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What counts as hazardous waste? Common types explained

A plain guide to what makes a waste hazardous, the common types you meet on the job, and how to check before you move it.

A professional photograph taken at an industrial loading bay of a waste transfer station during the daytime. In the foreground, a waste handler wearing appropriate high-visibility orange clothing, safety glasses, and gloves stands holding a clipboard, seemingly inspecting a pallet of hazardous materials. On the pallet, a blue 205-litre drum is prominently featured, clearly labeled 'WASTE OIL' with a red flammable symbol. Next to the drum is a stack of old lead-acid batteries, and bundled on the floor of the pallet are several used fluorescent tubes. In the background, the rear doors of a registered waste carrier box truck are open, ready for loading.

If you handle waste for a living, one question keeps coming back: is this load hazardous? It matters more than it sounds. Hazardous waste has its own rules for who can carry it, the paperwork that travels with it, and where it is allowed to go. Get it wrong and you risk a fine or a load turned away. This guide explains what makes a waste hazardous, the types you will meet most often, and how to check when you are not sure.

What makes a waste hazardous?

The official test is short. Waste is hazardous if it, or something inside it, can harm people or the environment. That covers a lot of ground. The harm might be because the waste is toxic, corrosive, flammable, or dangerous in some other way. It is not about how the waste looks. A clear liquid can be just as hazardous as a barrel of sludge.

Common types of hazardous waste

Here are the ones a carrier meets most often. If your load is on this list, treat it as hazardous until you have checked.

  • Waste oils, like used engine or hydraulic oil. Cooking oil does not count.
  • Asbestos, from old roofing, pipes and insulation.
  • Batteries, including lead-acid, vehicle and industrial types.
  • Solvents, and many paints, inks and adhesives.
  • Pesticides and garden or farm chemicals.
  • Workshop and cleaning chemicals, like brake fluid and print toner.
  • Fridges and freezers, and other gear that holds ozone-damaging gases.
  • Fluorescent tubes and energy-saving bulbs, which hold mercury.
  • Clinical and healthcare waste, like sharps and dressings.
  • Empty drums, cans and rags that held any of the above.

This is not the full list. The complete picture is the List of Wastes, which gives every waste type a code. But if you work with any of the items above, hazardous rules are likely to apply.

How to check if your waste is hazardous

You are not meant to judge it by eye. The rule is that you must identify and classify your waste before it is collected or moved. To classify a waste you work out what is in it, often from the supplier's safety data sheet, then match it to a code in the List of Wastes.

Every waste gets a six-digit code, and the hazardous entries are flagged in the list. The code then tells everyone how to handle the load. We go deeper on these codes in our guide to filling out a consignment note.

What changes once it is hazardous?

Once a waste is hazardous, you cannot treat it like general rubbish. Three things follow.

  • It must go with a registered waste carrier. Carrying hazardous waste without the right registration is a criminal offence.
  • A hazardous waste consignment note must travel with the load, from the producer to the site that receives it.
  • It can only go to a site that is permitted to take that type of waste.

Skipping any of these is where carriers get caught, often at a roadside stop or an Environment Agency inspection. Keeping the note and the records in order is the simplest way to stay on the right side of it.

A quick note on names

In England and Wales this is called hazardous waste. In Scotland the same idea is called special waste, with its own forms. This guide follows the England rules.

Is it hazardous? Quick answers

Is engine oil hazardous waste?

Yes. Used engine oil and other waste oils are hazardous. Fresh cooking oil is not.

Is asbestos hazardous waste?

Yes. Every type of asbestos waste is hazardous, and it has extra rules for handling and disposal.

Are batteries hazardous waste?

Most are. Lead-acid, vehicle and many industrial batteries are hazardous. Loose household batteries have their own collection rules.

Is paint hazardous waste?

Often. Solvent-based paint, and tins with wet paint still in them, are usually hazardous. Fully dried, water-based paint may not be.

Is old electrical equipment hazardous waste?

Some of it. Fridges, freezers, and items with screens or hazardous parts count. Check each item before you move it.

The safe habit is simple. If a load could be hazardous, classify it before it moves. The few minutes that takes is far cheaper than a fine or a load turned away.

From Consigns See how Consigns does digital consignment notes