A public resource guide

How to get rid of a TV or electronics.

Electronics are illegal to throw in regular trash in 25+ states, and free recycling is available almost everywhere. Here’s every legitimate option for TVs, computers, monitors, and small electronics.

Last updated: May 2026 · Maintained by Freemoval as a public resource

Electronics are banned from regular trash in 25+ U.S. states under state e-waste recycling laws. The reason: TVs, computers, and other electronics contain lead, mercury, cadmium, and other heavy metals that contaminate landfills and waste-to-energy facilities. The good news: free e-waste recycling is available in almost every U.S. city, through retailer takeback programs (Best Buy is the largest), state-mandated manufacturer programs (NY, CA, IL, others), and dedicated city facilities. Older CRT (tube) TVs are the trickiest because of leaded glass, some cities and retailers charge fees for these specifically. This guide covers every legitimate option.

The challenge with electronics

Electronics fall into a unique disposal category: they’re NOT eligible for regular trash in 25+ states (NY, CA, IL, NJ, MA, OR, WA, MN, MI, CT, MD, NC, VA, OK, and others have e-waste laws), but free recycling is widely available through multiple channels.

The challenges are: (1) CRT TVs, older tube TVs contain leaded glass and are expensive to recycle; some retailers and cities charge $10–$30 to take them. (2) Large flat-screen TVs, over 32 inches often require special handling. (3) Multiple items at once, some retailers limit to 3 items per visit. (4) Identifying the right channel, depends on item type (TV vs. computer vs. small electronics) and your location.

The simplest universal answer: Best Buy stores accept most electronics for free recycling at the customer service desk. Beyond that, state and city programs offer alternatives.

Free options

In order from most universal to most location-specific:

Best Buy In-Store Recycling (most universal)

Mostly free

Best Buy accepts most electronics for FREE in-store recycling at the customer service desk. The most universal channel in the U.S. with 1,000+ locations.

Free items: Laptops, desktops, monitors under 32 inches, printers, small electronics, batteries, ink cartridges, cables.

Limit: 3 items per household per day.

Fee items: CRT TVs and TVs over 32 inches: $30 fee each.

Bonus: Free data destruction service included, useful if you’re recycling computers with personal data.

Best Buy recycling info ›

State E-Waste Programs (Manufacturer-Funded)

Free in 25+ states

25+ states have Extended Producer Responsibility (EPR) laws requiring electronics manufacturers to fund free e-waste recycling. New York, California, Illinois, Massachusetts, Oregon, Washington, Minnesota, and many others.

State-mandated drop-off sites are usually FREE for residents and accept TVs, computers, monitors, printers, and other electronics, including CRT TVs that retailers often charge for.

How to find: Search “e-cycle [state name]” or check your state’s environmental agency website.

Staples In-Store Recycling

Free, computers/monitors

Staples stores accept computers, monitors, laptops, printers, and most office electronics for FREE in-store recycling. Limited to consumer electronics (no large TVs). Generally fewer item limits than Best Buy. Staples is in 1,000+ U.S. locations.

Manufacturer Takeback Programs (Apple, Dell, HP)

Free, by mail

Apple offers free recycling and trade-in for any Apple product (and many non-Apple products). Dell offers free home pickup for Dell products. HP offers free mail-in recycling. These programs are excellent for working older devices that have residual trade-in value.

Trade-in over recycle: Devices 5–7 years old often have $20–$200 trade-in credit. Check before recycling.

Apple Trade In ›

City-Specific Drop-Off Centers

Free in most cities

Most major U.S. cities operate dedicated e-waste drop-off sites or include electronics in their HHW programs. Knoxville Solid Waste Facility, Buffalo 1120 Seneca Street (5 items/year), Tucson Los Reales Sustainability Campus, San Francisco Recology Transfer Station, these are all free for residents.

Check the city section below for your local drop-off options.

Goodwill (working electronics)

Free, if working

Goodwill accepts working electronics (computers, monitors, printers, small electronics) for free at most donation centers. Most Goodwill locations also operate as e-waste drop-off sites for non-working items through partnerships with R2 (Responsible Recycling) certified recyclers.

Useful flexibility: Goodwill’s e-waste partnerships make this an unusually flexible donation channel for both working and non-working electronics.

When free options don’t fit (large CRT TVs, multiple items at once, can’t self-haul):

LoadUp paid pickup

$70+

For households who can’t self-haul, have multiple electronic items at once, or want full-service in-home pickup, LoadUp offers professional electronics removal nationwide with upfront pricing. Loaders handle all lifting and route electronics to certified e-waste recyclers. Independent loaders in the marketplace handle pickup, loading, and disposal coordination.

If you can pay for a pickup, your booking helps fund free pickups for someone else. Every paid LoadUp customer can opt in to round up at checkout, and 100% of round-ups go directly to Freemoval’s subsidized jobs.

Book an electronics pickup with LoadUp → Round-up option appears at checkout. Optional, opt-in only.

CRT TV Recycling Fees

$10–$30 typical

Older CRT (tube) TVs contain leaded glass and are expensive to recycle. Best Buy charges $30 for CRT TVs. Many cities charge $10–$30 at drop-off facilities. The fees fund proper disposal of the leaded glass.

Free alternative: If your CRT TV still works, check Goodwill or Salvation Army, they sometimes accept working CRTs free. State e-waste programs (NY, CA, IL, others) also accept CRT TVs free where Best Buy charges.

Find electronics disposal rules in your city

Electronics disposal rules depend heavily on your state’s e-waste law and your city’s programs. Cities in states with strong EPR laws (NY, CA, IL, MA, OR) have more free options. The summaries below show the headline rule per city, tap any city to read the full guide.

Albuquerque, NM Launching

Free curbside e-waste pickup with bulk schedule.

View Albuquerque guide →

Arlington, TX Launching

NOT in bulk. Best Buy free recycling. Sanitation Admin Bldg may accept. Texas e-waste manufacturer take-back.

View Arlington guide →

Atlanta, GA Launching

Free Center for Hard to Recycle Materials (CHaRM) drop-off.

View Atlanta guide →

Anaheim, CA Launching

North OC HHW Facility (1071 N. Blue Gum St, Anaheim, 714-834-6752, free for OC residents). Best Buy free recycling. CA e-waste law.

View Anaheim guide →

Anchorage, AK Launching

SWS HHW collection events (periodic, check muni.org/SWS). Best Buy free recycling.

View Anchorage guide →

Akron, OH Launching

Summit County Reworks (summitreworks.com). Best Buy free recycling. Ohio e-waste law applies.

View Akron guide →

Allentown, PA Launching

By appt at 641 S 10th St (call 610-437-8729). Best Buy free recycling. PA e-waste law applies.

View Allentown guide →

Aurora, CO Launching

CO BANS e-waste from landfills. At Your Door $10 includes electronics. Pedal Point events ($5/carload most). Best Buy.

View Aurora guide →

Austin, TX Launching

Free Recycle & Reuse Drop-Off Center (TVs, computers, monitors).

View Austin guide →

Augusta, GA Launching

GA e-waste law applies. Best Buy, Goodwill, or GA EPD-approved recyclers. NOT in curbside bulk.

View Augusta guide →

Bakersfield, CA Launching

CA e-waste law. Certified drop-off sites (bakersfieldcity.us). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in carts.

View Bakersfield guide →

Baltimore, MD Launching

Free at Northwest Citizens Convenience Center and other drop-offs.

View Baltimore guide →

Baton Rouge, LA Launching

Bi-annual HHW events (brla.gov). Best Buy free recycling. Louisiana e-waste law applies.

View Baton Rouge guide →

Bridgeport, CT Launching

CT E-Cycles (portal.ct.gov/DEEP). Best Buy free recycling. CT e-waste law applies. NOT in trash.

View Bridgeport guide →

Boise, ID Launching

6 free large item pickups accept electronics. Idaho e-waste law (2008). Best Buy free recycling.

View Boise guide →

Birmingham, AL Launching

Roebuck Recycling Center drop-off.

View Birmingham guide →

Boston, MA Launching

Free curbside, CRT items require special collection under MA state law.

View Boston guide →

Buffalo, NY Launching

NEVER curbside (NY state law). Drop off at 1120 Seneca Street, 5 items/year limit.

View Buffalo guide →

Camden, NJ Launching

Camden Electronics Pickup program (separate from bulk). Banned from regular trash under NJ state e-waste law. Best Buy accepts free.

View Camden guide →

Charlotte, NC Launching

Four free Mecklenburg County drop-off centers accept electronics.

View Charlotte guide →

Cape Coral, FL Launching

Lee County HHW (239-533-8000). Best Buy free recycling. FL e-waste law applies.

View Cape Coral guide →

Chattanooga, TN Launching

Free Recycle Collection Centers across the City.

View Chattanooga guide →

Chesapeake, VA Launching

SPSA Transfer Station HHW drop-off (first Wednesday of each month). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in bulk trash or carts.

View Chesapeake guide →

Chicago, IL Launching

Sims Metal Management drop-off + retailer takeback.

View Chicago guide →

Cincinnati, OH Launching

Hamilton County recycling drop-off events.

View Cincinnati guide →

Colorado Springs, CO Launching

El Paso County HHW Facility (719-520-7878). Best Buy free recycling. Note: SOCO Waste does not accept electronics.

View Colorado Springs guide →

Cleveland, OH Launching

Free Ridge Road Transfer Station drop-off.

View Cleveland guide →

Columbia, SC Launching

FREE drop-off at 2910 Colonial Drive (Mon, Tue, Thu, Fri 9:30 AM-3:30 PM).

View Columbia guide →

Columbus, OH Launching

SWACO drop-off events for Franklin County residents.

View Columbus guide →

Dallas, TX Launching

McCommas Bluff Landfill and Bachman Lake Drop-Off Centers.

View Dallas guide →

Des Moines, IA Launching

MWA HHW events (mwatoday.com). Best Buy free recycling. Iowa e-waste law applies.

View Des Moines guide →

Durham, NC Launching

Durham HHW Center (free for residents). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in carts.

View Durham guide →

El Paso, TX Launching

Free drop-off at any Citizen Collection Station. Best Buy free recycling. Texas e-waste law (2007) requires manufacturer takeback.

View El Paso guide →

Denver, CO Launching

Annual electronics recycling event, check Denver Recycles.

View Denver guide →

Detroit, MI Launching

Detroit Recycles drop-off events.

View Detroit guide →

Fresno, CA Launching

Cedar Avenue Recycling and Transfer Station drop-off.

View Fresno guide →

Fayetteville / Bentonville, AR Launching

Benton County Solid Waste facility. Best Buy free recycling. AR e-waste guidance via 479-575-8398.

View Fayetteville / Bentonville guide →

Fort Worth, TX Launching

Drop-Off Station OR Environmental Collection Center (free for residents). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in monthly bulk pile.

View Fort Worth guide →

Grand Rapids, MI Launching

Michigan e-waste law applies. Kent County Residential Waste Facilities (864-243-9672). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in trash.

View Grand Rapids guide →

Greensboro, NC Launching

NOT in bulk. HHW Center at 2750 Patterson Street (free for residents). Best Buy free recycling. NC e-waste landfill ban.

View Greensboro guide →

Greenville, SC Launching

SC e-waste law applies. Greenville County Residential Waste Facilities (864-243-9672). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in regular bulk.

View Greenville guide →

Hartford, CT Launching

CT state e-waste recycling at retailers (Best Buy, Staples).

View Hartford guide →

Henderson, NV Launching

Rotating Wed-Sat HHW drop-off (Henderson or Cheyenne Transfer). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in regular bulk.

View Henderson guide →

Honolulu, HI Launching

NOT in curbside or bulky. HI state e-waste manufacturer take-back. Best Buy free recycling. Convenience centers accept e-waste.

View Honolulu guide →

Houston, TX Launching

Westpark Consumer Recycling Center drop-off.

View Houston guide →

Indianapolis, IN Launching

Indianapolis ToxDrop drop-off events & retailer takeback.

View Indianapolis guide →

Irvine, CA Launching

INCLUDED in WM bulky pickup (unusual!). HHW Center at 6411 Oak Canyon. Best Buy free.

View Irvine guide →

Jackson, MS Launching

Best Buy free recycling, manufacturer takeback, or periodic city collection events. MS does not have state e-waste law.

View Jackson guide →

Jacksonville, FL Launching

HHW Facility on Commonwealth Avenue accepts electronics.

View Jacksonville guide →

Kansas City, MO Launching

Midwest Recycling Center drop-off (free, some fees apply).

View Kansas City guide →

Knoxville, TN Launching

Solid Waste Facility accepts electronics free.

View Knoxville guide →

Lakeland, FL Launching

Polk County Environmental Services HHW events. Best Buy free recycling. FL e-waste law applies.

View Lakeland guide →

Las Vegas, NV Launching

Republic Services + Clark County recycling events.

View Las Vegas guide →

Lexington, KY Launching

Electronics Recycling Center at 1306 Versailles Rd (24/7 outdoor bins). Best Buy free recycling.

View Lexington guide →

Lincoln, NE Launching

Best Buy free recycling. City HHW events (check lincoln.ne.gov for dates). Some Lincoln e-waste recyclers.

View Lincoln guide →

Long Beach, CA Launching

EDCO Recycling Center (free). Best Buy free recycling. CA e-waste law applies. NOT in Special Collection.

View Long Beach guide →

Los Angeles, CA Launching

LA Sanitation S.A.F.E. Centers drop-off.

View Los Angeles guide →

Louisville, KY Launching

Louisville Drop-Off Centers + retailer takeback.

View Louisville guide →

Madison, WI Launching

Drop-off sites (3 locations, Apr-Dec). Best Buy free recycling. WI e-waste law applies.

View Madison guide →

Memphis, TN Launching

Memphis Solid Waste Convenience Centers.

View Memphis guide →

Mesa, AZ Launching

HHM Facility at 2412 N. Center St (free, Wed-Sat, closed holidays). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in barrels or bulk.

View Mesa guide →

McAllen, TX Launching

Hidalgo County HHW/e-waste events. Best Buy free recycling. TX e-waste law (2007). NOT in Brush/Bulky.

View McAllen guide →

Miami, FL Launching

Miami-Dade Trash & Recycling Centers (TRCs).

View Miami guide →

Milwaukee, WI Launching

PREPAID STICKER REQUIRED for curbside, OR Drop-Off Centers (TVs require fee).

View Milwaukee guide →

Minneapolis, MN Launching

Hennepin County Drop-Off Facilities.

View Minneapolis guide →

Nashville, TN Launching

Metro Nashville Convenience Centers.

View Nashville guide →

New Orleans, LA Launching

New Orleans recycling events.

View New Orleans guide →

New York, NY Launching

NYC e-waste curbside pickup with appointment via 311. NEVER in regular trash (NY state law).

View New York guide →

Newark, NJ Launching

Essex County recycling events.

View Newark guide →

North Las Vegas, NV Launching

Republic Services Southern Nevada Recycling Center (360 W. Cheyenne). Silver State Recycling, Nevada Recycling Center, Best Buy free.

View North Las Vegas guide →

Norfolk, VA Launching

Norfolk HHW events. Best Buy free recycling. VA e-waste manufacturer take-back. NOT in curbside or bulk.

View Norfolk guide →

Oakland, CA Launching

Free bulky pickup; Davis Street Resource Recovery Complex.

View Oakland guide →

Omaha, NE Launching

Free Spring/Fall Cleanup events accept electronics. Best Buy free recycling year-round. NE e-waste law applies.

View Omaha guide →

Oklahoma City, OK Launching

OKC Recycle & Reuse Drop-Off events.

View Oklahoma City guide →

Orlando, FL Launching

Orange County Landfill drop-off events.

View Orlando guide →

Philadelphia, PA Launching

Philadelphia Sanitation Convenience Centers (5 sites).

View Philadelphia guide →

Phoenix, AZ Launching

Phoenix Transfer Stations + retailer takeback.

View Phoenix guide →

Pittsburgh, PA Launching

Pennsylvania Resources Council collection events.

View Pittsburgh guide →

Plano, TX Launching

Dallas County Home Chemical Collection Center (free for Dallas County residents). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in bulky waste.

View Plano guide →

Portland, OR Launching

Free E-Cycle Oregon for electronics.

View Portland guide →

Providence, RI Launching

FREE curbside pickup with 24-hr notice OR free at Mattress Drop-off Center.

View Providence guide →

Provo, UT Launching

SUVSWD transfer station (518 W 3450 N, Spanish Fork). Best Buy free recycling. UT e-waste guidance at suvswd.org.

View Provo guide →

Rochester, NY Launching

BANNED from curbside by NY e-waste law. Monroe County ecopark at 10 Avion Drive (free). Best Buy free recycling.

View Rochester guide →

Raleigh, NC Launching

Wake County Multi-Material Recycling Facility.

View Raleigh guide →

Reno, NV Launching

Best Buy free recycling. GrayMar voucher (HHW). HERO Environmental.

View Reno guide →

Richmond, VA Launching

Central Virginia Waste Management Authority events.

View Richmond guide →

Riverside, CA Launching

California e-waste law applies. Free drop-off at Agua Mansa Transfer Station. Best Buy free recycling.

View Riverside guide →

Sacramento, CA Launching

Sacramento County Waste Management Drop-Off.

View Sacramento guide →

Saint Paul, MN Launching

Bulky pickup with advance arrangement (counts toward 3-cap, may incur fees). Ramsey County Environmental Center.

View Saint Paul guide →

San Jose, CA Launching

CA e-waste law applies. Free unlimited junk pickup accepts e-waste. Best Buy free recycling.

View San Jose guide →

Salt Lake City, UT Launching

Call 2 Haul accepts e-waste. Best Buy free recycling. Utah state e-waste law (2008) covers TVs and computers.

View Salt Lake City guide →

San Antonio, TX Launching

San Antonio Recycling & Disposal Facilities.

View San Antonio guide →

San Diego, CA Launching

Miramar Landfill drop-off; new Solid Waste Management Fee applies.

View San Diego guide →

San Francisco, CA Launching

Free Bulky Item Recycling; mandatory three-cart sorting law.

View San Francisco guide →

Seattle, WA Launching

Seattle Recycle & Disposal Stations + retailer takeback.

View Seattle guide →

Spokane, WA Launching

Free at City/County facilities. Best Buy free recycling. WA E-Cycle Washington law applies.

View Spokane guide →

St. Louis, MO Launching

St. Louis County recycling drop-off events.

View St. Louis guide →

St. Petersburg, FL Launching

Pinellas County HHW (free for residents). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in regular trash.

View St. Petersburg guide →

Stockton, CA Launching

CA e-waste law. San Joaquin County Solid Waste (209-468-3066). Best Buy free recycling. NOT in any cart.

View Stockton guide →

Syracuse, NY Launching

NY e-waste ban. OCRRA drop-off sites (ocrra.org, 315-453-2866). Best Buy free recycling.

View Syracuse guide →

Tampa, FL Launching

McKay Bay Transfer Station + Hillsborough County drop-offs.

View Tampa guide →

Tucson, AZ Launching

NOT in regular bulky, Los Reales Sustainability Campus.

View Tucson guide →

Tulsa, OK Launching

Best Buy free recycling. Oklahoma e-waste law (2008). City transfer station accepts electronics. Manufacturer takeback programs.

View Tulsa guide →

Virginia Beach, VA Launching

Landfill & Resource Recovery Center (Jake Sears Road) or West Neck Recycling Center.

View Virginia Beach guide →

Washington, DC Launching

DC Office of the Clean City e-CYCLE program.

View Washington guide →

Wichita, KS Launching

PRo Kansas Recycling FREE (725 E. Clark, 316-269-1359). American E-Waste Recyclers, Best Buy. Sedgwick County HHW (call ahead).

View Wichita guide →

Winston-Salem, NC Launching

NOT in Bulky Pick-Up. 3RC EnviroStation Wed-Sat 9 AM-3 PM (free for Forsyth County residents). Best Buy free recycling.

View Winston-Salem guide →

Worcester, MA Launching

Drop-Off Center at 1065 Millbury St (appt). Best Buy free recycling. MA e-waste law applies.

View Worcester guide →

Common mistakes to avoid

Common questions

What’s the simplest way to recycle electronics?

Best Buy in-store recycling. 1,000+ U.S. locations, accepts most electronics free at the customer service desk (limit 3 items per household per day). Computers, laptops, monitors under 32 inches, printers, small electronics, batteries, ink cartridges, and cables are free. CRT TVs and TVs over 32 inches: $30 fee each. No appointment needed.

Can I throw a TV in regular trash?

In most U.S. states, no. 25+ states (NY, CA, IL, NJ, MA, OR, WA, MN, MI, CT, MD, NC, VA, OK, and others) have e-waste laws that ban TVs from regular trash. Even in states without e-waste laws, most cities ban TVs from regular bulk pickup. Free TV recycling is available through Best Buy ($30 for CRT or over 32 in), state e-waste programs, and city drop-off sites.

How do I wipe my hard drive before recycling a computer?

Three options: (1) Software wipe, download free DBAN (Darik’s Boot and Nuke) or use built-in OS tools (Windows: Reset PC with “remove everything” + clean drive; Mac: Erase Assistant in System Settings). (2) Physical destruction, remove the hard drive and physically destroy it (drill holes, hammer). (3) Best Buy free data destruction service, included with electronics drop-off. Option 3 is easiest if you’re using Best Buy for disposal anyway.

Why are CRT TVs more expensive to recycle?

CRT (cathode ray tube) TVs contain 4–8 lbs of leaded glass per tube, plus phosphors and other heavy metals. Modern flat-screen TVs are dramatically less hazardous and cheaper to recycle. CRT recyclers must handle the leaded glass through specialized facilities, which costs $20–$50 per TV. Retailer recycling fees ($30 at Best Buy) and city drop-off fees ($10–$30) cover this cost. State e-waste programs (NY, CA, IL, others) absorb the cost through manufacturer fees on new electronics.

What about old phones, tablets, and laptops?

Manufacturer trade-in programs (Apple, Samsung, Google, Dell, HP, Lenovo) almost always offer better value than recycling for working devices. Apple’s trade-in (apple.com/shop/trade-in) accepts iPhones, iPads, Macs, and many non-Apple devices. Samsung trade-in works similarly. Even devices 5–7 years old often have $20–$200 trade-in credit. For non-working devices: Best Buy free recycling, manufacturer mail-in programs, or e-waste drop-off events.

Is this page maintained?

Yes. Freemoval maintains this page as a public resource. We update it when programs change rules, fees, or contact methods. Last updated May 2026. If you find outdated information, let us know.

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