Cornwall Council bin collection: check your calendar, food waste, recycling, rubbish and garden waste options
This refreshed guide helps Cornwall residents check collection dates, download the correct calendar, use the new food waste service, sort recycling bags and boxes, avoid missed collection problems, order containers, subscribe to garden waste and choose the right official route for bulky waste or household waste recycling centres.
Cornwall Council collection dates are address-based. Your correct day can depend on your property, rural access, flats or shared-bin setup, wheelie bin or protective sack allocation, garden waste subscription and any current service disruption. Use the official Cornwall Council calendar for your exact address before putting waste out.
Quick answer: find your Cornwall Council bin collection date
Use Cornwall Council’s official “Find your collection day and download calendar” service from the recycling, rubbish and litter section. Enter your address, select the exact property and check the dates shown for food waste, recycling, rubbish and garden waste where subscribed.
Cornwall Council collects food waste every week. Recycling and household rubbish are collected every two weeks on alternating weeks. Garden waste is collected every two weeks only if you subscribe to the garden waste collection service.
Put food waste, recycling and rubbish out by 7am on the correct collection day at your usual collection point, normally the boundary of the property.
Shared recycling and rubbish arrangements can be different. Cornwall Council advises flats with shared bins to check with the site manager for container information.
Garden waste is a paid subscription service. Only use Cornwall Council garden waste containers for that service.
Official source verification
Publish-ready as of: 15 May 2026.
This page was refreshed using official Cornwall Council pages for recycling, rubbish and litter, household waste collections, food waste, recycling collections, household rubbish collections, missed collections, garden waste collections, bulky waste collections, assisted collections and household waste recycling centres.
Collection dates, container shortages, garden waste subscription prices, bulky waste charges, recycling centre rules, accepted items and missed collection processes can change. Use the official links in this article before making a report, subscription, booking, container request or disposal decision.
What this Cornwall Council bin collection guide covers
How to check the Cornwall Council collection calendar online
The official collection calendar is the safest way to check your dates because it is linked to your property. A nearby home may have a different collection point, a different container allocation, a newly registered property status, a shared-bin arrangement or a different garden waste subscription.
Open Cornwall Council’s collection day service
Start from the official recycling, rubbish and litter page and choose the “Find your collection day and download calendar” action.
Search your exact address
Use the address that receives the household collection. For flats, rural homes, new-build properties and named properties, check the selected address carefully.
Check each waste stream
Read the dates for weekly food waste, fortnightly recycling, fortnightly rubbish and garden waste if you subscribe to that service.
Save or download the calendar
Download, print or save the calendar. Recheck online during Christmas, New Year, bad weather or after Cornwall Council updates the service.
Cornwall recycling bags, food caddies, rubbish bins and garden waste containers
Cornwall’s system is not just one wheelie bin for everything. The council asks households to sort food waste, paper, cardboard, plastic and metal packaging, glass, textiles, rubbish and garden waste into the correct container. Sorting at home keeps materials cleaner and helps avoid unnecessary rubbish.
Cornwall collects food waste from the green outdoor food caddy every week. Households can use an indoor kitchen caddy and then put food waste into the outdoor caddy for collection.
You do not have to line the indoor caddy. Cornwall Council lists several lining options if you prefer to use one, including compostable liners, newspaper, paper bags and some reused bags.
Use the red recycling bag for plastic, cartons and metal packaging accepted by Cornwall Council. Keep packaging as clean as practical and do not mix general rubbish into recycling.
Cartons and plastic film have been added to Cornwall’s wider recycling approach, but use the official A-Z if you are unsure about one item.
Use the orange bag for cardboard and brown paper. Flatten cardboard where practical so the bag closes properly and material does not blow away.
If you have a one-off extra amount of cardboard, check Cornwall Council’s temporary container advice or HWRC route rather than leaving loose material incorrectly.
Use the blue bag for paper. Keeping paper separate from containers that may hold food or liquid helps protect recycling quality.
Wet or contaminated paper can become hard to recycle, so keep the lid closed and avoid mixing it with food waste.
Use the black box for glass jars, glass bottles and textiles accepted by the council. Do not put broken glass directly into the recycling box.
Cornwall Council advises broken glass and sharp objects should be carefully wrapped or placed in a sturdy labelled container and left on top of the wheelie bin or sack.
Cornwall provides either a wheelie bin or reusable protective sack for household rubbish depending on property assessment. All rubbish must be bagged before going into the bin or sack.
Do not leave extra bags of rubbish on top of or next to the bin or sack. Cornwall Council says extra rubbish beside the container will not be collected.
Cornwall waste sorting comparison for quick decisions
This mobile-friendly comparison helps you choose the first official route to check. It is not a replacement for Cornwall Council’s current recycling A-Z, but it reduces the common mistakes that lead to rejected waste or unnecessary trips.
Cornwall Council collection rules that prevent missed waste
Most avoidable missed collection problems start with timing, wrong containers, excess side waste, blocked access or incorrect sorting. Cornwall Council’s rules are practical and strict enough to matter.
What to do if your Cornwall Council bin, sack, bag or caddy was missed
Before reporting a missed collection, check the official calendar and make sure the correct waste stream was due. Your food waste and rubbish may be collected by different crews, so one container may be emptied before another.
Cornwall Council’s missed bin report page says waste should be out for collection by 7am. Collection times can vary from week to week, so a collection that normally happens later can still come earlier on another day.
Confirm that food waste, recycling, rubbish or garden waste was due for your address on that date.
Make sure the waste was out by 7am, at the usual collection point and inside the correct council container.
Incorrect items, unclosed lids, loose side waste or wrong recycling containers can stop a collection.
Use the official missed collection report route so the issue is logged correctly against your property.
Do not report too early: Food waste and rubbish can be emptied by different crews. Wait until it is clear the collection has been missed and then use the official form.
Cornwall food waste collections: weekly caddy service and common mistakes
Cornwall collects food waste weekly. This is one of the biggest changes residents notice because using the caddy properly frees space in the rubbish bin or protective sack and reduces the amount of waste going into general rubbish.
Food waste from homes in Cornwall is taken to an anaerobic digestion facility in Holsworthy. This makes correct use of the caddy more than a housekeeping issue. It supports a separate treatment route for unavoidable food waste.
Place food waste in the green outdoor food caddy for weekly collection.
You do not have to line the indoor caddy, but the council lists several liner options if you choose to use one.
If you have moved to a new build home, order food waste, recycling and rubbish containers for the property.
Cornwall garden waste collections: subscription, containers and fortnightly service
Garden waste is not included automatically in normal household rubbish collection. Cornwall Council offers a garden waste collection service that households can subscribe to. The council says garden waste is collected every two weeks if you subscribe.
Garden waste should be put out in Cornwall Council garden waste containers. The council says it only collects garden waste put out in one of its garden waste containers, so do not use random bags or other containers for subscribed garden waste.
Cornwall lists grass cuttings, leaves, branches up to 30cm long and weeds as garden waste it can collect through the service.
Subscribed garden waste collections run every two weeks. Check your address calendar for the actual date.
Use Cornwall Council garden waste containers. Crews will not collect garden waste from other containers.
Extra rubbish, 180 litre limit review and container problems
Cornwall Council says most households that make full use of food waste and recycling collections will have enough space in the rubbish bin or sack. If you have occasional extra rubbish, the council points residents toward household waste recycling centres.
Some households may be eligible for a review of the fortnightly 180 litre rubbish limit in exceptional circumstances. If the bin or protective sack provided does not work for your property, Cornwall Council has a review route because some homes were assessed for wheelie bins while others received protective sacks due to storage, steps or smaller specialist vehicle access.
Practical check: Before asking for extra rubbish capacity, check whether food waste, cardboard, paper, plastic packaging, cartons, metal packaging, glass or textiles are going into the correct recycling routes. Extra rubbish space should not replace correct sorting.
Bulky waste, household waste recycling centres and items Cornwall Council does not collect kerbside
Items too large for normal household rubbish or recycling should not be placed beside your containers. Cornwall Council offers a bulky waste collection service for household items that are too big for normal collections. There is a charge for this service.
Cornwall Council lists three bulky waste price categories. Standard items are charged at £44 for the first four items, with up to four more items at £16 each. Small special items are listed at £35 per item, and large special items at £53 per item. Always use the official price check tool because item category can change by type and size.
Use the official bulky waste booking route for eligible household items too large for normal rubbish or recycling.
Cornwall has household waste and recycling centres for items not accepted through kerbside collections, including many electrical items, metal and wood.
If furniture or household items are still usable, donation or reuse may be better than disposal.
Assisted collections and clinical waste in Cornwall
Cornwall Council offers assisted collections for people who are unable to move waste to the boundary of their property for collection. Assisted collections allow residents to choose an outside location closer to the property for collection.
Clinical waste has separate rules. Cornwall Council states that non-infectious clinical waste such as nappies, incontinence pads and stoma bags should be put in normal household rubbish. Infectious clinical waste must not go in household rubbish and is collected separately through a dedicated weekly service.
Use the official assisted collection route if you cannot move containers safely to the normal collection point.
Check the official clinical waste page before placing medical waste into normal rubbish.
Bank holidays, Christmas, weather and Cornwall collection disruption
Bank holidays, Christmas, New Year, severe weather, blocked roads and operational updates can affect collection patterns. Download your calendar, but recheck the official page close to the date when holiday changes or weather disruption may apply.
During windy weather, close recycling bag lids and avoid loose material. During busy periods such as Christmas, use the correct orange bag for cardboard, blue bag for paper, black box for glass and textiles, and red bag for plastics, cartons and metal packaging.
Official Cornwall Council bin collection links
Start here for collection days, missed collections, garden waste, bulky waste and household waste services.
Open Cornwall recycling, rubbish and litterCheck collection frequency, 7am rule, container rules, food waste, recycling and rubbish guidance.
Open household waste collection guidanceCheck red, orange, blue and black box recycling container rules.
Open recycling collections overviewCheck rubbish bin or protective sack rules, extra rubbish and container assessment guidance.
Open household rubbish collectionsCheck how to use the food waste recycling service and caddies.
Open food waste guidanceFind household waste and recycling centres and check vehicle or booking rules.
Open household waste recycling centresBook and check charges for household bulky waste collections.
Open bulky waste collectionsCornwall Council map for local reference
Most bin tasks should be completed online through Cornwall Council’s official website. Use this map only for general council location awareness.
For collection dates, missed collections, garden waste subscriptions, bulky waste bookings and HWRC rules, use the official links above.
FAQ about Cornwall Council Bin Collection: Schedule, Dates & Calendar
How do I check my Cornwall Council bin collection date?
Use Cornwall Council’s official collection day and calendar service from the recycling, rubbish and litter page. Search your address, select your exact property and download or save the calendar.
What time should Cornwall bins, bags and caddies be out?
Cornwall Council says food waste, recycling and rubbish should be put out by 7am on collection day at your usual collection point.
How often does Cornwall collect food waste?
Cornwall Council collects food waste every week from the green outdoor food waste caddy.
How often does Cornwall collect recycling and rubbish?
Recycling is collected every two weeks and household rubbish is collected every two weeks on the opposite week to recycling.
What goes in Cornwall’s red recycling bag?
The red recycling bag is for plastic, cartons and metal packaging accepted by Cornwall Council.
What goes in Cornwall’s orange and blue recycling bags?
The orange bag is for cardboard and brown paper. The blue bag is for paper.
What goes in Cornwall’s black recycling box?
The black box is for glass and textiles. Broken glass should not be placed loose in the recycling box.
Is Cornwall garden waste collection free?
No. Cornwall garden waste collection is a subscription service. Garden waste is collected every two weeks only if you subscribe.
Can I leave extra rubbish beside my Cornwall bin or sack?
No. Cornwall Council says extra bags of rubbish on top of or next to the bin or sack will not be collected.
Where can I take extra waste in Cornwall?
Use Cornwall household waste recycling centres, bulky waste collections, reuse options, garden waste subscriptions or container request routes depending on the item.
Editorial note and policy-safe disclaimer
This page is an independent resident guide created to help users navigate Cornwall Council bin collection dates, recycling bags and boxes, food waste, rubbish collections, garden waste subscriptions, missed collections, bulky waste and household waste recycling centres. It does not replace Cornwall Council’s official website.
Before reporting a missed collection, subscribing to garden waste, requesting containers, booking bulky waste, travelling to a HWRC or relying on a holiday collection date, confirm the latest rule on the official Cornwall Council page linked in this article.
Final summary
For Cornwall Council bin collection, the correct date comes from the official address-based calendar. Search your address, save the calendar and put food waste, recycling and rubbish out by 7am at the usual collection point. Food waste is collected weekly, while recycling and rubbish are collected fortnightly on alternating weeks.
Use the red bag for plastic, cartons and metal packaging, the orange bag for cardboard, the blue bag for paper, the black box for glass and textiles, and the provided wheelie bin or protective sack for bagged non-recyclable rubbish. For garden waste, bulky items, extra rubbish, container issues, assisted collections and HWRC visits, use the dedicated official Cornwall Council guidance rather than guessing or leaving waste beside your containers.