Keep both hands on the knife to avoid cutting a free hand.
Tearing up old carpet.
Continue pulling up carpet a few feet at a time and cutting it into easy to handle strips.
Use a utility knife or carpet knife to slice the carpet into manageable strips and roll the strips up as you go.
Use a utility knife with a sharp new blade to cut through the carpet backing.
Continue pulling until you ve separated the carpet entirely from one wall.
Pull back the carpeting until the entire rug can be rolled up removed from your home and placed in a dumpster.
Roll or fold the strip secure with duct tape and remove it from the room.
If you reveal a carpet padding beneath keep it in place for now we ll tackle that later on.
If the pliers aren t cutting it you can also use a small crow bar to pry it back.
Pry up the carpet from the tacking strips underneath.
Go to a corner of your carpeting and run a standard screwdriver between the edge of the wall and carpet.
If you are trying to salvage the floor underneath make sure you do not cut grooves in the floor with the knife.
Roll up the strips and tape them for easy handling.
After you ve rolled up the old carpeting and removed it from the room you ll finally get a good look at the subfloor and any surprise damage that the carpet may have been hiding.
Use pliers to grab the carpet and pull it away from the subfloor.
The average hourly rate is 60 per hour so expect to pay 180 in total for a contractor to remove and dispose of 12 by.
This equals 48 to 72 per hour because it usually takes 3 hours to remove carpet from a 12 by 12 foot room including extracting the tack strips and staples.
Carpet removal costs 1 to 1 50 per square foot including labor cleanup and waste disposal.
Then grab the carpet by hand and continue to pull it up along an entire wall.
Fold the carpet over for easy cutting and slice it into narrow strips.
One way to do this is to lift the carpet away from the floor as you cut.
Pull up a few feet of carpet and fold it over.