Candy Wrappers

Curbside Trash

Candy Wrappers Aren’t Recyclable

Traditional candy wrappers can’t be recycled. Why? Mostly because they are too small. The thin plastic pieces are nearly impossible to sort, so they get stuck to other recyclables and become contaminants. If your wrappers feel like plastic or are shiny inside, make sure they go in the garbage.

Not Just One Material

A lot of times, candy wrappers are made with different materials, such as a mix of plastic and aluminum or paper and aluminum. Recycling plants are not able to separate these mixed materials to use them again, so they need to go in the garbage.

chocolate.icon3

100% Aluminum Wrappers OK

If the wrapper is 100% aluminum foil, it’s OK to recycle. Both the inside and outside will look metallic and feel like metal foil, not plastic or paper. These are most commonly found on single chocolates or bars of chocolate (not candy bars). If any part of the wrapper looks or feels like paper or plastic, toss it in the garbage. If you aren’t sure, toss it in the garbage.

 

Ways to Reduce

Buy Candy Wrapped in Aluminum or Paper

To reduce the impact of candy wrapper waste on the environment, choose candy that’s wrapped in recyclable materials like 100% paper or 100% aluminum foil.

Did You Know?

The Truth About Candy Wrappers

Candy wrappers are made from a mix of materials, which makes it hard and expensive for facilities to turn them into useful materials, especially because they are not generated in high volumes like plastic bottles or aluminum cans. When possible, try to buy candy packaged in recyclable materials, or better yet, from the bulk bin.