London Waste Collection: Bin Days, Missed Bins, Bulky & Recycling
Find your London bin collection day by postcode, identify the correct borough, report a missed collection, check recycling and food-waste rules, arrange bulky or garden waste and understand the different services used for houses, communal flats and properties above shops.
How do I find my London bin collection day?
Use the GOV.UK postcode service, select the correct address and follow the result to your borough’s collection calendar.
Save the next refuse, recycling, food-waste and garden-waste dates separately. Nearby streets and different blocks can have different schedules.
Find waste services for your borough or the City of London
Select an authority to open its London Recycles service overview. Use the GOV.UK postcode checker when you are unsure which council manages the address.
Choose a London authority
Choose your borough to view typical containers, collection frequency, bulky waste and local recycling-centre information.
Not sure which borough?
London postcodes do not always match the borough name people use in conversation. A postal address can also sit close to a council boundary.
Set up your waste collection routine once
The exact bin colour may change between boroughs. The process below works across London because it starts with the address rather than assumptions about containers.
Identify the responsible council
Enter the full postcode and select the exact property. Confirm the council name before saving any dates.
Find the correct council and collection pageRecord every separate collection stream
Note refuse, dry recycling, food waste, garden waste and any separate paper or card collection.
Check local recycling collectionsMatch the instructions to the property type
A house, communal estate, mansion block and flat above a shop can use different containers and presentation points.
Compare London property arrangementsCheck the presentation time
Some councils require bins out early in the morning. Central and high-street areas can use narrow time-banded collection windows.
Read time-banded collection guidanceRecheck bank-holiday and disruption updates
Normal dates can change because of public holidays, severe weather, road closures or operational delays.
Return to the property-specific calendarWhat changed for London household recycling from 31 March 2026?
England’s Simpler Recycling requirements introduced a more consistent core service. Councils can still use different colours, containers and collection methods.
| Waste stream | Core 2026 requirement | What London residents should check |
|---|---|---|
| Food and garden waste | Collected separately from residual rubbish by default. | Whether your property has received a food caddy or communal food bin and whether garden waste needs a paid subscription. |
| Paper and card | Collected as a recyclable material stream. | Whether it goes into a separate box, sack or the same mixed-recycling container. |
| Glass, metal and plastic | Collected as other dry recyclable materials, including cartons. | Local preparation rules and whether glass is accepted at the kerbside or through communal bins. |
| Residual waste | Non-recyclable household rubbish remains a separate stream. | Bag colour, wheelie-bin type, frequency and presentation time. |
| Flats | The household requirements apply to flats as well as houses. | Rollout dates, communal-bin location and managing-agent arrangements. |
| Plastic film and bags | Scheduled to join plastic recycling from 31 March 2027. | Until then, use current borough or supermarket soft-plastic instructions. |
Do not assume every London service changed overnight. Property-level rollouts, communal-bin installations and food-waste container deliveries can happen in stages. Check the exact address.
Save your next London collection date
Confirm the date on your council page, then save it locally in this browser. The reminder does not send information to a council or create an official alert.
My next collection
My household collection board
No collection saved. Confirm the property date before creating a reminder.
Why London waste collection rules change by property type
| Property type | Typical arrangement | Main risk | Best action |
|---|---|---|---|
| House or converted flat | Wheelie bins, boxes, sacks and outdoor food caddy. | Using a neighbouring borough’s colours or wrong collection week. | Follow the address result and container labels. |
| Estate or purpose-built block | Communal refuse, recycling and increasingly food-waste bins. | One contaminated communal bin can affect the whole block. | Use bin-store signage and report unclear labels to the manager. |
| Flat above a shop | Sacks collected during specific time bands, sometimes several times weekly. | Putting bags out too early can cause litter, obstruction or enforcement. | Check the exact street and time-banded window. |
| City-centre mansion block | Estate-specific bins, chutes, sacks or daily collections. | Assuming the public street schedule applies inside the block. | Check building instructions and the managing agent. |
| New development | Temporary communal service while the address and bin store are commissioned. | Address missing from the council lookup. | Ask the developer or council to register the property service. |
| House in multiple occupation | Shared containers based on occupancy and storage space. | Insufficient capacity or unclear responsibility. | Landlord or manager should provide adequate labelled storage. |
Time-banded collection zone
Put sacks out only during the published street window. These zones are common around shopping streets and dense central areas.
Communal contamination
Do not move rejected waste into another block’s bin. Photograph unclear signage and report it to the estate manager.
Waste chute
Never force cardboard, glass, batteries or bulky objects into a chute unless the building specifically permits them.
Pavement obstruction
Use the boundary or agreed collection point. Avoid leaving sacks where they block wheelchairs, prams or doorways.
What normally belongs in household recycling?
Core dry recycling is becoming more consistent, but preparation and container arrangements still vary. Empty containers and check local rules for unusual packaging.
Do not hide recycling inside a black rubbish bag. Collection crews cannot verify the contents safely, and the entire bag may be treated as residual waste.
Which service should I use for this item?
Select an item
Result: Select an item first.
Should I report the bin, wait or correct a problem?
Missed-bin reporting deadlines vary. Check the collection day, presentation time, rejection reason and known delays before submitting the borough form.
| Check | What it can mean | Next action |
|---|---|---|
| Has the collection day ended? | Different vehicles may collect refuse, recycling and food waste. | Wait until the borough’s reporting time begins. |
| Was it presented on time? | Late sacks or bins usually do not qualify as missed. | Use the correct time on the next scheduled date. |
| Was it at the correct point? | A locked store, gate, parked car or wrong pavement location can prevent access. | Correct the access problem before reporting. |
| Is there a tag or sticker? | The container may be contaminated, overweight or contain prohibited waste. | Remove the problem and follow the council’s retry instructions. |
| Is a street delay published? | The borough may already have scheduled a recovery collection. | Follow the delay message rather than creating duplicate reports. |
| Was only one stream left? | Another crew may still attend later. | Leave the remaining container out until the reporting window opens. |
Missed-bin diagnosis
Result: Select the closest situation.
Prepare before reporting
- Full address and postcode
- Scheduled date and waste stream
- Presentation time
- Photo of the container or rejection tag
- Access or road problem
- Known-delay message
- Previous report reference for repeat failures
Sofa, mattress, fridge and furniture disposal routes
Bulky-waste fees and item limits differ by borough. Reuse, retailer take-back and council collection should be compared before paying a private collector.
| Situation | Best first route | Important check |
|---|---|---|
| Furniture still usable | Donate, sell, give away or use a reuse charity. | Upholstered furniture normally needs a fire-safety label. |
| Broken sofa or mattress | Book the borough bulky-waste service or an accepted recycling-centre visit. | Item count, size, fee and collection point. |
| Replacing an appliance | Ask the retailer about take-back at delivery. | Whether the old appliance must be disconnected. |
| No vehicle available | Council collection or a licensed waste carrier. | Waste-carrier registration and disposal receipt. |
| Estate or communal block | Use the building’s booked bulky-waste area or council service. | Do not leave items beside communal bins without permission. |
| Builder or landlord clearance | Commercial waste service. | Household council collections may exclude business or landlord waste. |
Bulky-waste route helper
Result: Select your situation.
Before booking a council collection
- List every item accurately.
- Check whether mattresses and fridges count separately.
- Confirm the collection point.
- Keep items inside the property boundary until instructed.
- Remove personal possessions from furniture.
- Save the payment and booking references.
Kitchen caddies, communal bins, liners and fox prevention
What normally goes in
Fruit, vegetables, plate scrapings, cooked and raw food, meat, fish, bones, bread, rice, pasta, tea bags, coffee grounds, dairy and eggshells.
Remove all packaging
Food pouches, trays, wrappers and ordinary plastic bags should not enter the food caddy unless the council explicitly approves the liner.
Flats and communal food bins
Empty the indoor caddy into the labelled outdoor communal food container. Do not leave filled caddy liners on the floor.
Foxes and pests
Close outdoor lids, avoid loose food bags and wash the caddy regularly. Present food waste only through the assigned container.
| Problem | Practical fix |
|---|---|
| No caddy delivered | Check whether the property rollout is active and request the correct indoor or outdoor container. |
| No approved liner | Use the borough’s stated alternative, which may include newspaper or an unlined caddy. |
| Smell | Empty frequently, close the lid, rinse the caddy and keep it away from heat. |
| Communal bin overflowing | Report it to the council or estate manager and keep food inside the closed container. |
| Flat above a shop | Check whether food waste is already active or still being introduced for that street. |
Paid subscriptions, sacks, composting and recycling centres
Garden waste is commonly a paid optional service in London. Prices, container types and winter frequencies vary significantly.
Subscription bin
Best for regular grass, leaves, hedge cuttings and small prunings where the borough offers a wheeled-bin service.
Reusable or compostable sacks
Some boroughs use paid sacks or stickers instead of a wheelie bin.
Home composting
Leaves, soft prunings and suitable plant material can reduce paid collections and produce garden compost.
Recycling centre
Check booking, vehicle, residency and quantity rules before transporting garden waste.
Keep out of garden waste: soil, rubble, plant pots, plastic bags, food, treated timber, furniture and invasive plants unless the borough provides a specific route.
London waste services for special situations
Assisted collection
Residents who cannot move containers because of disability, age or mobility can ask the borough about an assisted presentation service.
Clinical waste
Infectious dressings, sharps and other clinical material may need a council collection arranged directly or through a healthcare professional.
Batteries and vapes
Use retailer take-back, a council collection or a recycling point. Never place them in refuse or mixed recycling.
Hazardous household waste
Paint, chemicals, gas cylinders, asbestos and fuel require a specific borough, recycling-centre or specialist route.
Commercial waste
Waste from shops, offices, rental businesses, charities and paid contractors must use a commercial collection or licensed disposal service.
Fly-tipping protection
Check a private collector’s registration and keep a receipt. Householders can be investigated when their waste is found illegally dumped.
Find a household waste and recycling centre near you
London recycling centres use different booking, permit, residency, pedestrian and DIY-waste rules. Never assume a centre in a neighbouring borough accepts your address or vehicle.
Check these six details
- Whether advance booking is required
- Accepted resident postcodes
- Proof of address
- Van and trailer permits
- DIY-waste quantities or charges
- Pedestrian and bicycle access
How London reuse and recycling centres work
This North London Waste Authority video explains how household materials are separated for reuse and recycling after residents arrive at a centre.
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Common collection problems in dense London streets
Foxes and torn sacks
Use the borough-approved container, avoid early presentation and keep food waste inside a locked caddy where supplied.
Timed collection streets
Save the exact morning or evening window. A general weekly day is not enough in a timed zone.
Roadworks and parked vehicles
Keep the agreed collection point visible and accessible to crews without blocking pedestrians.
Communal bin overflow
Report it before placing bags beside the bin. Side waste can create pests and may be treated as fly-tipping.
Bank-holiday confusion
Some boroughs move collections while others maintain normal rounds. Check the address-specific update.
Wrong borough advice
Bin colours used by a friend elsewhere in London may be completely different from your local system.
Student and short-term lets
Landlords should leave current collection instructions, container locations and bulky-waste rules for new residents.
Repeated service failure
Save missed-bin references and photographs, then use the borough complaint process if normal reports do not resolve the problem.
Waste and recycling overview for all 33 London authorities
Open the relevant area to compare typical house, flat and communal services before proceeding to the council’s live collection or booking page.
London waste links for final actions
Information checked: 26 June 2026. Individual collection dates, fees, food-waste rollouts, time bands and recycling-centre rules can change. Use the exact property result for the final live action.
Frequently asked questions
How do I find my London bin collection day?
Enter the full postcode in the GOV.UK rubbish collection day service, select the exact property and follow the result to the responsible borough or City of London collection calendar.
Is there one bin collection calendar for all of London?
No. London has 32 borough councils and the City of London Corporation. Each authority manages its own dates, containers, property arrangements and reporting process.
When should I report a missed bin collection in London?
Wait until the borough’s collection day and reporting window have passed. Check presentation time, access, rejection tags and known delays, then use the property’s council missed-bin form promptly.
What can I put in recycling in London?
Core household recycling includes paper, card, glass, metal, plastic containers and cartons. Container colours and whether materials are mixed or separated vary by borough and property.
Does every London household now receive food-waste collection?
National household recycling requirements changed on 31 March 2026 and apply to flats as well as houses, but local container delivery and property-level rollout can still occur in stages. Check the exact address.
How do flats above shops put rubbish out?
Many shopping streets use time-banded sack collections. Residents must follow the exact street days and time windows rather than leaving waste outside throughout the day.
How much does London bulky-waste collection cost?
There is no single London price. Fees, free allowances, concessions, item limits and collection points are set by each borough. Check the item list before paying.
Can I take waste to any London recycling centre?
Not always. Centres can restrict access by resident postcode, booking, proof of address, vehicle type, permit and DIY-waste quantity. Check the chosen site before travelling.
How do I request an assisted bin collection?
Contact the responsible borough if disability, age or mobility prevents you from moving containers to the normal collection point. Eligibility and evidence requirements differ.
What should I do with batteries and disposable vapes?
Keep them out of rubbish and mixed recycling because they can cause fires. Use a retailer take-back point, council collection or approved recycling point.