Impact dashboard

Every dollar in. Every dollar out. Updated monthly.

Freemoval publishes the program's actual numbers, not projections, not aspirations. The dashboard below shows the current state of the program account.

Round-ups collected

$0

since program launch

Homes served

0

free pickups completed

Tons diverted

0

from streets and lots

Cities active

0

57 launching

Last updated: program pre-launch · 100% of round-ups fund pickups at market rate · No fundraising overhead

Where we’re headed, next 6 months

Round-ups needed

$275,600

to fund the projection

Pickups projected

2,756

~1 per city per week

Tons projected

1,378

at 0.5 tons per pickup

Cities in projection

106

of 108 total guides

Forward-looking projections, not current activity. Assumes 1 pickup/week per operational city × 26 weeks across 106 markets, at standard market rates (~$100/pickup avg). New Jersey (Newark, Camden) is excluded pending state A901 licensing. Actual results depend on funding and operational ramp.

Methodology

Round-ups collected is the cumulative dollar total of customer round-up contributions transferred from LoadUp checkout to the dedicated Freemoval program account. It does not include any other funding source, partner fees, grants, or LoadUp contributions are tracked separately.

Homes served is the count of unique pickups completed and paid for from the program account. Each pickup represents one household, regardless of the number of items hauled or trips required.

Tons diverted is the total weight of material removed by Freemoval pickups and delivered to a licensed disposal or recycling facility. Weights are recorded at the transfer station scale, not estimated.

Cities active is the count of metros where Freemoval has at least one active partner agreement and is accepting eligible bookings.

Reporting cadence

The dashboard is updated on the first business day of each month with the prior month's reconciled totals. Annual summary reports are published every January, with a full account reconciliation, partner list, and program notes.

How the 100% promise works

When we say 100% of round-ups fund pickups, we mean: every dollar collected as a round-up at LoadUp checkout is spent on actual Freemoval pickups, invoiced at the same market rate LoadUp charges any commercial customer for equivalent work. Donor contributions cover the full retail cost of each pickup, loader payment, disposal fees, and the platform coordination that gets the work scheduled, dispatched, and completed.

What “100%” means here: donations are not skimmed for fundraising overhead, executive salaries, marketing budgets, or this website. There is no separate “administrative cut” before donor dollars reach pickups. There is no inflated “charity rate” charged on Freemoval jobs. The pricing is identical to what any other LoadUp customer would pay for the same job in the same metro.

What this isn’t: it isn’t a claim that donor dollars pay only for loader hours and disposal fees with zero platform cost. Platform work is real work, customer support, dispatch technology, payment processing, partner relationships, licensed disposal coordination, and it’s included in the standard market rate, the same as on any paid pickup. We’re asking donors to pay fair value for a real pickup, not to subsidize an artificially low cost structure.

The reason this structure works is that it’s operationally simple and donor-honest. Freemoval doesn’t need a separate operational pipeline, a separate cost basis, or a separate accounting system that would require its own administrative overhead. It rides on infrastructure that already exists and pays market rate for it, same as any other customer.

Independent verification

Freemoval's program account is reconciled monthly by LoadUp's finance team, and the annual summary is reviewed by an independent CPA. Reconciliation records are available on request to partner organizations and journalists. We're working toward a public-facing audit summary as part of the 2026 annual report.

Want the underlying numbers?

Partner organizations, journalists, and researchers can request the detailed reconciliation records and methodology notes.

Request the data