CURBSIDE RECYCLING IN DAVIS & MORGAN COUNTIES

Your complete guide to what should and should not go in the curbside recycling cart.

ALUMINUM & STEEL
Aluminum & Steel
Food & Beverage Cans
Empty Cans
PLASTIC
Plastic
Bottles, Containers, & Film
Empty & Remove Cap
PAPER & CARDBOARD
Cardboard & Paper
Mixed Paper, Newspapers, Magazines, & Boxes
Empty & Flatten

Please Do Not Bag Recyclables

PUT IN GARBAGE CART

No Yuck

No Food or Liquid

No Tanglers

No Tanglers

DROP OFF AT LANDFILL REUSE AREA

No Glass

No Glass

No Clothing

No Clothing

No Batteries

No Batteries

No Electronics

No Electronics

Using the curbside recycling cart = a more sustainable future

Curbside recycling bin

If you live in Davis or Morgan Counties, and have a curbside recycling cart at your house, you will want to separate recycling and trash into the two separate carts for collection. This small action has a big impact on our communities.

The more we all learn about which items go in each cart, the more effective our combined recycling efforts will be. It is our goal—and the goal of each city in Davis and Morgan Counties— to divert as many recyclable materials as possible from the landfill to process at our Material Recovery Facility (MRF).

Thanks for using your curbside recycling cart and for helping to move Davis and Morgan Counties toward a more sustainable future.

If you do not have a curbside recycling cart, drop off your recyclables for free at the Davis Landfill Reuse Center. Check if your city has a curbside recycling program to sign up for at the bottom of our page. Search Earth 911 to find other drop-off locations for specific materials.

Recycle Bin
Recycle Bin
Glass Recycling Bin

How to Recycle Glass, Electronics, Clothing, and More

Glass

Glass

Recycling drop-off at the Davis Landfill Reuse Center. Find other glass recycling options with Momentum Recycling.

If you’re interested in residential curbside glass pickup, see if your city is offering the program and sign up here, Momentum Curbside Glass Pick Up Program.

Check out the process of glass recycling on Momentum Recycling’s website.

Clothing

Clothing

Donation drop-off at Davis Landfill Reuse Center. Donating to thrift store is another great option.

Some brands have recycling drop-off bins for their clothes only, such as Patagonia, Carhartt, and more!

Electronics and batteries

Electronics and batteries

Recycle your e-waste at the Davis Landfill Reuse Center. Lowe’s and Home Depot also have recycling drop-offs batteries and cell-phones.

Find other e-waste recycling drop-off locations with Earth 911.

Other items

Other items

Mattress, box spring, tire, steel, and appliance recycling services are all offered at our citizen drop-off pad at the landfill. We also take donations at our thrift store.

Difficult to recycle items

Ship other items to be recycled for free with Terracycle. Some of these items include Kroger packaging, Burt’s Bees packaging, applesauce squeeze containers, hair tools, and more!

Check out Earth 911 for all things recycling.

Your recycling efforts make a big difference!

Check out these stats!

Recycling paper

Recycling one ton of paper saves:

  • 17 mature trees
  • 3.3 cubic yards of landfill space
  • 4100 killowatt hours of energy
  • 380 gallons of oil
  • 7000 gallons of water
  • 60 pounds of pollutants
  • 17 mature trees
  • 3.3 cubic yards of landfill space
  • 4100 killowatt hours of energy
  • 380 gallons of oil
  • 7000 gallons of water
  • 60 pounds of pollutants
Recycling plastic

Recycling one ton of plastic saves:

  • 5,774 kilowatt hours of energy
  • 16.3 barrels of oil
  • 30 cubic yards of landfill space
Recycling aluminum

Recycling aluminum:

  • Saves 95% of the energy required to produce cans from raw materials
  • Reduces water pollution by 97%
  • Reduces aire pollution by 95%
Recycling steel

Recycling one ton of steel saves:

  • 2,500 pounds of iron ore
  • 1,400 pounds of coal
  • 120 pounds of limestone
  • 75% of the energy required to produce steel from raw materials
  • 2,500 pounds of iron ore
  • 1,400 pounds of coal
  • 120 pounds of limestone
  • 75% of the energy required to produce steel from raw materials

Tips on how to reduce your waste!

Reducing consumption is the most effective way to have a positive impact on our environment. Also, less stuff = less stress, right? Follow our Instagram to watch quick videos on how to reduce waste.

Shop locally/in person

This will significantly reduce the number of cardboard boxes and other single-use packaging that comes along with online orders. You will also have fewer boxes to break down, and it’s a way to find and support local businesses. Woohoo!

Shop with reusable grocery and produce bags

This is a simple way to reduce single-use plastics by not using plastic bags and choosing produce without packaging.

Reuse packaging

Reusing items also helps reduce waste, such as reusing a cardboard box to ship something or cleaning the glass jar that you bought with spaghetti sauce and using it for overnight oats. There are lots of creative ways to reuse items.

Reduce food waste

Did you know that reducing food waste is one of the most impactful ways to reduce greenhouse gas emissions?! Roughly one-third of food is wasted! For whatever food does end up going bad, drop it off at Wasatch Resource Recovery’s free drop off program for recycling food waste into energy and compost. You also can learn how to compost organics in your backyard or with an electronic composter, such as a Lomi.

Have questions?

For questions about your curbside recycling cart, view your city’s garbage and recycling page.

For other questions about recycling in Davis and Morgan Counties, contact:
For other questions about recycling in Davis and Morgan Counties, contact:
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