starkey3/3/2011

    Awesome information, Jeanne. Cheers ;)

  • Megan Myers3/2/2011

    Good information. My nephew, who is an electrician, sold a pickup load of copper wire, and made more on that than he makes in a week!

  • Donna Cavanagh3/2/2011

    I never knew you could get paid for these things. Great information!

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