Buyer Beware
Not all restroom trailers are created equal
Beware of DIYers and side hustlers, porta-potty chains crossing over, and overseas reseller and ghost-company networks. All three sell luxury and deliver plastic, hide fees inside the contract, vanish on service calls, or in the worst case take the deposit and never dispatch at all. Three patterns repeat in this category right now. Each one looks like a real rental company from the outside. Each one is worth recognizing before you sign anything.
Threat 1
DIYers & Side Hustlers
First, the honest part. We respect the hustle. The Lavatory itself started as a one-trailer, one-person operation in California, so we know what it looks like to grind from a single unit into a real fleet. Entrepreneurship is in our roots and we have nothing but respect for anyone trying to build something. The issue is not ambition. The issue is what is being sold to those entrepreneurs as the starting line.
There is a wave of social-media misinformation right now telling people how easy and lucrative it is to start a restroom-trailer business. The pitch leaves out the part about commercial insurance, DOT compliance, manufacturer-grade build standards, sanitation protocols, dispatch infrastructure, on-call service teams, and the thousand small operational details that separate a real luxury fleet from a weekend hustle. The result has been a rapid upstart of DIYers, side hustlers, and weekend warriors entering the market with one or two units bought, borrowed, or owner-built. They sell themselves as luxury operators on a website while running the whole thing part-time out of a driveway.
What that quietly costs the renter. Most of these operators simply lack the experience and the operational depth this business requires. Common issues we hear about after the fact: unsanitary interiors not properly serviced between rentals, late deliveries, no-shows on event day, cheaply built units that fail under real-world use, and clogged toilets from undersized or improperly plumbed systems. The last thing any couple wants is a clogged toilet line halfway through the wedding reception and an emergency service number that goes straight to voicemail because the operator is at a soccer game.
The pricing trap. The published rate looks competitive on the website. Then the contract arrives with delivery fees, convenience fees, mileage fees, fuel surcharges, water-hookup fees, pump-out fees, weekend fees, and after-hours fees stacked underneath the headline number. The "low quote" you signed up for is no longer the low quote.
You will not always know what you are looking at from a website. Ask whether the trailer was manufactured in a regulated facility, whether the operator carries commercial-grade insurance, whether the unit has a documented inspection history, whether someone actually answers a service call at 9 PM on a Saturday, and whether the total all-in price is written into the contract before you sign. If the answer to any of those is vague, the deal is vague.
Threat 2
Porta-potty chains crossing over
Several large blue-collar equipment-rental and porta-potty chains are now adding restroom trailers to their fleets. The problem is the porta-potty culture itself. All they care about is getting the deal closed. The sales floor is built to say whatever it takes to get a signature. Promises on quality, promises on service response, promises on what the unit will look like. The operations team is left holding whatever the rep gave away. Volume over finish, plastic over porcelain, racing to the lowest service cost leaks into how those trailers are built, dispatched, and maintained.
Same pricing trap, different costume. A teaser rate gets you on the phone, a "we can beat any quote" line gets you to commit, and then the booking confirmation lands with delivery fees, mileage fees, environmental fees, service-trip fees, and convenience fees that were never mentioned on the call. By the time you notice, you have already turned down the operators who quoted honestly up front.
You can usually tell within thirty seconds of stepping inside the trailer. Plastic where there should be porcelain. Particle-board where there should be fiberglass. Cigarette burns and patch jobs where there should be a clean inspection log. Buyer beware.
Threat 3
Resellers & Third-Party Ghost Companies
This is the most aggressive scam pattern currently active in the category and the one most renters do not see coming. A growing wave of third-party reseller websites, many of them operated out of Eastern Europe (Romania, Latvia, Lithuania) and Israeli lead-generation networks, are posing as local American rental companies. They do not own a single trailer. They do not employ a single driver. They are pure intermediaries built to capture the search and resell it.
The playbook. They flood Google and the major directories with thousands of fake local-business listings, then pour ad spend behind them so they outrank legitimate operators. The phone number routes to a centralized overseas call center trained to sound American, ready to quote, and ready to close. Once you sign and pay, the operation splits into two patterns:
Pattern A. "Take the money and run." A large share of these resellers simply pocket the deposit and never dispatch anything. You wake up on event day to no trailer, no answer, no recourse, and a website that has quietly disappeared by Monday.
Pattern B. "Shop the booking around." The reseller takes your signed contract and starts cold-calling real operators in your market (us, our competitors, anyone with inventory) trying to find the lowest bidder to actually fulfill the job. They pocket the spread. The trailer that shows up at your wedding, your jobsite, or your event is from a completely different company than the one you signed with. You never met them. You never vetted them. They were not on your contract. In many states this practice is outright illegal when the consumer is not disclosed of it.
The honest distinction. Yes, on occasion a legitimate operator will work with certified partners. We do it ourselves when we are sold out during a peak weekend, or when a large outdoor festival needs porta-potty volume alongside our trailers. The difference is disclosure. When we use a partner, the customer is told up front, the partner is named, and the customer has the right to say no. The third-party reseller scam never tells the customer anything. By the time you realize the company on the side of the trailer is not the company on your contract, you are already mid-event.
Before You Sign Anyone Else
Talk to a Lavatory expert. We will read the other quote with you, line by line.
Most renters end up calling 3 to 5 operators before they book. We do not mind being one of them. We strongly encourage every potential renter to talk to a member of our Denver team about who else they have spoken to or quoted with. We will review competitor quotes for you, identify the line items that have been hidden, flag the fees that will be added after signing, and explain the real all-in number you are actually about to pay.
We will also cross-reference any quote you have received against our internal list of known bad actors, scam resellers, and overseas ghost companies currently active in the Colorado market. If the company you are about to sign with is on it, you deserve to know before you wire a deposit. If they are clean, you deserve to know that too. Our promise is simple: we will keep you informed and we will make sure you rent from a trusted, verified provider, even if that ends up not being us. Informed renters make better decisions, and informed renters are who we want to do business with.