Chemicals & Solvents
Disposal Rules
Household chemicals, solvents, pesticides, herbicides, and cleaning agents in liquid form are prohibited from dumpsters. They can react with other materials, cause fires, or contaminate groundwater at landfills.
Pro Tip
Never mix unknown chemicals together when consolidating for disposal. Keep them in original labeled containers.
What to Do Instead
Household hazardous waste collection programs accept all chemicals. Check your city or county website for schedules.
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Paint (Latex & Oil-Based)
ProhibitedLiquid paint is prohibited from dumpsters. Oil-based paint is classified as hazardous waste. Latex paint must be dried out before disposal. Never pour paint down drains or into dumpsters in liquid form.
Batteries
ProhibitedBatteries of all types — alkaline, lithium-ion, lead-acid, and rechargeable — are prohibited from dumpsters. They can cause fires, leak acid, and contaminate landfills. Lithium-ion batteries are especially dangerous.
Tires
ProhibitedTires are universally prohibited from dumpsters and landfills in most states. They trap methane gas, breed mosquitoes, and are nearly impossible to compact. Separate disposal is required by law.
Motor Oil & Automotive Fluids
ProhibitedMotor oil, transmission fluid, brake fluid, and antifreeze are hazardous waste and strictly prohibited from dumpsters. A single quart of oil can contaminate 250,000 gallons of water.