Docket Dumpster Software evolves into Docket Waste Software

The company brings together roll-off dumpsters, commercial trash routes and residential routes through one system.

Docket Waste Software.
The company's new name represents a broader commitment to supporting waste haulers as they grow and expand their services.
Image courtesy of Docket Waste Software.

Denver-based Docket Dumpster Software has announced the next phase of its company evolution with a new name, Docket Waste Software, to reflect its expansion beyond roll-off dumpster rental into commercial and residential trash operations. 

As the company’s customers expanded into front-load commercial trash and residential routes, Docket says it saw a growing problem across the industry: most waste software breaks when trash routes and roll-off dumpsters are run together. 

“Many of our customers started in roll-off and naturally grew into commercial and residential trash,” says Jonah Chilton, Docket Waste Software CEO. “What they told us was clear; the software options on the market weren’t built for that mix. They forced workarounds, manual cleanup and too much reliance on memory. We built these new capabilities to support how our customers are actually growing, and to make it a better experience than what’s currently available.” 

Docket Waste Software brings roll-off dumpsters, commercial trash routes and residential routes together in one system. The company says dispatchers can manage mixed operations from a single board; drivers can complete stops with one tap and report issues directly in the app and billing stays automatically connected to what happened in the field. 

The platform includes mobile functionality that works in real time and offline, and an interface designed for both office staff and drivers. 

The company updated its tagline to “It just works” to reflect that software should hold up when haulers run trash routes and roll-off dumpsters together. 

Docket Waste Software says its new name represents a broader commitment to supporting waste haulers as they grow and expand their services, without forcing them to change systems or adopt multiple tools.