Portland Trash Pickup Schedule, Recycling & Compost 2026

Everything Portland residents need to know about collection in 2026 — how to find your hauler and garbage day, the unique four-bin system (garbage every other week, recycling and compost weekly), the separate glass bin, only 2 collection holidays, large item disposal, Metro HHW facilities, and the official Garbage Day Reminders tool.

City of Portland, Oregon · Bureau of Planning & Sustainability (BPS) · Updated March 2026 · Oregon Recycling Modernization Act updates effective July 2025

⭐ Collection Day Finder

Find Your Portland Hauler & Collection Day

Portland’s residential garbage collection is served by multiple City-franchised private haulers assigned to different neighborhoods. Your specific hauler, collection day, and biweekly garbage week depend on your address. Use the selector below for a quick district summary, then confirm your exact hauler and day using the City’s official lookup tool.

👈 Select your neighborhood above for general schedule info — then confirm your hauler and exact day using the City’s official tool.

For your exact hauler, collection day, and biweekly garbage week, use the official City of Portland lookup: portland.gov — Who Picks Up My Garbage?. Then sign up for free weekly bin reminders (email, app, text, or phone) at: portland.gov — Garbage Day Reminders.  See all official links ↓

At a Glance

Portland Waste Collection — Quick Facts

Portland’s residential garbage system is managed by the City’s Bureau of Planning & Sustainability (BPS), which sets rates and rules, and carried out by six City-franchised private haulers each assigned to specific neighborhoods. Portland operates a distinctive four-bin curbside system: a gray/black garbage cart, a blue recycling cart, a green compost cart, and a separate yellow glass-only bin — a setup found in very few other major U.S. cities. One of Portland’s most unusual features: garbage is collected every other week while recycling and compost are collected weekly.

🗑
Garbage
Every other week
Gray/black cart • biweekly
Recycling
Weekly
Blue cart • paper, plastic, metal
🌿
Compost
Weekly
Green cart • food & yard waste
🪟
Glass
Weekly
Yellow bin • glass only • separate
Set-Out Time
By 6:00 a.m.
Night-before placement OK
📌
Holidays
Only 2
Christmas & New Year’s Day only
⚠ Garbage every other week — recycling and compost weekly. This is the opposite of most U.S. cities. In Portland, the blue recycling cart and green compost cart are collected every week, while your gray garbage cart is only collected every other week. This design intentionally encourages residents to compost and recycle more, reducing what goes in the garbage. Use the green compost cart for food scraps so your garbage cart doesn’t fill up between biweekly collections.
Four-Bin System

Portland’s Four-Bin System — Garbage, Recycling, Compost & Glass

Portland is one of the very few major U.S. cities to operate a four-stream curbside collection system. The separation of glass into its own bin is especially unusual — it keeps glass from contaminating paper in the recycling stream, resulting in higher-quality recovered materials. All four bins are collected on the same weekday for your address, but on different schedules: garbage is biweekly, while recycling, compost, and glass are all weekly.

🗑

Garbage

Gray/black cart. Residual waste only — nothing recyclable, compostable, or glass. Biweekly — every other week. Rates based on cart size.

Every other week

Recycling

Blue cart. Paper, plastic, and metal only — no glass. Items loose, dry, empty. Extra cardboard bundled beside cart. Weekly collection.

Weekly
🌿

Compost

Green cart. Food scraps and yard waste together for homes. No plastic bags. Weekly collection. Mandatory under Oregon’s food waste rules.

Weekly
🪟

Glass

Yellow bin. Glass bottles and jars only — all colors, rinsed, lids removed. Keeps glass separate from paper recycling. Weekly collection.

Weekly • Yellow bin
Franchised Haulers

Portland’s Franchised Hauler System — Who Picks Up Your Garbage

Unlike cities where the municipality directly operates garbage trucks, Portland contracts the work out to six City-franchised private haulers, each assigned to specific geographic zones. All rates are set by the City of Portland (effective July 1 each year), so your bill is the same regardless of which hauler serves you. The City assigns your hauler based on your address — you cannot choose your hauler for residential service.

🚚 Portland’s Six Franchised Residential Haulers

  • WM (Waste Management) — (800) 808-5901 — Serves large portions of Northwest, Southwest, and parts of Southeast Portland
  • Portland Disposal & Recycling — (503) 281-8736 — Serves portions of Northeast and North Portland
  • Arrow Sanitary Service — (503) 257-1331 — Serves portions of East and Southeast Portland
  • Heiberg Garbage & Recycling — (503) 794-8212 — Serves portions of Southeast Portland
  • Walker Garbage Service — (503) 531-6330 — Serves portions of North and Northeast Portland
  • City Sanitary Service — (503) 760-2412 — Serves portions of Southeast and outer East Portland

To find which hauler serves your specific address, use the City’s official lookup: portland.gov — Who Picks Up My Garbage?

💵 Portland Garbage Rates 2026

  • Rates are set by the City of Portland annually, effective July 1. All haulers charge the same City-approved rates for the same cart sizes.
  • Cart size options for garbage: 20-gallon (smallest), 32-gallon, 60-gallon, or 90-gallon. The base rate is determined by your garbage cart size.
  • Recycling (blue cart), compost (green cart), and glass (yellow bin) are all included in the base garbage rate at no additional charge.
  • Rates are adjusted for low-income households through the Garbage and Recycling Discount Program. Contact BPS at 503-823-7202 for eligibility details.
  • For current exact rates, visit portland.gov — Garbage Service Basics.
⚠ Apartments and businesses use different haulers. The City’s franchised hauler system applies to houses, duplexes, triplexes, and fourplexes. Apartments with 5+ units and businesses can choose from any of Portland’s permitted commercial haulers — the City does not assign them. If you live in a 5+ unit building, contact your property manager for your hauler and schedule. The find-my-hauler tool on portland.gov is for residential homes (1–4 units) only.
Set-Out Times & Rules

Portland Set-Out Rules — By 6:00 a.m., 3 Feet Apart

All bins and carts must be at the curb by 6:00 a.m. on your collection day. Most haulers recommend setting bins out the evening before to avoid being rushed in the morning. Incorrect spacing is one of the most common reasons for missed collection in Portland, as automated truck arms require room to operate.

⏰ Official Set-Out Requirements

  • All bins at the curb by 6:00 a.m. on your collection day. Setting out the night before is acceptable and recommended.
  • Place carts with handles facing the street.
  • Leave at least 3 feet between each cart and at least 3 feet from parked cars, mailboxes, poles, trees, and other obstacles.
  • Do not place bins under overhanging branches or power lines.
  • Lids must be fully closed. An overfilled cart with a propped-open lid may be skipped.
  • Extra garbage (up to 32-gallon bags or cans): may be set beside the garbage cart for a small extra-bag fee charged by your hauler (approximately $5 per bag/can). Contact your hauler for exact fee.
  • Extra recycling (cardboard): flatten, bundle with tape, and lean against the blue cart. No additional charge for extra bundled cardboard.
  • Extra compost/yard waste: use paper yard waste bags or bundled branches (see compost section). No additional charge.
⚠ Snow and ice: leave bins at the curb. During winter storms — common in Portland with the Portland Hills and surrounding terrain — if collection is delayed due to snow or ice, leave your bins at the curb. Your hauler will collect them as soon as it is safe to do so. Do not bring bins in and put them back out the next day — leave them in place until collected.
Holiday Schedule

Portland Holiday Collection Schedule 2026 — Only 2 Holidays

Like San Francisco, Portland observes only two holidays for garbage and recycling collection purposes: Christmas Day (December 25) and New Year’s Day (January 1). On all other holidays — including Thanksgiving, Memorial Day, Independence Day, and Labor Day — all haulers collect as normal.

When Christmas or New Year’s falls on a weekday, collection is delayed one day for the rest of that week. Friday customers move to Saturday. In 2026, both Christmas Day and New Year’s Day fall on Thursday, so Thursday and Friday customers are affected each time.

Holiday2026 DateCollection ImpactWho Is Affected
New Year’s DayThu, Jan 1One-day delayThu customers collect Fri, Jan 2. Fri customers collect Sat, Jan 3. Mon–Wed unaffected that week.
MLK Jr. DayMon, Jan 19Normal serviceAll haulers collect as normal. No delay.
Presidents’ DayMon, Feb 16Normal serviceAll haulers collect as normal. No delay.
Memorial DayMon, May 25Normal serviceAll haulers collect as normal. No delay.
Independence DaySat, Jul 4Normal serviceFalls on Saturday; no weekday impact.
Labor DayMon, Sep 7Normal serviceAll haulers collect as normal. No delay.
Veterans’ DayWed, Nov 11Normal serviceAll haulers collect as normal. No delay.
Thanksgiving DayThu, Nov 26Normal serviceAll haulers collect as normal. No delay.
Christmas DayThu, Dec 25One-day delayThu customers collect Fri, Dec 26. Fri customers collect Sat, Dec 27. Mon–Wed unaffected that week.
💡 Sign up for free Garbage Day Reminders — they automatically adjust for holidays. The City’s free reminder service at portland.gov/garbage-day-reminders sends you a weekly notification (email, app, text, or phone call) showing which bins to set out. During holiday weeks, the reminder automatically reflects the adjusted schedule. This is the most reliable way to never miss a collection or forget which biweekly bin goes out.
Recycling

Portland Recycling — Blue Cart for Paper/Plastic/Metal, Yellow Bin for Glass

Portland uses a dual-stream approach: paper, plastic, and metal go in the blue recycling cart, while glass goes in a separate yellow glass bin. Both are collected weekly on your designated collection day. Items in the blue cart must be placed loose, dry, and empty — no bags. The Oregon Recycling Modernization Act (effective July 2025) updated the accepted materials list, adding pizza boxes and plastic caps.

✅ Blue Cart — Paper, Plastic & Metal

  • Newspapers, magazines, catalogs, junk mail, office paper, paper bags
  • Paperback books, phone books
  • Cardboard (flattened, bundled beside cart if extra)
  • Cartons: milk, juice, soup, broth
  • Cereal boxes, cracker boxes, paper egg cartons, paperboard
  • Clean pizza boxes (new since July 2025 per Oregon law)
  • Aluminum and steel cans, empty aerosol cans, aluminum foil
  • Plastic bottles, jugs, tubs, and containers (#1–7)
  • Plastic caps and lids (new since July 2025)
  • All items loose, dry, empty — no bags

🚫 Never in the Blue Cart

  • Glass of any kind → yellow glass bin
  • Plastic bags or film → Metro drop-off or store take-back
  • Styrofoam → Metro transfer station drop-off
  • Food or liquids — rinse all containers
  • Electronics → Oregon E-Cycles or Metro stations
  • Batteries → see battery tip below (yellow glass bin for households)
  • Tanglers: garden hoses, cords, chains, wire hangers, string lights
  • Wax-coated or foil-coated packaging

🪟 Yellow Glass Bin — Glass Only

  • Accepted: glass bottles and jars of any color. Labels are fine.
  • Rinse thoroughly and remove metal lids (lids go in the blue cart).
  • Not accepted: drinking glasses, ceramics, vases, Pyrex, light bulbs, mirrors, or window glass — these are not recyclable curbside.
  • Battery drop-off for houses: small household batteries (AAA, AA, C, D, 9V, button-cell, coin) can be placed in a clear 1-quart zip-sealed plastic bag on top of the glass in the yellow bin. Tape both ends of any battery not labeled “Alkaline.” Do NOT do this at apartments or businesses — take batteries to a drop-off site.
  • Motor oil: used motor oil in a clear plastic jug with a screw-on lid may be placed next to the yellow glass bin for free collection.
💡 Oregon Recycling Modernization Act — July 2025 updates. Oregon updated its statewide recycling list effective July 2025 under the Recycling and Plastics Pollution Modernization Act. New additions include clean pizza delivery boxes and plastic caps/lids. Free regular drop-off sites for hard-to-recycle items such as block Styrofoam and plastic bags/film are being developed statewide. Check recycleornot.org for the most current list of what’s accepted in Portland.
Compost

Portland Compost — Green Cart for Food & Yard Waste

Portland’s curbside compost program is one of the most established in the US, serving all 1–4 unit homes with a weekly green cart collection. Homes can compost both food scraps and yard waste together in the same green cart. Using the compost cart for food scraps is especially important in Portland because garbage is only collected every other week — putting food in the garbage means it sits for up to 14 days.

🌿 Tip: Compost is the key to making biweekly garbage work. Because Portland’s garbage is only collected every other week, keeping food scraps out of the black cart is essential — otherwise they sit and smell for up to 14 days. The green compost cart is collected every week. Use it for all food scraps, food-soiled paper, and yard waste, and your garbage cart will rarely fill up between collections.

✅ Goes in the Green Cart

  • All food scraps: fruits, vegetables, meat, fish, bones, shellfish, dairy, eggs, cooked and raw food, expired food
  • Food-soiled paper: pizza boxes (cardboard only), paper napkins, paper towels, paper plates, coffee filters, tea bags
  • Yard waste: leaves, grass, weeds, vines, flowers, houseplants, pumpkins
  • Small branches: under 4 inches thick, under 36 inches long
  • Large yard waste: bundle with twine, place beside cart (see tip below)

🚫 Not in the Green Cart

  • Plastic bags — even “compostable” or “biodegradable” plastic bags
  • Pet waste or cat litter → garbage
  • Diapers or personal hygiene items → garbage
  • Treated, painted, or stained wood → garbage or Metro station
  • Stumps or large woody debris → Metro transfer station
  • Soil or rocks → Metro transfer station
  • Compostable serviceware (cups, utensils) labeled compostable → garbage (not accepted in curbside green cart)
  • To-go coffee cups (hidden plastic lining) → garbage

🎄 Christmas Tree Collection 2026

Curbside Christmas tree collection runs for several weeks starting after Christmas. Set your tree next to the green compost cart. You have two options: (1) Whole tree (6 ft or shorter): a small fee applies (approximately $5.45 — confirm with your hauler). (2) Cut into pieces 3 ft or shorter: place in your green compost cart, no extra charge. Remove all decorations, lights, ornaments, tinsel, and the tree stand first. Artificial trees and flocked (fake-snow) trees go in garbage, not compost. Call 503-234-3000 or check with Metro for drop-off locations near apartments.

🌿 Free Compost Giveaway Days 2026

Portland’s Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) composts over 5,000 tons of leaves collected annually through the Leaf Day program. In spring 2026, the City is hosting Free Compost Days on April 18–19, 2026, 7:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. Residents can pick up free finished compost. Bring containers. Check portland.gov — Free Compost Days 2026 for the exact location and any updates.

Large Items

Large Item Disposal in Portland — What the City Does Differently

Portland handles large and bulky item disposal differently from most U.S. cities. There is no free scheduled curbside bulky item pickup program like those in Los Angeles, San Diego, or Sacramento. Instead, Portland residents have several options to choose from, including scheduling a haul-away with their garbage company, self-hauling to a Metro transfer station, or using the Resourceful PDX network for reusable items.

📌 Options for Large Item Disposal in Portland

  • Extra bags/cans beside the garbage cart: On your biweekly garbage day, you may set out extra garbage bags or rigid garbage cans (up to 32-gallon each) beside your cart for a small fee per item (approximately $5 each). Contact your hauler for the current extra-bag fee.
  • Schedule a large item pickup with your hauler: Contact your hauler (see hauler list above) to schedule a pickup of large furniture, appliances, or other bulky items. Fees apply. Call at least one week in advance. Do not set items curbside until the scheduled day.
  • Self-haul to Metro transfer stations: Portland residents can take large items directly to Metro Central Transfer Station (6161 NW 61st Ave, Portland) or Metro South Transfer Station (2001 Washington St, Oregon City). Disposal fees apply based on weight/volume. Metro Central is open daily 8 a.m.–5 p.m.
  • Mattress recycling: Metro Central accepts up to 4 mattresses/box springs per customer per day for recycling. Customers receive a $2.30 credit per mattress when part of a mixed load. Foldout sofa beds, futons, crib mattresses, waterbeds, and air mattresses are charged as garbage. See ByeByeMattress.com for other Portland-area mattress recycling locations.
  • Resourceful PDX: Before spending money on disposal, check portland.gov/resourcefulpdx for Portland’s network of repair shops, tool libraries, reuse stores, Buy Nothing groups, and donation options that may give your items a second life at no cost.

✅ Accepted via Hauler or Metro Stations

  • Furniture (couches, chairs, dressers, bed frames, tables)
  • Mattresses and box springs (up to 4/day at Metro)
  • Large appliances (washers, dryers, refrigerators, stoves)
  • Rugs, carpeting, and large household items
  • Clean wood and engineered wood (Metro rates apply)
  • Yard debris in bulk (Metro stations)

🚫 Not Accepted Curbside

  • Large furniture and appliances — schedule with hauler first
  • Construction or demolition debris → Metro stations (fees)
  • Hazardous materials → Metro HHW facility
  • Electronics → Oregon E-Cycles program (free)
  • Tires → Metro Central (up to 4 free/day for residents)
  • Stumps, large woody debris → Metro stations
Special Waste

Special Waste — Metro HHW Facilities & Oregon E-Cycles

Household hazardous waste (HHW) and electronics in Portland are managed through Metro’s regional transfer stations, which include co-located HHW facilities. Both Metro Central (Portland) and Metro South (Oregon City) accept HHW and electronics from households for free. Oregon also operates the statewide Oregon E-Cycles program for free electronics recycling at hundreds of locations.

⚡ Metro Central Transfer Station & HHW

Address: 6161 NW 61st Ave., Portland, OR 97210  •  Phone: 503-234-3000

Transfer Station: Daily 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.

Household Hazardous Waste (HHW): Daily 9:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.

Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day.

  • HHW is free for households (up to 35 gallons by container size). Businesses must apply and pay a fee.
  • No appointment needed for residential HHW drop-off.
  • Oregon E-Cycles electronics accepted free: computers, monitors, TVs, printers, tablets, keyboards, mice. Limit 7 items per day.
  • Tires: up to 4 per customer per day accepted free.
  • Motor oil: must be in gallon or smaller unbreakable containers with screw-on lids. Limit 20 gallons per customer per day.

⚡ Metro South Transfer Station & HHW

Address: 2001 Washington St., Oregon City, OR 97045  •  Phone: 503-234-3000

Transfer Station: Daily 7:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m.

Household Hazardous Waste (HHW): Daily 9:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.

Closed Thanksgiving, Christmas, and New Year’s Day. Same HHW acceptance rules as Metro Central.

📷 What Metro HHW Facilities Accept

  • Paints and solvents: oil-based paints, latex paints, varnishes, stains, paint thinners, mineral spirits
  • Pesticides, herbicides, and pool/spa chemicals
  • Automotive fluids: motor oil, antifreeze, gasoline, brake fluid, batteries
  • Batteries (all types — car, lithium, rechargeable, household)
  • Fluorescent bulbs, CFLs, and mercury-containing devices
  • Propane tanks and compressed gas cylinders
  • Medical sharps (in FDA-cleared red sharps containers if possible)
  • Electronics via Oregon E-Cycles (computers, TVs, monitors, etc.)

📌 Oregon E-Cycles — Free Statewide Electronics Recycling

Oregon’s E-Cycles program provides free electronics recycling at hundreds of locations statewide, including retail stores, libraries, and Metro transfer stations. Accepted items include desktop and laptop computers, monitors, printers, TVs, tablets, keyboards, and computer mice. No limit at Metro transfer stations. For additional drop-off locations near you, visit oregonecycles.org or call 503-234-3000.

💡 Ask Metro — Portland’s best resource for unusual disposal questions. Portland’s Metro regional government operates a free “Ask Metro” service for any recycling, disposal, or hazardous waste question. Call 503-234-3000 or visit oregonmetro.gov/askmetro. Specialists are available 8:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m. They can tell you where to take anything from old medications to obscure chemicals to unusual electronics.
Missed Pickup

What to Do If Your Bins Weren’t Collected in Portland

  1. Check which bins were due out. Because garbage is biweekly and recycling/compost/glass are weekly, confirm which bins were scheduled for that particular collection day using the Garbage Day Reminders tool. If it was not your garbage week, the black cart will not be collected — that is normal.
  2. Verify bin placement. Bins must be at the curb by 6:00 a.m. with at least 3 feet of clearance between each bin and from all obstacles. Lids must be fully closed. Bins placed too close together or under obstructions are a common cause of missed collection.
  3. Check for a holiday delay. Portland only observes Christmas and New Year’s for collection purposes. If your day fell on or after one of those two holidays, collection shifts one day for the rest of that week.
  4. Check for a weather delay. During snow or ice events, haulers may delay collection. Leave bins at the curb and they will be collected when safe.
  5. Contact your hauler within 3 days. If bins were curbside by 6:00 a.m. and not collected, call your assigned hauler (see hauler list above). By City rule, the hauler must return within 24 hours of being notified of a missed collection (excluding weekends and holidays). If your hauler frequently misses collections, contact BPS at 503-823-7202.
Local Tips

Portland Trash & Recycling Tips Every Resident Should Know

🏠 New to Portland or Just Moved In?

First: go to portland.gov/find-my-hauler to find your assigned hauler and collection day. Then sign up for free weekly bin reminders at portland.gov/garbage-day-reminders (email, text, app, or phone) — the reminder tells you which bins to set out each week so you never have to remember whether it’s a garbage week. Remember: you have four bins — gray garbage (biweekly), blue recycling (weekly), green compost (weekly), and yellow glass (weekly). Rates are set by the City and are the same regardless of hauler.

🚫 5 Mistakes Portland Residents Make

  • Putting glass in the blue recycling cart — glass always goes in the separate yellow bin to prevent contaminating paper
  • Thinking garbage is collected every week — Portland’s garbage is biweekly; recycling and compost are weekly
  • Not using the green compost cart for food scraps — with biweekly garbage collection, food in the black cart sits for up to 14 days
  • Placing bins less than 3 feet apart or under overhanging branches — the most common reason for missed collection
  • Assuming Thanksgiving or Labor Day cause collection delays — Portland only delays for Christmas and New Year’s Day

🌿 Leaf Day Program — Portland’s Annual Fall Leaf Collection

Each fall, Portland Bureau of Transportation (PBOT) crews sweep leaves from city streets during the Leaf Day program, composting over 5,000 tons of leaves annually. Residents are asked to rake leaves to the curb (not into the street) during designated neighborhood leaf collection dates. This is separate from regular curbside compost service. The collected leaves become the compost given away free at the spring compost giveaway events. Check portland.gov/transportation in the fall for the 2026 leaf collection schedule for your neighborhood.

Contact

Contact BPS, Your Hauler & Metro

ContactDetails
Portland Garbage & Recycling Hotline (BPS)503-823-7202 · wasteinfo@portlandoregon.gov — schedule questions, service issues, rate assistance, all residential garbage questions
Find Your Hauler & Dayportland.gov — Who Picks Up My Garbage? — enter address for your assigned hauler, collection day, and biweekly garbage week
Free Garbage Day Remindersportland.gov — Garbage Day Reminders — free weekly reminders by email, app, text, or phone. Automatically adjusts for holiday weeks and tells you which bins go out.
WM (Waste Management)(800) 808-5901 — serves NW, SW, and parts of SE Portland
Portland Disposal & Recycling(503) 281-8736 — serves portions of NE and North Portland
Arrow Sanitary Service(503) 257-1331 — serves portions of East and SE Portland
Heiberg Garbage & Recycling(503) 794-8212 — serves portions of SE Portland
Walker Garbage Service(503) 531-6330 — serves portions of North and NE Portland
City Sanitary Service(503) 760-2412 — serves portions of SE and outer East Portland
Metro Central (HHW & Transfer Station)6161 NW 61st Ave., Portland · (503) 234-3000 · Transfer: daily 8 a.m.–5 p.m. · HHW: daily 9 a.m.–4 p.m. · oregonmetro.gov — Metro Central
Metro South (HHW & Transfer Station)2001 Washington St., Oregon City · (503) 234-3000 · Transfer: daily 7 a.m.–7 p.m. · HHW: daily 9 a.m.–4 p.m.
Ask Metro (Disposal Questions)(503) 234-3000 · oregonmetro.gov/askmetro — free expert answers on what to do with unusual items, 8:30 a.m.–5 p.m.
Oregon E-Cycles (Electronics)oregonecycles.org — free statewide electronics recycling; hundreds of locations including Metro Central
Portland 311Dial 3-1-1 inside city limits, or 503-823-4000 — general city services, illegal dumping reports, all non-emergency city questions
Resourceful PDX (Reuse Network)portland.gov/resourcefulpdx — repair shops, tool libraries, donation centers, Buy Nothing groups, free and low-cost alternatives to disposal
FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions — Portland Trash Pickup

Portland does not have a single citywide trash day. Your specific collection day depends on your address and which of Portland’s six City-franchised haulers serves your neighborhood. To find your hauler and exact collection day, enter your address at portland.gov/find-my-hauler. Then sign up for free weekly bin reminders at portland.gov/garbage-day-reminders — the reminder tells you which bins to set out each week.
Portland’s garbage (black/gray cart) is collected every other week — biweekly. This is the opposite of most U.S. cities where recycling is biweekly. Recycling (blue cart), compost (green cart), and glass (yellow bin) are all collected weekly on the same day as garbage. The free Garbage Day Reminders service at portland.gov/garbage-day-reminders tells you each week which bins go out.
Portland collects glass in a separate yellow bin instead of mixing it with paper and plastic recycling in the blue cart. This is because broken glass shards contaminate paper recycling and degrade its quality. By keeping glass separate, Portland recovers higher-quality paper and better-quality glass. The yellow bin is collected weekly along with the blue recycling cart and green compost cart. Place glass bottles and jars (all colors, rinsed, lids removed) in the yellow bin. No drinking glasses, ceramics, or light bulbs.
Use the City of Portland’s official hauler lookup tool at portland.gov/find-my-hauler. Enter your address to find your assigned hauler and collection day. Then sign up for the free Garbage Day Reminders at portland.gov/garbage-day-reminders — available by email, app, text, or phone call. The reminder tells you which of the four bins to set out each week (especially useful since garbage is biweekly and you may not remember which week it is). You can also call the Garbage and Recycling Hotline at 503-823-7202.
Portland observes only two collection holidays: Christmas Day (December 25) and New Year’s Day (January 1). On those days, collection shifts one day later for the remainder of the week. Friday customers move to Saturday. All other holidays — Thanksgiving, Memorial Day, Independence Day, Labor Day, Presidents’ Day, and Veterans’ Day — are normal collection days with no delays. The free Garbage Day Reminders service automatically adjusts notifications during holiday weeks.
All bins must be at the curb by 6:00 a.m. on your collection day. Most haulers recommend setting bins out the evening before. Leave at least 3 feet of clearance between each bin and 3 feet from all obstacles (parked cars, mailboxes, poles, trees). Handles should face the street. Lids must be fully closed. During snow or ice events, leave bins at the curb — your hauler will collect them when safe.
Portland does not have a free scheduled curbside bulky item pickup program. Options include: (1) Schedule a large item pickup with your garbage hauler for a fee — call at least one week in advance. (2) Self-haul to Metro Central Transfer Station (6161 NW 61st Ave, Portland, open daily 8 a.m.–5 p.m.) or Metro South in Oregon City — disposal fees apply. (3) Set extra garbage bags or cans beside your cart on garbage day for a small per-item fee. For reusable items, use Resourceful PDX (portland.gov/resourcefulpdx) to donate or find takers before paying for disposal.
Metro Central Transfer Station at 6161 NW 61st Ave., Portland (daily 8 a.m.–5 p.m.) and Metro South at 2001 Washington St., Oregon City (daily 7 a.m.–7 p.m.) both accept HHW free for households. HHW hours at both: 9 a.m.–4 p.m. daily. No appointment needed. Electronics are accepted free via Oregon E-Cycles at Metro stations (limit 7 items/day) and hundreds of other locations statewide — find them at oregonecycles.org. Call 503-234-3000 or visit oregonmetro.gov/askmetro for any disposal question.
Portland uses a franchised hauler system where the City assigns specific private companies to geographic zones. There are six franchised residential haulers: WM, Portland Disposal & Recycling, Arrow Sanitary, Heiberg Garbage & Recycling, Walker Garbage Service, and City Sanitary. The City sets all rates — so your bill is the same regardless of hauler. To find which company serves your address, enter your address at portland.gov/find-my-hauler. Apartments with 5+ units and businesses can choose from any permitted commercial hauler.
Official Source

Still Can’t Find Your Collection Day?

The City of Portland’s hauler lookup tool is the most reliable way to find your specific collection day, biweekly garbage week, and which of the six haulers services your address. Because multiple haulers serve different neighborhoods on different days and schedules, no general guide can substitute for the address-specific lookup.

🔍 Official Portland Collection Lookup & Key Links

All of the following are free and will confirm your exact schedule and service details:

🔍 Find My Portland Hauler & Day 📞 Call BPS — 503-823-7202
Find My Hauler (Address Lookup)portland.gov/find-my-hauler — enter address for your hauler name, phone number, and collection day.
Free Garbage Day Remindersportland.gov/garbage-day-reminders — weekly reminder by email, app, text, or phone. Shows which bins go out each week. Adjusts automatically for holidays.
BPS Garbage & Recycling Programportland.gov/bps/garbage-recycling — all program info, what goes in each bin, rates, large item disposal, printable recycling guides.
Printable Recycling Guidesportland.gov/bps/garbage-recycling/printable-recycling-guides — downloadable sorting guides in multiple languages. Print and post near your bins.
Large Item Disposal Optionsportland.gov — Large Household Waste Disposal — all options for furniture, appliances, mattresses.
Metro Central (HHW & Transfer)oregonmetro.gov — Metro Central · 6161 NW 61st Ave., Portland · Daily 8 a.m.–5 p.m. · HHW daily 9 a.m.–4 p.m. · (503) 234-3000
Ask Metrooregonmetro.gov/askmetro · (503) 234-3000 — free expert disposal guidance, 8:30 a.m.–5 p.m.
Oregon E-Cycles (Free Electronics)oregonecycles.org — statewide free electronics recycling at hundreds of locations.
Resourceful PDX (Reuse)portland.gov/resourcefulpdx — donation, repair, tool-sharing options before disposal.

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Trash & Recycling Schedules for Cities Near Portland

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