Hauler Hero has raised $16 million in Series A funding to accelerate its AI-driven software for waste and recycling operators, betting that smarter data and automation can squeeze inefficiencies out of one of the least digitized corners of local infrastructure. The startup’s all-in-one platform spans customer relationship management, billing, and route optimization, with new AI tools aimed at cutting costs, boosting service quality, and uncovering lost revenue for private haulers and municipalities alike.
Founded in 2020 by CEO Mark Hoadley and Ben Sikma after encountering outdated back-office systems during sector M&A work, the company says demand has swelled as haulers look for modern, integrated software that actually reflects day-to-day operations on the street—missed pickups, contamination issues, work orders, and route changes—rather than siloed spreadsheets and manual processes.

Why Haulers Are Turning To AI For Waste Operations
Solid waste collection is a high-frequency, fixed-route business where small misses compound quickly. U.S. Environmental Protection Agency data shows Americans generate roughly 4.9 pounds of municipal solid waste per person per day, and collection remains labor- and fuel-intensive. Industry case studies from groups like SWANA and NREL have shown that pairing telematics with dynamic routing can trim 10–20% from fuel use and route time—savings that fall straight to the bottom line in a margin-tight sector.
That operational math explains why haulers want more visibility. Hauler Hero has rolled out a feature that ingests images from third-party truck cameras—think hopper cams, side-loader arms, and dash-mounted devices—directly into a command center. The goal: verify service at the point of pickup, resolve “missed” complaints, document contamination, and support billing with photographic evidence. When paired with GPS and work orders, these images become auditable records instead of anecdotes.
Not everyone in the field welcomes more cameras. Labor groups have raised privacy and discipline concerns as fleets adopt vision systems. Hauler Hero says most union contracts it encounters restrict footage from being used punitively and notes that recorded evidence can reduce driver liability after collisions or disputed stops. As cities and haulers navigate this shift, clear policies and narrow use cases—safety, service verification, and training—are becoming standard guardrails.
Inside The Product And The New AI Agents Suite
At the core, Hauler Hero stitches together CRM, billing, dispatch, and routing so data flows in one system rather than across a patchwork of legacy tools. The company is now productizing three AI agents: Hero Vision to flag service issues and revenue opportunities from operational data; Hero Chat to automate common customer inquiries with account-aware responses; and Hero Route to recommend route adjustments as conditions change. The pitch is that a unified data model lets operators ask for outcomes—fewer missed stops, smarter sequencing, faster cash collection—instead of building bespoke reports each week.

For example, Hero Vision could surface chronic overages at specific accounts with time-stamped images and weight tickets, prompt the sales team to update service levels, and hand billing a clean audit trail. On the customer side, Hero Chat can confirm service windows or provide a picture of the last pickup without tying up call centers. And Hero Route can respond to closures, weather, or vehicle downtime by rebalancing stops to keep service-level agreements intact.
The company is also leaning into public-sector demand. Municipal sanitation departments are under pressure to improve transparency, respond to service tickets faster, and stretch budgets amid rising labor and equipment costs. Hauler Hero says inbound interest from cities has grown, and market consolidation—CEO Mark Hoadley points to the 2024 merger of Routeware and Wastech—has narrowed procurement choices, opening room for newer platforms that emphasize open integrations and faster releases.
How The Funding Will Be Used To Scale Operations
The fresh capital will go toward commercializing the AI agents, expanding integrations with camera vendors and onboard computers, and scaling implementation teams that can migrate haulers off legacy systems without service disruptions. Expect investment in data security and compliance—SOC 2 and role-based access controls are increasingly table stakes for municipal RFPs—plus training tools that help frontline supervisors adopt analytics without a data science background.
The business case is straightforward: fewer truck rolls from first-call resolution, faster billing cycles via verified service documentation, and tighter routes that reduce overtime. Benchmarking from industry associations shows complaints and callbacks concentrate among a small slice of stops; surfacing those patterns early can improve customer satisfaction while cutting unnecessary drive time and fuel burn.
Competition remains active, from entrenched vertical software to marketplace-style platforms that broker hauling while offering digital tools. But the window is open for systems that treat waste operations as a continuous data problem rather than a billing database. If Hauler Hero can turn camera feeds, route telemetry, and work orders into trustworthy, daily decisions, the $16 million raise is less about hype and more about modernizing an essential service that touches every address on the map.
