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Batteries - household / non-automotive
Accepted at 1 location
Household batteries are portable power sources that come in various chemistries, types and sizes including single-use and rechargeable batteries used in electronics, power tools, phones, laptops, and other everyday items.
Batteries - household / non-automotive Summary
Also known as: Household Batteries, Rechargeable Batteries, lithium batteries, tool batteries, phone batteries, laptop batteries
Parent material: Batteries
Accepted Locations

Use clear tape to tape over the terminals / contacts of any battery over 9v or any lithium chemistry battery such as tool batteries, phone batteries, laptop batteries, etc.
Do not tape batteries with anything other than fully transparent tape.
Last updated on July 3, 2026 by Green Star GM
About Batteries - household / non-automotive
What it is
Every year in the United States, millions of single-use and rechargeable batteries are bought, used and recycled or disposed of, with increased demand traced largely to the rapid increase in use of small portable electronics, power tools, and other everyday items, as well as smart products. Some batteries contain materials such as cobalt, lithium and graphite that are considered critical minerals—raw materials that are economically and strategically important to the United States with high supply risk and no easy substitutes—so every effort should be made to recycle and recover these materials.(1, 2)
How it’s recycled
When a battery is sent for recycling, it must first be sorted by battery chemistry as each chemistry is recycled differently. A common next step is shredding, which creates different streams including black mass (a granular material made up of the shredded cathodes and anodes), copper and aluminum foils, separators, plastics, steel canisters, and electrolyte. Currently there are two main methods to recover metals from black mass: a heat-based smelting process (pyrometallurgy) which can recover cobalt and nickel, and recycling technologies that use leaching (hydrometallurgy) which may economically recover high amounts of cobalt, nickel, lithium, and manganese.(2)
How to prepare it
Place each battery or device containing a battery in a separate plastic bag and place fully transparent, non-conductive tape over the battery's terminals.(3)
Common mistakes
Certain batteries should NOT go in household garbage or regular recycling; to prevent fires from lithium-ion batteries, tape battery terminals with fully transparent non-conductive tape and/or place batteries in separate plastic bags. Never put these batteries in household garbage or recycling bins. When lithium-ion batteries or the devices that contain them are mistakenly put into the trash, they can become damaged or crushed during processing and may become a fire hazard; the chasing arrow symbol on lithium-ion batteries means you can recycle these batteries at specialized battery recyclers but does NOT mean you can put them anywhere other than the area designated to collect them.(4, 5, 6)
Environmental impact
When batteries are discarded improperly, such as in household trash, critical materials inside batteries are lost and cannot be recycled into new batteries, and batteries can also start fires throughout the municipal waste management system, causing air pollution issues in communities and threatening the safety of workers and first responders. Recycling the batteries avoids air and water pollution and prevents batteries from being sent to facilities that are not equipped to safely manage them and where they could become a fire hazard.(1, 5, 6)
Did you know?
There were more than 240 fires caused by lithium-ion batteries at 64 waste management facilities between 2013 and 2020, with the most common sources identified as batteries from small consumer devices, including cell phones, tablets, laptops, hoverboards, and e-cigarettes.(6)
Sources & additional reading
- Used Household Batteries | US EPA epa.gov
- Lithium-Ion Battery Recycling | US EPA epa.gov
- Battery Collection Best Practices | US EPA epa.gov
- Frequent Questions on Lithium-Ion Batteries | US EPA epa.gov
- Used Lithium-Ion Batteries | US EPA epa.gov
- The Importance of Sending Consumers’ Used Lithium-ion Batteries to Electronic Recyclers or Hazardous Waste Collection Facilities | US EPA epa.gov
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