Your Seattle Trash Day — No More Guessing
If you live in Seattle, missing pickup usually happens because garbage and compost are weekly, recycling is every other week, and holiday delays do not always affect every neighborhood the same way. This guide makes it simple. You can check your exact day fast, understand Seattle’s pay-as-you-throw setup, and avoid the common extra-garbage and bulky-item mistakes that cost money or get items left behind.
📑 What’s in this guide
Seattle Public Utilities runs a curbside system where single-family households get weekly garbage, weekly food and yard waste, and every-other-week recycling. Seattle also uses a pay-as-you-throw model, so smaller garbage carts cost less, while recycling service is included in the garbage rate. That makes knowing your actual collection pattern important if you want fewer missed pickups and lower bills.
Lids facing street or alley
How to Find Your Seattle Trash Pickup Day
Seattle’s official collection-day lookup is the fastest and most reliable way to confirm your garbage, recycling, and food & yard waste service. The city says the calendar will show both your regular pickup days and holiday schedules for your exact address.
- Open the official collection-day tool. Go to Seattle’s Look Up Collection Day page.
- View your collection calendar. The city’s calendar shows garbage, recycling, and food & yard waste service tied to your address.
- Check holiday notes too. Seattle says the calendar includes holiday schedules, but it does not automatically reflect weather delays.
- Download the Recycle It app. Seattle Public Utilities recommends the app for reminders and solid-waste notices.
- Call SPU if needed. If you cannot confirm your route online, call (206) 684-3000.
Seattle Trash Pickup Schedule: What Runs When
For single-family residences, Seattle Public Utilities says garbage and compost are collected every week, while recycling is collected every other week. Apartment and condo service can be more frequent, but for typical household curbside service this is the core pattern.
| Service | Container | Frequency | How It Works |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garbage | SPU garbage cart | Weekly | Pay-as-you-throw pricing based on cart size |
| Recycling | 96-gallon recycle cart | Every other week | Included in garbage service rate for residents |
| Food & Yard Waste | Compost cart | Weekly | Separate cart with its own monthly service rate |
| Bulky Items | Special pickup | As needed | Schedule with SPU and pay per item |
Seattle’s system rewards diversion. If you recycle more and use your compost cart regularly, you may be able to move down to a smaller garbage cart and lower your bill.
Seattle Weekly Garbage Collection Rules
Seattle says garbage is collected every week, and residents are required to have garbage service. Collection must be set out correctly to avoid being skipped.
Garbage
Recycling
Compost
For regular weekly cart pickup, Seattle tells customers to put carts out by 7:00 a.m., place them so lids open toward the street or alley, avoid blocking sidewalks, mailboxes, or driveways, and remove carts as soon as possible after collection.
Seattle also publishes current garbage cart pricing. The city’s posted residential monthly rates effective April 1, 2025 include $28.25 for a 12-gallon micro-cart and $34.65 for a 20-gallon mini-cart, with larger cart options also available.
⭐ Seattle money-saving move
Seattle’s pay-as-you-throw setup makes smaller trash service one of the easiest utility savings in the city. Households that use compost and recycling well often find they can step down to a smaller garbage cart instead of paying for space they do not really need.
Because recycling is already included in the garbage rate, overfilling the trash cart is often more expensive than just sorting more correctly.
Seattle Recycling: Every-Other-Week Collection
Seattle says single-family residents receive one 96-gallon recycling cart for every-other-week collection. Recycling service is included in the garbage rate, so there is no separate added charge for the standard residential recycling cart.
Extra recycling rules Seattle publishes:
- There is no additional charge for extra recycling
- There is a limit of 1 extra unit of recycling per collection day
- Flatten cardboard and break it down to smaller than 4 by 4 feet
- Remove plastic wrap and foam
- Put extra recycling in a cardboard box, paper bag, or personal can
Seattle Food & Yard Waste Pickup
Seattle’s food and yard waste service is collected weekly. The city posts residential compost cart options and rates, including a 13-gallon micro-cart, 32-gallon cart, and 96-gallon cart.
| Food & Yard Waste Cart | Current Posted Monthly Rate | Weight Limit |
|---|---|---|
| 13-gallon micro-cart | $7.50 | 20 pounds |
| 32-gallon cart | $11.25 | 60 pounds |
| 96-gallon cart | $14.30 | 180 pounds |
Seattle also says you can set out extra yard waste next to your compost cart on collection day, but there is a charge for that service and no food waste is allowed in extra yard-waste units.
Seattle Extra Garbage and Extra Yard Waste
Seattle lets residents set out extra garbage and extra yard waste on collection day, but the city charges by the unit and has clear size rules.
- Put extra garbage next to your garbage cart. Seattle says the maximum weight for each extra item is 60 pounds.
- Know what counts as one extra-garbage unit. It can be a 32-gallon garbage can, one large plastic bag, or a cart too full for the lid to close.
- Put extra yard waste next to the compost cart. No food waste is allowed in these extra units.
- Use proper yard-waste containers. Extra yard waste can be a 32-gallon can, a large kraft brown paper bag, an approved compostable bag, or a tied bundle up to 4 feet long and 2 feet in diameter.
- Label extra waste with your address if needed. Seattle recommends this especially where multiple households cluster carts together.
Seattle’s published extra-service prices say an extra garbage bag, bundle, or 32-gallon can costs $13.95, while an extra yard-waste bag, bundle, or 32-gallon can costs $7.25.
Seattle Bulky Item Pickup
Seattle Public Utilities offers home pickup for large items that are hard to dispose of, including old furniture, mattresses, and appliances. The city says you can schedule this service online or by calling SPU Customer Service.
Seattle’s published bulky-item prices:
- $30 per item for old furniture, mattresses, appliances, and similar items
- $38 for refrigerators
This is usually easier than trying to force oversized waste into weekly garbage service or hauling everything yourself the same day.
⭐ Seattle shortcut that saves time
Seattle’s own “Save Yourself a Trip” page basically says the same thing many residents discover the hard way: if you only have one or two large household items, paying for a scheduled bulky pickup can be simpler than loading a vehicle, waiting in line, and paying transfer-station minimums.
That is especially true for mattresses, furniture, and bulky appliances that are awkward to transport.
Seattle 2026 Holiday Trash Pickup Schedule
Seattle’s 2026 holiday rules are not completely one-size-fits-all. The city confirmed that New Year’s Day 2026 caused the usual Thursday-to-Friday and Friday-to-Saturday shift. Seattle also published a special MLK Day 2026 arrangement where only some service areas had a one-day delay, while other neighborhoods stayed on normal collection that week.
| Holiday / Period | Date | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| New Year’s Day | Thursday, January 1, 2026 | No collection Thursday; Thursday moves to Friday and Friday moves to Saturday |
| Martin Luther King Jr. Day | Monday, January 19, 2026 | Only some Seattle service areas had a one-day delay; others stayed on normal schedule |
| Thanksgiving pattern example | Thursday holiday | Thursday customers move to Friday; Friday customers move to Saturday |
| Christmas pattern example | Thursday / Friday holiday week | Check collection calendar because delay follows holiday placement |
Seattle’s MLK Day 2026 notice specifically said Northeast Seattle and Central Seattle had delayed collections that week, while Northwest Seattle, West Seattle, and South Seattle stayed on normal Monday-through-Friday service. That is why Seattle residents should always check the official calendar or SPU notices instead of assuming every holiday affects the whole city the same way.
What to Do If Seattle Missed Your Pickup
If your cart was out correctly and was not collected, Seattle customers should start with SPU Customer Service. Recycling, compost, and garbage route issues can also be affected by holiday or weather notices, so verifying the day first saves time.
- Confirm your collection day. Recheck the Seattle collection calendar for your address.
- Look for service alerts. Seattle says weather-related delays appear in the At Your Service blog rather than in the calendar itself.
- Make sure your set-out met the rules. Carts must be out by 7:00 a.m., lids opening toward the street or alley, without blocking access.
- Call Seattle Public Utilities. Contact (206) 684-3000 for pickup issues or service questions.
- Leave clear identification on extra waste if needed. Seattle recommends putting your address on extra set-out when multiple households place carts in the same area.
Seattle Transfer Stations
Seattle also operates transfer stations for self-haul disposal. The city’s posted hours say stations are open 8:00 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. seven days per week on most days, with a later start of 10:00 a.m. on the first Wednesday of the month. The stations are closed on Thanksgiving, Christmas Day, and New Year’s Day, and the North Transfer Station is also closed on the 4th of July.
Transfer Stations
Official dump / landfill hours, closures and payment details
Save Yourself a Trip
Bulky pickup, extra set-out options and tips for avoiding transfer-station runs
Look Up Collection Day
Address-specific schedule for garbage, recycling and compost
Setting Out Waste
Official set-out rules for carts, extra garbage, yard waste and recycling
Frequently Asked Questions About Seattle Trash Pickup
How do I find my Seattle trash pickup day?
Use the official Look Up Collection Day page from Seattle Public Utilities. It shows garbage, recycling, and food & yard waste schedules for your address.
Is Seattle garbage picked up every week?
Yes. Seattle says garbage is collected every week for single-family residences.
Is Seattle recycling every week?
No. Seattle says single-family residents receive every-other-week recycling collection.
How often is Seattle compost picked up?
Seattle says food and yard waste is collected every week for single-family residences.
What time do I put my bins out in Seattle?
Seattle requires regular weekly carts to be out by 7:00 a.m. on collection day.
Does Seattle charge for extra garbage?
Yes. Seattle charges by the unit for extra garbage. A unit can be a 32-gallon can, a large plastic bag, or a cart that is too full to close.
Is extra recycling free in Seattle?
Yes, Seattle says there is no additional charge for extra recycling, but there is a limit of one extra unit per collection day.
How much does Seattle bulky-item pickup cost?
Seattle’s published price is $30 per bulky item for things like furniture, mattresses, and many appliances. Refrigerators are listed at $38.
Do holidays change Seattle pickup days?
Yes, but not always in the exact same way citywide. New Year’s Day 2026 caused the standard Thursday-to-Friday and Friday-to-Saturday shift, while MLK Day 2026 only delayed some service areas.
Where do I check weather-related Seattle collection delays?
Seattle says the collection calendar does not update for weather-related delays. Check the SPU At Your Service blog for those notices.
Official Seattle Waste Collection Resources
Look Up Collection Day
Address-specific calendar with regular pickup days and holiday schedules
Garbage Service
Weekly garbage service and pay-as-you-throw information
Garbage Rates
Current posted garbage cart options and residential pricing
Recycling Rates
Included recycling service and every-other-week cart details
Food & Yard Rates
Weekly compost cart sizes, rates and extra yard-waste pricing
Setting Out Waste for Collection
Rules for carts, extra garbage, extra yard waste and extra recycling
Need help now? Call Seattle Public Utilities Customer Service at (206) 684-3000. For weather or unusual holiday service notices, check the SPU At Your Service blog.