Ohio Hauling Contractors
Looking for hauling contractors in Ohio? Below are 10 top-rated hauling contractors serving Ohio in 2026 — every one rated 4.0+ stars with 10 or more verified Google reviews. Compare ratings and review counts, then contact them directly by phone or website. No middleman, no lead fees.
Listings are sourced from public Google Business Profiles and sorted by rating. Are you a Ohio hauling contractor? Add your business free below.
Buddy & Sons Trucking LLC
4202 Township Hwy 235, Junction City, OH 43748, USA
11 reviews
Reviews via Google
Finley Hauling & Excavating
12620 Grand Rapids Rd, Grand Rapids, OH 43522, USA
10 reviews
Reviews via Google
Albrecht Trucking Co Inc
6809 Spencer Lake Rd, Medina, OH 44256, USA
66 reviews
Reviews via Google
Kauser Trucking Services Inc
850 W Harrison St, Paulding, OH 45879, USA
28 reviews
Reviews via Google
IB Hauling LLC
7648 State Rte 41, Washington Court House, OH 43160, USA
10 reviews
Reviews via Google
Forrest Trucking
6510 OH-29, West Jefferson, OH 43162, USA
16 reviews
Reviews via Google
Miller Specialized Transport
1820 Valley St, Dayton, OH 45404, USA
16 reviews
Reviews via Google
U A Transport LLC.
4041 Jennings Rd #3049, Cleveland, OH 44109, USA
20 reviews
Reviews via Google
Eagle Transport and Logistics, LLC
3700 Corporate Dr Suite 120, Columbus, OH 43231, USA
27 reviews
Reviews via Google
Triple T Transport Inc
433 Lewis Center Rd, Lewis Center, OH 43035, USA
114 reviews
Reviews via Google
Data sourced from Google Places. Updated April 12, 2026.
Hiring a Hauling Contractor in Ohio
Buildermuse currently lists 10 hauling contractors in Ohio, averaging 4.7 stars across 318 verified Google reviews. Every firm listed clears the 4.0-star bar, and with ratings this close together, review volume is the better tiebreaker — a 4.6 backed by hundreds of reviews usually beats a 5.0 with a dozen. Most of the crews above operate out of Cleveland, Columbus, and Dayton.
Ohio does not require a state-level general contractor license. Columbus, Cleveland, Cincinnati, and other cities handle general contractor licensing. State-level licensing exists for electrical, plumbing, and HVAC trades through the Construction Industry Licensing Board. With no statewide license for this work, checking city and county requirements — plus active insurance — falls on you as the hiring party.
Labor is the biggest line item on most bids, and the Ohio market sets the floor: construction workers here average $37.30 an hour — about $77,584 a year — across 260,262 workers statewide, per Bureau of Labor Statistics data. Use that figure as a sanity check when comparing quotes — a bid priced far below market labor rates usually means subcontracted or uninsured crews.
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