Household Bin Guide: What Goes Where & Why Batteries Don’t Belong

Household Bin Guide: What Goes Where & Why Batteries Don’t Belong

A Complete Guide for Allied Recycling Customers

Household waste can be confusing — especially as more products now come with built-in or rechargeable batteries. Putting the wrong items in your black, blue, or brown bin can lead to contamination, extra charges, and even serious fire risks.

To help keep your home and our recycling facilities safe, here’s a simple, accurate guide on what goes in each bin, with a major focus on the safe disposal of batteries.

Why Batteries Should NEVER Go in Any Household Bin

Ireland is seeing a huge rise in everyday items powered by batteries — toys, e-bikes, vapes, headphones, kitchen gadgets and more. But batteries are one of the most dangerous items placed in household bins.

Why batteries are a problem

  • They can cause fires inside bin trucks, your wheelie bin, and waste facilities.
  • Lithium batteries can explode when crushed, which happens during waste processing.
  • Chemicals inside batteries can leak into soil and water if disposed of incorrectly.

The correct way to dispose of batteries

All batteries should be brought to:

  • Local shops (all retailers that sell batteries must accept them for recycling)
  • Civic amenity sites / recycling centres
  • WEEE Ireland collection points

This includes:

  • AA/AAA batteries
  • Lithium batteries
  • Phone batteries
  • E-bike/e-scooter batteries
  • Button-cell batteries
  • Batteries inside vapes

If it has a battery — it MUST NOT go in your black, blue, or brown bin.

What Goes in Your Bins?

Black Bin
Blue Bin
Brown Bin

Black Bin – General Waste

Permitted Prohibited
General refuseHot ashes
NappiesGlass
Ashes (cooled)Papers
Hoover contentsPlastic
Heavy construction
Garden Waste
Electrical items
Furniture
Batteries
Demolition materials

Blue Bin – Recycling

Permitted Prohibited
NewspapersGlass
MagazinesGeneral refuse
Food & Drink cansNapkins / Paper towels
Rigid plasticsCarrier bags / refuse sacks
CardboardWrappers
Tetra pak cartonsStyrofoam
Coffee cupBatteries
Aluminium foil/ trays*No black bags – clean dry loose only
*Contaminated bins will not be emptied

Brown Bin – Food & Compost Waste

Permitted Prohibited
Cooked & raw foodPlastic & plastic bags / liners
Peelings & leftoversMetal
Coffee grandsGlass
Tea bags & leavesAshes
Paper napkinsWashing machine sheets
Grass cuttingsHoover contents
Garden wasteCandle wax
Fabric
Medicine
Plasters
Rocks & gravel
Animal waste
Personal hygiene products
Contaminated garden waste
Cardboard
⚠ Batteries can cause fires — NEVER put them in black, blue, or brown bins.
Please bring all batteries to a WEEE drop-off point or any battery collection box.

Where Should Electrical Items Go?

Electrical items (even small ones) should never go in household bins.

Bring them to:
✔ Recycling centres
✔ WEEE Ireland drop-off points
✔ Any shop that sells electrical items (they take old ones for free)

This includes:

  • Toys with batteries
  • Vapes
  • Phones
  • Remote controls
  • Hairdryers
  • Kitchen appliances

If it plugs in or takes a battery — it’s WEEE, not household waste.

A Growing Issue: Hidden Batteries in Everyday Items

More products now include hidden lithium batteries, such as:

  • Bluetooth speakers
  • Electric toothbrushes
  • Power tools
  • LED candles
  • E-scooters & e-bikes
  • Vape devices
  • Kids’ toys and gadgets
  • Rechargeable kitchen tools

If it feels heavier than expected, charges with a cable, or lights up — it probably contains a battery.

How You Can Help Keep Your Community Safe

Here are three easy steps every household can take:

1. Check before you bin

If the item has a battery or a plug, it must go to a WEEE collection point, not a household bin.

2. Store used batteries safely

Keep a small box or jar at home for used batteries until you can bring them to a recycling point.

3. Never put batteries in your blue, brown, or black bin

Even one lithium battery can cause a fire in a collection truck.

Recycling properly keeps costs down, improves safety, and helps increase Ireland’s overall recycling rates. As battery-powered products continue to grow in popularity, it’s more important than ever to keep batteries and electrical items OUT of household bins.

If you need local information on battery drop-off points or recycling services, Allied Recycling is here to help.

Christmas & New Year Bin Collection Updates

Please note the following temporary changes to collection dates:

• Thursday, 25 December (Christmas Day)
➡️ Collected on Saturday, 27 December

• Friday, 26 December (St. Stephen’s Day)
➡️ Collected on Sunday, 28 December

• Thursday, 1 January (New Year’s Day)
➡️ Collected on Sunday, 3 January

Thank you and happy holidays!