Swale Council Bin Collection: Schedule, Dates & Calendar

Find Bin Day
Swale Borough Council bin collection guide — postcode lookup, blue bin, green bin, food waste and garden waste help
Swale bins 2026

Swale Borough Council Bin Collection Schedule, Dates and Calendar Guide

Use this practical Swale guide to check your bin collection day, understand the green refuse bin, blue recycling bin, black and orange food waste bin, brown garden waste subscription, missed-bin reporting, replacement bins, bulky waste collections and Kent household waste recycling centre rules for Sittingbourne, Sheerness, Faversham and surrounding villages.

Official postcode lookup first Bins at property edge by 6am Food waste collected every week Garden waste: £62 yearly subscription
Set-out ruleBins at edge of property by 6am, lids closed
Food wastePut food waste out every week on collection day
Garden waste£62 yearly brown-bin subscription

Find Your Swale Bin Collection Calendar

Enter your postcode here to keep it handy, then open Swale Borough Council’s official bin day page. The official lookup is the safest way to check your next green bin, blue bin, food waste and brown garden waste collection date.

ME10 — Sittingbourne ME11 — Queenborough ME12 — Sheppey ME13 — Faversham ME9 — villages ME17 — rural edge
If your property does not appear, do not copy a neighbour’s schedule. New developments, flats, private lanes, rural routes, holiday-affected streets and homes near council boundaries can have different collection arrangements.
Quick answer

How do I check Swale Borough Council bin collection dates?

Use Swale Borough Council’s official “Check Your Bin Day” page and enter your postcode. On collection day, put bins at the edge of your property by 6am with the lids fully closed. In Swale, green bins are for general household waste that cannot be recycled, blue bins are for recyclable household waste, black and orange bins are for food waste, and brown bins are for paid garden waste subscriptions.

Source verification

Official Swale Bin Collection Sources Used for This 2026 Guide

This page is based on official Swale Borough Council and Kent County Council pages, not guessed bin dates or copied schedules from another Kent district.

Collection day lookup

Swale’s official “Check Your Bin Day” page asks residents to enter their postcode to check the date of the next household waste collection, including garden waste where relevant.

Set-out rule

Swale says bins should be at the edge of your property by 6am on collection day and lids should be fully closed.

Garden waste fee

Swale lists the garden waste subscription at £62 each year, with fortnightly brown-bin collections except over Christmas and New Year.

Missed-bin limit

The missed-bin service cannot normally be used if it has been more than two working days since your collection day.

Bin calendar

Swale Borough Council Bin Collection Dates 2026: Schedule, Calendar and Postcode Lookup

Your Swale bin day depends on your exact property, so always start with the official postcode lookup before putting bins out.

Swale covers Sittingbourne, Faversham, Sheerness, Queenborough, Minster, Leysdown, Iwade, Teynham, Eastchurch, Kemsley, Milton Regis and many villages. Collection routes can vary by road, estate, lane, flat block or new development. The official lookup is especially important if you have recently moved, if your street has new bins, if you subscribe to garden waste or if your area has been affected by Christmas and New Year collection changes.

1

Open the official Check Your Bin Day page

Use Swale Borough Council’s Check Your Bin Day page.

2

Enter your full postcode

Use the postcode for the property that needs the collection date. Do not use the postcode of a nearby shop, neighbour or old address.

3

Check each service separately

Look for household waste, recycling, food waste and garden waste if you have a brown bin subscription.

4

Re-check around Christmas and New Year

Swale publishes Christmas and New Year changes when they apply. Garden waste and bulky waste can be suspended during festive periods.

Resident tip: save the lookup result on your phone after checking your postcode. If you live on the Isle of Sheppey, in a rural lane or on a new estate, this is safer than relying on a neighbour’s bin.

Collection rules

Swale Bin Set-Out Rules: 6am, Edge of Property, Closed Lid and No Dangerous Items

Many missed collections are not route problems. They happen because bins were not presented correctly, were blocked or contained the wrong items.

By 6am

Put bins at the edge of your property by 6am on collection day. Collection times can change from week to week.

Lid fully closed

Overfilled bins with open lids can cause safety issues and may not be collected.

Use correct bin

Food belongs in the food waste bin, nappies in the green refuse bin, and textiles/electricals should go to a household waste recycling centre.

No dangerous items

Gas canisters, batteries and disposable vapes are dangerous and are not collected in normal kerbside bins.

Safety warning: batteries, vapes and gas canisters can cause fires and explosions. Use Kent County Council guidance or household waste recycling centres for safe disposal.

Bin colours

Swale Bin Colours Explained: Green Refuse, Blue Recycling, Food Waste and Brown Garden Waste

Swale’s bin colours are easy once you remember the local meanings: green is general waste, blue is recycling, black/orange is food waste, and brown is paid garden waste.

Green bin

General household waste that cannot be recycled

Use for non-recyclable household waste. Do not use it for food waste, garden waste, batteries, vapes, gas canisters or electrical items.

  • Nappies and sanitary waste
  • General rubbish that cannot be recycled
  • Pet waste where appropriate
  • Non-recyclable packaging

Blue bin

Recyclable household waste

Use for clean, dry recycling. Loose recycling is preferred. If extra recycling does not fit, Swale allows clear sacks or a separate cardboard box next to the blue bin.

  • Clean and dry recyclable containers
  • Paper and card where accepted
  • Clear sacks only for extra recycling
  • No food, nappies, textiles, black sacks or electricals

Black and orange food waste bin

Food waste collection

Put food waste out beside your refuse or recycling bin each week on collection day.

  • Food scraps and leftovers
  • Fruit and vegetable peelings
  • Tea bags and coffee grounds
  • No packaging or liquids

Brown garden waste bin

Paid yearly subscription

Use only if you subscribe to Swale’s garden waste collection service. Brown bins are collected fortnightly except over Christmas and New Year.

  • Grass cuttings and leaves
  • Hedge trimmings
  • Small garden prunings
  • One brown bin for each subscription
Blue bin recycling

Swale Blue Bin Recycling: Clean, Dry, Loose and No Food, Nappies, Textiles or Electricals

Swale’s blue bin is for recyclable household waste. The simplest rule is clean, dry and loose.

Swale specifically warns residents not to put food, nappies, textiles, black bin sacks or electricals in recycling. Food should go in the food waste bin. Nappies should go in the green refuse bin. Textiles and electrical items should go to a household waste recycling centre or other correct reuse/recycling route.

Extra recycling

If your blue bin is full, Swale says you can put extra recycling in additional clear sacks or a separate cardboard box next to the bin, but loose recycling is preferred.

Prepare items first

Rinse containers, remove food, keep paper and card dry, and flatten boxes before collection day.

Avoid these mistakes

No food waste, nappies, textiles, black sacks, electricals, batteries, disposable vapes or gas canisters.

Practical tip: if you regularly have extra recycling, keep a clear sack or spare cardboard box ready. Do not use black sacks for recycling because crews cannot confirm what is inside.

Food waste

Swale Food Waste Collection: Black and Orange Bin, Weekly Set-Out and Liner Rules

Food waste should be separated from your green refuse bin and put beside your refuse or recycling bin each week on collection day.

Swale provides food waste bins and replaces food caddies free of charge. The council does not supply or replace liners for silver food caddies. It advises residents to use compostable liners whenever possible, or newspaper or kitchen paper to wrap food waste if compostable liners are not available.

Why use it?

Food waste takes up space in the green bin and can smell. Weekly food waste collection keeps general waste cleaner.

What to avoid

Do not put packaging or liquids into your food waste bin.

Need a caddy?

Food waste bins and caddies are part of Swale’s order and replacement bin service, and food caddies are replaced free.

Green refuse bin

Swale Green Bin: General Household Waste That Cannot Be Recycled

The green bin is for household waste that cannot be recycled in the blue bin or separated into the food waste bin.

Do not use the green bin as the first option. Before putting something in it, ask whether it can go into the blue recycling bin, food waste bin, garden waste service, bulky waste booking or Kent household waste recycling centre. This helps avoid overflowing bins and contamination.

Use green bin for

General household waste that cannot be recycled, nappies, non-recyclable packaging and small household rubbish.

Keep out

No dangerous items, gas canisters, batteries, disposable vapes, electrical items, food waste, garden waste, rubble or bulky waste.

Closed lid matters

Make sure the lid is fully closed by 6am on collection day to reduce the chance of non-collection.

Garden waste

Swale Garden Waste Collection 2026: £62 Brown Bin Subscription and Fortnightly Collections

Swale garden waste is an optional paid service. You need a brown bin subscription before garden waste will be collected.

Swale lists the garden waste subscription at £62 each year. If you subscribe, the council collects your garden waste every two weeks, except over Christmas and New Year when garden waste collections are suspended for two weeks. Each subscription includes one brown garden waste bin. If you need extra garden waste collections, you must pay the garden waste subscription fee for each garden waste bin you order.

Yearly cost

£62 each year for a garden waste subscription.

Collection pattern

Fortnightly collections, with a two-week suspension over Christmas and New Year.

New brown bin

Swale says a new garden waste bin is delivered within 10 working days after subscribing.

Renew on time

Renew before your renewal date to continue receiving collections.

Missed collection

Missed Bin Collection Swale: Report Within Two Working Days and Check Refusal Reasons First

Swale lets residents report missed green, blue and food waste bins, and subscribed brown garden waste bins, but some reports are not accepted.

You cannot normally report a missed collection if it has been more than two working days since your collection day, if someone has already reported it, if the crew has not reached your road yet, if the bin was not out when the crew came, if the wrong items were in the bin, if the bin included items Swale does not collect, or if the crew could not get access after trying three times.

1

Check the official bin day first

Make sure the correct bin was due for your postcode and address.

2

Check the 6am and lid rule

Was the bin at the edge of your property by 6am, with the lid fully closed?

3

Check contamination and access

Wrong items, dangerous materials, blocked roads or blocked access can stop collection.

4

Report online within two working days

Use the official missed-bin service and keep the reference number you receive.

Report a Missed Bin
Replacement bins

Order or Replace Swale Bins: New Development Set, Green/Blue Replacement Cost and Free Food Caddies

Swale charges for many replacement wheeled bins, but food caddies are replaced free of charge.

Container or service Official Swale detail Resident note
New development full set £130.20 for a full set of 4 bins Includes 180L green bin, 240L blue bin, 23L food waste bin and 5L kitchen caddy.
Replacement green or blue bin £32.70 Applies to lost or damaged green/blue bins, including moved-in properties without them.
Food waste bin or caddy Replaced free of charge Swale does not supply or replace liners for silver food caddies.
Garden waste bin Through garden waste subscription Garden waste subscription reference may be needed for brown bin replacement.

New development tip: if you moved into a new housing development without bins, ask the developer first. If the developer is not supplying them, Swale lets residents order a bin set online or through customer services.

Order or Replace Bins
Large items

Swale Bulky Waste Collection: Prices, White Goods and Upholstered Seating Charge

Use Swale’s bulky collection service for larger furniture and electrical appliances that will not fit in your normal bins.

Swale lists bulky collection at £34.70 for up to four items, or £34.70 each for white goods such as washing machines and tumble dryers. An additional £6 is added if the bulky collection includes upholstered seating such as sofas or armchairs.

Standard bulky booking

£34.70 for up to four items, subject to Swale accepting the items.

White goods

£34.70 each for white goods such as washing machines and tumble dryers.

Upholstered seating

Add £6 if the collection includes upholstered seating items like sofas or armchairs.

Free add-ons with booking

When booking a bulky item, Swale also collects one small electrical item and AA, AAA, C, D or 9V batteries free of charge.

Before booking: Swale asks residents to check that the council will collect the items before making a bulky waste booking.

Open Bulky Collections
Recycling centres

Swale Household Waste Recycling Centres: Sittingbourne, Sheerness, Faversham and Kent Booking Rules

Kent County Council runs household waste recycling centres, and residents should book a slot before visiting any Kent HWRC.

Kent says residents need to book a slot before visiting household waste recycling centres, can book on the same day or up to two weeks in advance, and should check vehicle restrictions and chargeable items before travelling. Sittingbourne Household Waste Recycling Centre is at Gas Road, Milton, Sittingbourne, ME10 2QD. It has a 2 metre height barrier, does not accept business waste, and residents must not carry waste into the site on foot.

Book before visiting

Kent requires a booked slot before visiting HWRCs. Bring your booking reference on your phone, printed or written down.

Separate items first

Group electricals, paper, textiles and other materials before arrival to speed up your visit.

No business waste

Business and commercial waste cannot be taken to household waste recycling centres.

Non-Kent residents

Kent says residents who do not pay Council Tax to a Kent council must pay £10 per visit.

Flats and new builds

Swale Flats, Communal Bins and New Developments: Why Your Collection May Look Different

Not every Swale property uses the same normal household bin layout.

Flats, communal stores, houses above shops and new developments can have different arrangements for waste and recycling. Swale says if a new housing development does not have green, blue and food waste bins, residents may need to contact the property developer first. If the developer is not supplying bins, a full set can be ordered through the council.

Common Swale property-type problems

Check these before reporting a missed collection or ordering a replacement bin.

New estate without bins

Ask the developer first, then use Swale’s bin order route if the developer is not providing them.

Communal stores

Blocked gates, locked bin stores or contamination can stop collection for the whole block.

Private lanes

Rural lanes and private roads may have specific collection points. Use your official postcode result.

Moved into a property

You can continue using green and blue bins if the previous occupiers left them behind.

Local resident tips

Swale Bin Collection Tips Residents Learn the Hard Way

These practical checks help avoid rejected bins, missed collections and wasted trips across Sittingbourne, Sheerness, Faversham and Swale villages.

Set a 6am reminder

Put bins out the night before if mornings are busy. Collection lorries do not always arrive at the same time.

Keep recycling dry

Wet card and dirty containers reduce recycling quality. Rinse, flatten and keep items dry where possible.

Use food waste weekly

Food waste should not sit in the green bin. Use the black and orange food waste bin every week.

Never bin vapes or batteries

Use battery recycling and Kent HWRC routes instead of normal Swale bins.

Check Christmas changes

Garden waste and bulky collections can be suspended over Christmas and New Year, so re-check official updates in December.

Book HWRC before loading

Kent HWRC visits need a booking slot, and restricted vehicles may need vouchers.

Official links

Official Swale Borough Council Bin Collection Links

Use these official links before putting bins out, reporting, paying, booking or travelling with waste.

Resident questions

Swale Borough Council Bin Collection FAQ

These answers cover the main Swale searches: bin collection dates, schedule, calendar, green bin, blue bin, food waste, garden waste, missed bins, bulky waste and recycling centres.

Use Swale Borough Council’s official Check Your Bin Day page and enter your postcode. The lookup shows the date of your next household waste collection, including garden waste if you have a subscription.

Bins should be at the edge of your property by 6am on collection day, with lids fully closed.

The green bin is for general household waste that cannot be recycled. Food waste should go in the black and orange food waste bin, and recyclable household waste should go in the blue bin.

The blue bin is for recyclable household waste. Swale says recycling should be clean and dry. Do not put food, nappies, textiles, black bin sacks or electricals in the recycling bin.

Yes. Swale guidance says food waste should be put beside your refuse or recycling bin each week on collection day.

Swale lists the garden waste subscription at £62 each year. Brown garden waste bins are collected every two weeks except over Christmas and New Year, when collections are suspended for two weeks.

You can use the official missed-bin service for missed green, blue, food waste or subscribed brown bins, but you cannot normally report it if more than two working days have passed since collection day.

Swale lists £32.70 to replace a lost or damaged green or blue bin. Food waste bins and silver caddies are replaced free of charge.

Swale lists £34.70 for up to four bulky items, or £34.70 each for white goods. An additional £6 is added if the collection includes upholstered seating such as sofas or armchairs.

Yes. Kent County Council says you need to book a slot before visiting any household waste recycling centre. Check vehicle restrictions, chargeable items and the site page before travelling.

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