Recycling in Brisbane
Use this guide to help you recycle more in Brisbane and send less waste to landfill.
What can be recycled in Brisbane?
Paper
Metals (aluminium/steel)
Cardboard
Glass (unbroken)
Plastics (firm)
Important things to know
When placing items in your yellow bin:
- empty bottles and containers - you don't have to wash them out
- leave lids on bottles, containers and jars - loose lids are too small to be processed
- don't put items in plastic bags before they go in the bin.
Do you want to check if an item is recyclable?
Use our handy interactive tool to find out what goes in your yellow bin.
What happens to my recycling?
After you place your yellow bin on the kerbside, the following process takes place.
Your yellow bin is collected, and the content is emptied into one of Council’s dedicated fleet of recycling trucks.
The content is taken to Visy’s (Council’s recycling partner’s) Material Recovery Facility on Gibson Island.
Visy sorts the content into the material streams of paper, cardboard, plastics, glass, steel and aluminium. Items that are deemed non-recyclable are separated and sent to landfill.
The material streams are now ready to be reprocessed into new products.
For more information on what is accepted or upcoming special drop-off events, visit the resource recovery centres page.
Frequently asked questions
Recycle coffee cups at a participating location, or place them in your red bin (general waste). Coffee cup lids can be recycled in your household yellow bin.
We encourage residents to use a reusable cup whenever possible.
Polystyrene can't be recycled in your yellow bin.
You can drop off household quantities of clean polystyrene (up to 5 cubic metres) at our resource recovery centres. It will be processed for recycling.
You can recycle your coffee pods via the Nespresso coffee capsule recycling program. Drop off any brand of coffee pod at a Nespresso store or participating florist or garden centre.
Alternatively, you can purchase an Australia Post Recycling Satchel.
If you use plastic coffee pods, check with the manufacturer to see if they offer a recycling service for customers
Unfortunately, broken glass is a safety risk to staff at recycling facilities. Please do not place any broken glass in the yellow bin. Broken glass should be wrapped and placed in the red bin (general waste).
In Brisbane you can place empty and intact aerosol cans into your yellow bin. If you are unable to safely empty aerosol cans you can dispose of them at a Council resource recovery centre.
Big W has partnered with TerraCycle to create a free national toy recycling program. You can take your pre-loved toys to any participating Big W store.
Toys in good condition can also be donated to Council’s Treasure Troves, as well as toy libraries and op-shops.
Most household batteries, including from remotes and toys, and car batteries, can be dropped off at our resource recovery centres.
Alternatively, drop off old and easily removable household batteries at a B-cycle drop off point.