Last update 09-02-2024

Disposal of household waste

Content

What is household waste?

Household waste is waste generated in homes as a result of household activities. Similar kinds of waste generated in services and industries, for example food waste or packaging that employees dispose of in the waste paper baskets of an industrial facility’s office area, are also considered to be household waste.

Waste generated in homes, such as waste electrical and electronic equipment, clothes, batteries, accumulators, furniture and fittings, and waste and debris from minor construction and home repair works, are also included in this category.

Household waste is also considered to be any waste originating from the cleaning of public roads, green spaces, recreational areas and beaches, deceased pets and abandoned vehicles.

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Services related to household waste

The local authorities are responsible for providing, and must do so, services for the collection, transport and treatment of household waste generated in homes, businesses and services.

The waste separation model and the collection and treatment systems therefore depend on the organisation of each local authority and are regulated in the corresponding municipal by-laws.

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Household waste separation models

In Spain there are various separation models for different types of household waste,(Abre en nueva ventana) depending on the number and type of fraction to be separated by the user at source. The most common models are the following.

  • Five fractions: glass(Abre en nueva ventana) , paper and cardboard(Abre en nueva ventana) , (Abre en nueva ventana) l(Abre en nueva ventana) ight packaging(Abre en nueva ventana) , organic waste and other waste.
  • Four fractions: glass, paper and cardboard, light packaging and other waste (including organic waste).
  • Four fractions + pruning waste: glass, paper and cardboard, light packaging, other waste (including organic waste) and garden waste.

These primary or ordinary collections are supplemented by other specific collections of bulky waste, batteries(Abre en nueva ventana) , textiles(Abre en nueva ventana) , oils(Abre en nueva ventana) and others. In addition, increasing numbers of municipalities already have household waste recycling centre services.

The future regulation on waste will change the collection models, as the organic fraction (bio-waste) must be collected separately from 2024, and textiles, used cooking oils and hazardous household waste must be collected separately from 2025.

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Household waste collection systems

Collection systems are the set of resources that facilitate the collection of household waste from where they are deposited to the first destination. The configuration of the collection systems is linked to the selected separation model. The most common systems are the following.

  • Door to door. This system consists of depositing waste for the collection service outside the door of the residence or business, in bags, small containers or in bulk, according to the days and times set out for the collection of different fractions.
  • Surface/underground containers. This system is the most common. It consists of placing containers on public roads where citizens can deposit their household waste. The containers are subsequently emptied by the collection services.
  • Pneumatic. This system consists of a number of waste containers connected by means of underground pipes at the intake point, from which waste is transported through the circuit using suction.
  • Household waste recycling centres. These are sorting centres for depositing and storing household waste that is not collected at home. Such waste includes metal, cables, wood, clothes, furniture, waste electrical and electronic equipment, radiographs and light bulbs. These facilities are mainly intended for use by individuals and small businesses (including small industries and municipal services) in accordance with the specifications of the corresponding municipal by-laws. These household waste recycling centres can be fixed or mobile.
  • Specific collections. In addition to household waste recycling centre services, other specific collections with different service methods and locations – such as on-demand collections, collections at facilities or collections from businesses – are also provided for some fractions such as batteries, medicines, waste electrical and electronic equipment, bulky waste, textiles, debris, or pruning and vegetable waste.

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Information for each Autonomous Community

Mapa de España con comunidades autónomas Acceso al servicio de Andalucía (Abre en ventana nueva) Acceso al servicio de Aragón (Abre en ventana nueva) Acceso al servicio de Canarias (Abre en ventana nueva) Acceso al servicio de Cantabria (Abre en ventana nueva) Acceso al servicio de Castilla y León (Abre en ventana nueva) Acceso al servicio de Castilla-La Mancha (Abre en ventana nueva) Acceso al servicio de Cataluña (Abre en ventana nueva) Acceso al servicio de Ciudad de Melilla (Abre en ventana nueva) Acceso al servicio de Madrid, Comunidad de (Abre en ventana nueva) Acceso al servicio de Navarra, Comunidad Foral de (Abre en ventana nueva) Acceso al servicio de Rioja, La (Abre en ventana nueva) Andalucía Aragón Canarias Cantabria Castilla y León Castilla-La Mancha Cataluña Ciudad de Melilla Madrid, Comunidad de Navarra, Comunidad Foral de Rioja, La

Andalucía Aragón Asturias, Principado de Balears, Illes Canarias Cantabria Castilla y León Castilla-La Mancha Cataluña Ciudad de Ceuta Ciudad de Melilla Comunitat Valenciana Extremadura Galicia Madrid, Comunidad de Murcia, Región de Navarra, Comunidad Foral de País Vasco Rioja, La

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Information from local authorities

Municipal councils have rules on the collection of household waste. They are obliged to provide this service and may charge for it.

Access to the Local Government Map(Abre en nueva ventana) to select the relevant municipality.

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Authority responsible for the information

Ministry for Ecological Transition and the Demographic Challenge
Directorate General for Quality and Environmental Evaluation
Sub-Directorate General for the Circular Economy