| Glass | |
|---|---|
| • bottles and food jars - just rinse | |
| • Metal lids are recyclable just remove first | |
| Paper | |
| • cereal boxes | • newspapers |
| • deli/ butchers paper | • paper |
| • egg cartons | • paper bags |
| • greeting cards | • paper plates (clean) |
| • junk mail | • paper towel roll |
| • magazines | • phone books |
| • boxes/cardboard (no waxed boxes like fruit boxes) | • pizza boxes - bottom section goes in the rubbish bin |
| • envelopes (including with plastic windows) | |
| Plastic | |
| • food punnets | • margarine containers - remove lids |
| • biscuit trays | • empty and clean takeaway food containers - remove lids |
| • cake trays (plastic) | • Tupperware |
| • detergent bottles - remove lids | • ice cream containers - remove lids |
| • bottles (for example: milk cordial juice soft drink) remove lids. Plastic lids larger than a credit card can be placed in the recycling bin. Smaller lids go into the general rubbish bin. | • yoghurt containers - remove lids |
| Metals | |
| • aluminium cans | • formula tins |
| • aluminium baking trays | • pet food cans |
| • cake trays (foil) | • steel cans |
| • food cans | • tin cans |
| • cooking oil tins (up to 5 litres) | |
| • aerosol cans (cooking/baking spray whipped cream | |
| • foil (clean and rolled/scrunched into a loose ball) | |
Recycling in the bathroom
From cardboard toilet rolls to rigid plastic shampoo containers, there are so many different bathroom products that can go into your household recycling.