Want to recycle more? Find out what else you can recycle in your local area using Recycle Now's recycling locator.
You can also find handy hints on how to reduce, reuse and recycle more on the #LeedsByExample website.
Cameras
Donate cameras in good working condition to your local charity shop or drop off at your local household waste recycling centre's reuse container. Broken cameras can be recycled at your local recycling centre's small electrical items bank.
Cans
Rinse and squash all cans (steel and aluminium) and recycle them through your green recycling bin. These items are used in metal smelters and made into new metal products.
Car batteries
You can take your diesel and petrol car batteries to your nearest recycling centre. Contact your car manufacturer or dealer for advice on recycling electric vehicle (EV) batteries.
Cardboard
Cardboard sheets can be used in the garden as a mulch to suppress weeds or ripped up can be added to your compost heap. It can also be shredded and used for animal bedding. All cardboard such as brown card, cereal boxes, egg boxes and toilet roll tubes can be placed in your green recycling bin. Larger corrugated cardboard boxes should be flattened and deposited in the cardboard skips at your nearest recycling centre. This is recycled back into cardboard products such as packaging materials, cat litter and more.
Cards
Carpet
Why not hire an industrial steam cleaner or use a local carpet cleaning firm to clean and spruce up your carpet so you can continue to use it? If you have a homemade compost heap, pieces of carpet are ideal as an insulating material to place on the top of the heap to keep the heat in. Unwanted carpets and rugs can be sold or given to charity shops. As a last resort unwanted carpets should be taken to your nearest recycling centre and placed in the general waste skips. These will be sent to landfill for disposal.
Carrier bags
Remember to take out a shopping bag or a few carrier bags with you so that you do not need to accept any more. Save money by using carrier bags as bin liners at home.
Stretchy carrier bags, bread bags, fresh or frozen fruit and vegetable bags, and tearable cereal, salad, pasta and rice bags can all be recycled in your green bin.
Cars
Cartons
CDs (Compact Discs)
If your unwanted CDs are pre-recorded and still work, you can donate them to your local charity shop. There are also many online companies that offer a CD recycling service.
Cereal wrappers
Cereal wrappers, salad, rice and pasta bags can all be recycled in your green bin.
As a general rule, if plastic wrap, bags or packaging is stretchy or tearable and not foil-lined, then it can be recycled in your green bin.
Large supermarkets usually provide collection containers at the front of the store for plastic packaging that cannot go in your green bin, for example, the foil-lined crisp bags and chocolate wrappers.
Chairs
If your unwanted chair is good enough to be used by others, donate it to a local re-use organisation. Armchairs must have a fire label to be re-used. You can also take it to the Revive Leeds re-use shop at the Kirkstall or Seacroft recycling centres or to your nearest recycling centre where you can put it in the re-use container. If it is not good enough to re-use you can take it to your nearest recycling centre for disposal. Wooden furniture can be recycled in the timber container. If you are unable to do this, you can book a bulky item collection online
Chemicals
Chocolate wrappers
See 'Crisp packets'.
Christmas trees
St Gemma’s Hospice and Sue Ryder are both bringing back their popular Christmas tree collection services across the city in January 2026. For a small donation, their volunteers will pick up your real tree from outside your home and recycle it responsibly.
St Gemma’s Hospice will be collecting between 8 and 15 January, from LS4, LS5, LS6, LS7, LS8, LS9, LS13, LS14, LS15, LS16, LS17, LS18, LS22, LS23 and LS25.
Sue Ryder will be collecting between 7 and 13 January, from LS6, LS7, LS8, LS14, LS15, LS16, LS17, LS18, LS19, LS20, LS21, LS26, LS27 and LS28.
Reusable artificial trees can be donated to charity shops.
Real Christmas trees should be taken to your nearest recycling centre and put in the green garden waste skips. They will be composted and made into soil conditioner for use in land restoration projects.
Please ensure that all decorations are removed before putting your tree in the skip.