Recycling Ireland: Complete Household Recycling Guide 2026

Ireland household recycling guide · 2026

Recycling Ireland: Complete Household Recycling Guide 2026

Use this simple Ireland guide to decide what goes in the recycling bin, brown bin, general waste bin, bottle bank, Deposit Return Scheme machine, WEEE drop-off, textile bank or recycling centre. The aim is less guessing, fewer contaminated bins and better recycling at home.

Independent guide for recyclingcentreireland.org. Use MyWaste, your council and your bin provider for live local rules, opening times, charges and collection calendars.

Quick answer: what can go in the Irish recycling bin?

Your household recycling bin is for mixed, dry recyclables. The safest rule is clean, dry and loose: paper, cardboard, plastic packaging, tins and cans can usually go in when they are empty and not contaminated with food or liquid.

Do not use the recycling bin for food waste, nappies, wet wipes, batteries, electricals, chemicals, paint, broken glass, textiles, rubble or dirty packaging. Those need another route.

Best fridge note for families

Recycle only when it is empty, clean enough, dry and loose. If it is food, liquid, battery-powered, hazardous, textile, glassware, ceramic, electrical or very dirty, stop and check the correct route.

For senior citizens, carers and rental homes, print one simple bin note and place it beside the kitchen bins. Confusion at the kitchen counter causes most recycling mistakes.

Start here

Ireland’s Household Recycling System in 2026: Three Bins Plus Drop-Off Routes

Most Irish households work around a simple three-bin idea: recycling bin for mixed dry recyclables, brown bin for food and garden organic waste where provided, and residual/general waste bin for items that cannot be recycled or composted.

Route Best for Use this rule Do not put here
Recycling bin Paper, cardboard, plastic packaging, metal tins and cans. Clean, dry, loose Food, liquid, nappies, batteries, electricals, dirty packaging.
Brown bin Food waste and garden waste where your service accepts it. Food/organic only Plastic, glass, metal, nappies, general rubbish.
General waste bin Residual rubbish that cannot be recycled, composted or returned. Last household bin Hazardous waste, batteries, WEEE, paint, chemicals, rubble.
Recycling centre / drop-off Electricals, batteries, bulky items, textiles, paint, timber, metals, some plastics. Check local site Do not arrive with unknown material without checking fees/rules.

Hard truth: recycling is not “anything that looks reusable.” If the wrong material goes into the recycling bin, it can contaminate other clean material and cause problems for the whole load.

Kitchen helper

Irish Recycling Sorting Helper: Where Should This Item Go?

Choose the situation that matches the item in your hand. This is designed for quick kitchen decisions, not for complex commercial waste.

What are you trying to recycle?

Likely route: recycling bin.

Check first: it should be empty, clean enough, dry and loose. Do not bag recyclables in black sacks.

Recycling bin

What Goes in the Recycling Bin in Ireland?

The recycling bin is for mixed dry recyclables. MyWaste’s simple rule is clean, dry and loose. “Clean” does not mean dishwasher-perfect; it means empty enough that food or liquid will not spoil the rest of the bin.

Usually accepted when clean, dry and loose

  • Paper, newspapers, envelopes and magazines.
  • Cardboard boxes, cereal boxes and packaging card.
  • Plastic bottles, tubs, trays and plastic packaging.
  • Soft plastics where accepted under Irish recycling guidance.
  • Steel cans and aluminium cans where not part of the Deposit Return Scheme.
  • Milk cartons and beverage cartons where listed as acceptable.

Keep out of the recycling bin

  • Food waste, liquids and greasy packaging.
  • Nappies, wipes, tissues and sanitary waste.
  • Batteries, vapes, cables, phones and electricals.
  • Paint, chemicals, oil containers or hazardous waste.
  • Broken glass, drinking glasses, ceramics and mirrors.
  • Textiles, shoes, toys, rubble, soil and bulky plastics.

Best kitchen test: empty it, give it a quick rinse if needed, let it drain, and put it loose into the recycling bin. If it is still wet, greasy or full of food, it is not ready.

Brown bin

Brown Bin Ireland: Food Waste and Organic Waste Done Properly

The brown bin is for food waste and garden organic waste where your service provides it. It matters because food is heavy, messy and not suitable for the recycling bin.

Item Likely route Watch out for
Fruit, veg peelings and plate scrapings Brown bin Remove packaging first.
Tea bags and coffee grounds Check local guidance Some products contain plastic or non-compostable material.
Food in plastic tray Separate first Food to brown bin; clean tray to recycling if accepted.
Garden clippings Brown bin / civic site Branches, soil and bulky garden waste may need another route.
Plastic bags, nappies, glass Do not use brown bin These contaminate organic waste.

Do not use ordinary plastic bags in the brown bin. Ask your provider which liners are accepted, and keep glass, nappies, pet waste and general rubbish out.

General waste

General Waste Bin: What Should Be Left After Recycling and Composting?

The residual or general waste bin should be the last option for ordinary household rubbish that cannot be recycled, composted, returned or dropped off safely. It should not become the hiding place for batteries, electricals, paint, chemicals or recyclable packaging.

Use general waste for

Non-recyclable residual waste such as heavily soiled non-recyclable material, hygiene waste and household rubbish that has no safe recycling route.

Do not use it for

Batteries, vapes, phones, cables, paint, chemicals, oil, WEEE, bulky items, rubble, hot ash or hazardous material.

Money-saving habit

Move food waste and clean packaging out of the general bin. Heavy mixed rubbish can increase cost pressure under weight-based plans.

Deposit return

Deposit Return Scheme Ireland: Bottles and Cans With the Re-turn Logo

Plastic bottles and drinks cans with the Re-turn logo should be returned through the Deposit Return Scheme route rather than treated like ordinary household packaging. Keep the container in returnable condition so the machine or return point can read it.

1

Look for the Re-turn logo

If the bottle or can has the Re-turn mark, use a reverse vending machine or manual return point where available.

2

Keep the barcode readable

Do not crush the container before returning. The machine needs the shape and barcode to be readable.

3

Keep caps on where possible

Caps are easier to recycle when they travel with the bottle. Check Re-turn instructions if unsure.

Simple distinction: Re-turn logo means deposit-return route. Other accepted clean packaging can still belong in the household recycling bin.

Glass

Glass Recycling Ireland: Bottle Banks, Jars and What Not to Mix

Glass bottles and jars often go to bottle banks or glass collection routes, depending on your provider and area. Do not assume every glass object is suitable for the bottle bank or household bin.

Glass item Likely route Important note
Glass bottles and jars Bottle bank / glass route Empty them first. Follow local colour or container rules where used.
Drinking glasses Check Waste A–Z Not the same as bottle/jar glass.
Ceramics and crockery Not bottle bank Can contaminate glass recycling.
Mirrors and window glass Recycling centre / specialist route Check your local civic amenity site.
Special waste

Electricals, Batteries, Vapes, Textiles, Paint and Bulky Waste

Some items should never be forced into household bins. Anything with a plug, battery or cable needs a WEEE route. Batteries and vapes need safe drop-off. Textiles should be reused or collected separately where possible. Paint, chemicals and bulky waste need local recycling-centre guidance.

Item Do not put in Better route Why
Batteries and vapes Any household bin Battery/WEEE drop-off Fire and contamination risk.
Phones, cables, chargers, toys with batteries Recycling or general bin WEEE drop-off or retailer take-back Valuable materials can be recovered safely.
Clothes and shoes Recycling bin Charity shop, textile bank or reuse route Textiles are not mixed dry recyclables.
Paint, chemicals, oil, solvents Any normal household bin Local civic amenity / specialist hazardous route Can harm workers, trucks and treatment systems.
Furniture, mattresses and bulky plastics Household wheelie bins Bulky collection, reuse, charity or civic amenity site Too large and not kerbside-bin material.

Never hide batteries or electricals in a normal bin. If it has a plug, battery or cable, stop and use a WEEE or battery drop-off route.

Packaging labels

Recycling Labels in Ireland: How to Read Packaging Without Guessing

Packaging labels are useful, but they are not a magic answer for every Irish household. Use Irish recycling labels as guidance, then check MyWaste if the item is unusual, dirty, mixed-material or not ordinary packaging.

If label says widely recycled

Still empty it, keep it clean and dry, and place it loose in the recycling bin if it is accepted locally.

If label says check MyWaste

Use the Waste A–Z. Do not guess based on material look or colour.

If item is dirty or mixed

Separate what you can. If it cannot be cleaned or separated, it may need general waste or another drop-off route.

Recycling centres

How to Find a Recycling Centre, Bring Bank or Civic Amenity Site in Ireland

Use the MyWaste locator when you need a bottle bank, recycling centre, civic amenity site, battery drop-off, WEEE drop-off, textile bank or lightbulb drop-off. Always check opening hours, fees and accepted items before loading the car.

1

Search by address or item

Do not search only “dump near me.” Search by item type and location so you find the right facility.

2

Check fees and opening times

Some items are free, some have charges, and some sites only accept certain materials on certain days.

3

Separate items before leaving home

Keep WEEE, batteries, glass, textiles, paint, timber and bulky waste separate so the visit is faster and safer.

Apartments and rentals

Recycling in Apartments, Student Houses and Shared Bins

Shared bins fail when nobody knows who is responsible. If you live in an apartment, rental house, managed estate or student accommodation, ask who controls the bin store, calendar, contamination notices and missed-bin reports.

Ask the landlord or manager

  • Which bin is for recycling, brown waste and general waste?
  • Who gets the provider calendar?
  • Who reports missed collections?
  • Who handles contamination fines or warnings?
  • Is there a glass or textile drop-off nearby?

Make the bin store easier

  • Add simple labels above bins.
  • Keep recycling loose, not in black sacks.
  • Break down cardboard before bin day.
  • Keep food waste bins closed and lined correctly.
  • Do not leave bulky waste beside bins.
Senior-friendly

Simple Recycling Checklist for Senior Citizens and Family Helpers

Recycling advice can feel too complicated. For older residents, keep it short, visible and repeated. One clear fridge note is better than a long document nobody reads.

Blue/green recycling

Only empty, clean enough, dry packaging, paper, card, tins and plastics. No food, nappies, batteries or electricals.

Brown bin

Food waste where provided. No plastic, glass, metal, nappies or general rubbish.

Ask before dumping

For batteries, paint, chemicals, electricals, textiles or bulky waste, ask family, council, MyWaste or the local recycling centre first.

Practical tip: place a small box near the door for batteries, bulbs and small electricals so they do not accidentally go into the kitchen bin.

Map & video help

Recycling Centres Map and Official MyWaste Video Guide

The map below is only a broad “recycling centre in Ireland” search context. It does not confirm opening hours, fees, accepted items or site rules. Use MyWaste and your local council/provider before travelling.

Important: do not drive to a recycling centre with paint, electricals, bulky items or hazardous waste until you confirm that the site accepts that item and whether a fee applies.

Official MyWaste video: Recycling List Ireland

This MyWaste Ireland video gives quick recycling-bin context. Use it with the Waste A–Z when an item is confusing or has mixed materials.

Real household intent covered

Common Recycling Ireland Questions Answered Properly

Most people are not searching for theory. They want to know which bin to use, why a bin was rejected, where batteries go, whether plastic is accepted, what to do with glass, and how to find the nearest recycling centre. This guide answers those jobs inside the correct sections instead of listing keywords.

If you are standing at the kitchen bin

Use the helper first. Clean packaging usually goes recycling; food goes brown bin; batteries and electricals never go in normal bins.

If your bin was not collected

Check wrong day, contamination, lid, weight, account and access before assuming the truck skipped you.

If an item is unusual

Use MyWaste Waste A–Z or your local recycling centre rules. Do not guess with hazardous or electrical items.

FAQ

FAQ: Recycling Ireland Household Guide 2026

What goes in the recycling bin in Ireland?

Clean, dry and loose mixed recyclables such as paper, cardboard, plastic packaging, tins and cans usually go in the recycling bin. Check MyWaste or your provider if the item is unusual.

Can soft plastic go in the recycling bin in Ireland?

MyWaste guidance includes plastics in the recycling-bin system, including rigid and soft plastics where they are clean, dry and loose. Check the Waste A–Z if the packaging is unusual or dirty.

Should recyclables be bagged?

No. Put recyclables loose in the recycling bin unless your provider gives a specific local instruction. Black bags and tied bags can cause sorting problems.

Where do batteries and vapes go?

Do not put batteries or vapes into any household bin. Use battery, WEEE or retailer drop-off routes because they can create fire and contamination risks.

Where do electrical items go?

Anything with a plug, battery or cable should use WEEE recycling or retailer/civic amenity drop-off routes, not household bins.

Where do glass bottles and jars go?

Use bottle banks, glass collection routes or local recycling-centre guidance. Do not treat drinking glasses, mirrors, ceramics or window glass like normal bottle/jar glass.

What goes in the brown bin?

Food waste and accepted organic waste go in the brown bin where your provider supplies the service. Keep plastic, nappies, glass, metal and general rubbish out.

What should I do with Re-turn bottles and cans?

If the drink container has the Re-turn logo, use the Deposit Return Scheme return route and keep the barcode readable.

How do I find a recycling centre near me in Ireland?

Use the MyWaste recycling locator and search by address, centre type or item. Check opening hours, fees and accepted items before travelling.

Is this the official MyWaste website?

No. This is an independent Recycling Centre Ireland guide. Use MyWaste, your local council, recycling centre and bin provider for live local rules and opening times.

Official and Helpful Links Used in This Guide

Waste A–Z