Old mattresses are one of the most awkward things to get rid of in Kelowna. They’re bulky, they won’t fit in a curbside cart, and most donation centres turn them away for hygiene reasons. The good news is you have several legitimate options in the Central Okanagan — some free, some paid — and the right one depends on the mattress’s condition and how much heavy lifting you want to do. Here’s the honest rundown, cheapest first.
- Landfill: the Glenmore Landfill accepts mattresses, but charges a per-item surcharge on top of the minimum load fee — check the current rate on the landfill fee schedule before you drive out.
- Donation: only clean, undamaged mattresses, and most centres — including thrift stores and Habitat ReStore — won’t take used mattresses at all.
- Recycling: mattress recycling exists in BC but is limited in the Interior; call ahead before assuming a depot will take it.
- Pickup: if you can’t transport it or don’t want the trips, a mattress removal service loads and hauls it for you.
- Rule of thumb: good condition → try to donate; worn out → landfill or pickup.
Option 1: Take it to the Glenmore Landfill
The most direct route is the Glenmore Landfill, the main disposal site serving Kelowna and the Central Okanagan. It accepts mattresses and box springs, but be aware that mattresses are singled out for a per-item surcharge on top of the standard minimum load fee — they’re bulky, spring-loaded and hard to compact, so most landfills price them separately. Rates change, so check the current mattress fee and hours on the landfill’s fee schedule before you go rather than assuming last year’s number.
A few things to plan for:
- Transport. A mattress will not fit in most cars. You’ll need a truck or a trailer, plus a second person to load and unload it.
- Weather. A wet mattress is far heavier and messier — keep it dry until drop-off day.
- Payment. Confirm accepted payment methods; the scale house has its own rules.
For regional waste details and what else is accepted, the Regional District of Central Okanagan is a useful reference before you load up.
Option 2: Donate it — if it genuinely qualifies
Donating keeps a usable mattress out of the landfill, but the bar is higher than most people expect. Charities have to protect the people they serve, so they will only accept a mattress that is clean, structurally sound, free of stains, tears, odours and any sign of bed bugs. Anything less is declined at the door.
It’s also worth knowing that many well-known donation points simply don’t take used mattresses at all. Habitat for Humanity ReStore, for example, gladly takes furniture and building materials but generally will not accept used mattresses for hygiene reasons. Before you load anything up, phone the specific location and ask two questions: do they accept mattresses, and do they offer pickup? A wasted trip with a mattress strapped to the roof helps no one.
If your mattress is in great shape but no charity will collect it, a local “buy nothing” or online marketplace listing — free, honest about the condition — will often find it a home faster than a depot will.
We’ll carry your old mattress out — down stairs, out of the spare room, gone — and dispose of it responsibly. Get a fast, no-obligation quote.
Option 3: Recycle it where you can
A mattress is surprisingly recyclable in principle — the steel springs, foam, wood frame and fabric can all be separated and reused. The catch is that dedicated mattress recycling is still limited in the BC Interior compared with the Lower Mainland, and there is no province-wide mattress take-back programme the way there is for paint or electronics. That means recycling is worth chasing, but you can’t assume it’s available on demand.
Before you count on it, call ahead to confirm a facility is currently accepting mattresses for recycling and whether a fee applies. If recycling isn’t available for your item, responsible landfilling at Glenmore is still a legitimate choice — and a junk removal crew will route your mattress to a recycler when one is an option, so you don’t have to make the calls yourself.
Option 4: Book a pickup service
The landfill and donation routes both assume you can lift a queen mattress down a flight of stairs and fit it in a truck. If you can’t — or you simply don’t want to spend a Saturday on it — a pickup service is the reason this option exists.
With professional mattress removal, a crew comes to you, carries the mattress out from wherever it sits, and takes it away in one visit. There are no dump runs, no roof-rack gymnastics and no lifting on your part. It shines in a few common situations:
- Upstairs bedrooms and awkward stairwells where wrestling a mattress solo risks a wall or your back.
- Multiple mattresses at once — a rental turnover, a kids’ room refresh or a whole-house clear-out.
- No truck, or no interest in tying one up for the day.
- Adding it to a bigger job, such as a furniture removal or a full junk removal load, so everything leaves together.
We handle mattress pickups across the valley, from West Kelowna through Kelowna proper, and route each item to donation or recycling where it qualifies before the landfill.
Which option is right for you?
It comes down to condition and effort:
- Clean and barely used? Try to donate or give it away first — call ahead to confirm they’ll take it.
- Worn out but you have a truck and a helper? The Glenmore Landfill is your cheapest end-of-life route; just budget for the per-item fee.
- No truck, stairs involved, or several to move? A pickup service saves the trips and the strain.
Whatever you choose, the goal is the same: keep a usable mattress in service, recycle what can be recycled, and landfill only what’s truly done. If you’d like a hand deciding or a firm price, request a quote or reach out through our contact page and we’ll sort the fastest, cleanest way to get it gone.
Book a no-obligation mattress pickup in Kelowna or the Okanagan — we lift, load and dispose of it responsibly.



