Below you will find information that might help you understand how to find things or learn about information you might need to know about your city or town.
Landfill
Can residents deliver waste to the Franklin County Sanitary Landfill (FCSL)?
Yes, residents may bring waste to the FCSL. All loads must be tarped. As of April 1, 2017 the tipping fee was reduced to $39.75 per ton. Residents pay a $5.00 minimum and the tipping fee is prorated for loads weighing less than 1 ton.
What are your hours of operation?
Landfill hours are 5:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. Monday through Friday and 6:00 a.m. until 12:00 p.m on Saturdays. We are closed on Sundays and all major holidays.
Where are you located?
The Landfill is located at 3851 London Groveport Rd., Grove City, OH 43123. View a map of the
How much does it cost to dispose of material in the landfill?
The tipping fee is $39.75 per ton. Residents pay a $5 minimum and the tipping fee is prorated for loads weighing less than 1 ton.
View Landfill rates.
Do you accept credit/debit cards?
SWACO accepts VISA, Discover, and/or MasterCard credit and debit cards. We also accept checks provided with government issued photo identification. Commercial Customers may contact SWACO's Finance Department at 614-871-5100 to inquire about obtaining a
SWACO Charge Account.
What type of waste is accepted?
We accept general solid waste, including furniture, carpeting, and general household trash. However we urge you to reuse and donate or recycle as much as possible before bringing items to the landfill. We do not accept yard waste, liquids, or anything hazardous.
Can I dispose of tires and appliances at the FCSL?
SWACO does not accept dedicated loads of tires. Tires that are accidentally included with other solid wastes are accepted for a charge of $5 per tire or $50 for large truck tires.
Appliances are accepted for a charge of $20 per appliance. However, the Freon must be removed from the appliance by a licensed Freon recycler. The appliance must be tagged by the recycler as “Freon free.”
Franklin County residents are able to take appliances to the SWACO Recycling Convenience Center (2566 Jackson Pike) for FREE and proper disposal.
I am a commercial hauler. What do I need to do in order to dispose of waste at the landfill?
Contact SWACO's Finance Department at 614-871-5100 to register your vehicle(s) and obtain disposal payment information.
I do not live in your area - are there other places closer to me?
If you do not live in Franklin County, please consider calling your County for disposal options. SWACO serves 41 communities in the Solid Waste District. If you live outside of the District and want to dispose of waste at the Franklin County Sanitary Landfill (FCSL), additional rates may apply.
Commercial haulers can only use one of the three SWACO transfer stations. Due to safety concerns, residents cannot use SWACO transfer stations. For more information contact 614-871-5100.
SWACO Community Map (PDF)
Recycling
What's accepted for recycling?

Mix all accepted items together - no separation required. Container labels don’t need removed but these materials should be free of food and liquid. Plastic bottles should be crushed and have the caps on. Cardboard boxes should always be flattened.
What's not accepted for recycling?

The following items are not currently accepted through Franklin County’s recycling program.
Plastic: Not all #5’s are accepted. No plastic party cups or Styrofoam take-out food containers.
Polystyrene foam or "Styrofoam" egg cartons, plates, cups, etc.
Glass: Ceramics, window or drinking glass, light bulbs and any other glass not in the shape of a bottle or jar.
Paper: Napkins, paper towels, tissue paper, etc. Uncoated paper receipts are okay to recycle.
Drink Pouches: Made of or lined with foil and plastic.
Metals: Coat hangers, steel scraps and any other metal not in the shape of a container. Foil is not accepted. Aluminum pie pans, lids, or trays are not accepted.
**As of November 1, 2024, clear plastic clamshell containers are accepted in curbside recycling and at SWACO recycling drop-off locations in Franklin County.
Why can't I bag my recyclables?
Plastic bags can easily get caught in recycling sorting machine gears. Simply place loose recyclables directly into your curbside recycling bin or a drop-off bin. Plastic bags are 100% recyclable if done correctly. Please be sure to recycle your plastic bags at a Bring Me Back location near you. For a map of locations and more information about this program, click here.
Why is it important to flatten cardboard boxes before placing them in my container?
Cardboard boxes take up a lot of space. Breaking them down, or flattening them before placing them in the curbside or drop off container saves space and creates additional capacity to recycle even more items.
How do I recycle in my community?
Call your community refuse department for information about pick-up schedules, how to request a new bin, and billing.
I live in an apartment, condo or other multi-family housing unit and don't have curbside. Where can I recycle?
SWACO provides multiple drop-off recycling locations throughout Franklin County for those who don't have curbside recycling or fill up their bins before pick-up. The updated list is available at Recycling Drop-Off Locations. In 2022, over 6,000 tons of recyclable material was diverted from the Franklin County Sanitary Landfill through the Drop-Off program.
What happens during the recycling process?
In Franklin County, most of the single stream recyclables are processed at Rumpke’s Columbus Material Recovery Facility (MRF), located near the Ohio State Fairgrounds. At the Rumpke MRF, co-mingled recyclables are sorted through mechanical and people power into their material types. Materials like plastic bottles and aluminum cans are then compressed into cubes called bales, and material types like glass are collected in large dumpsters. These commodities are sold to companies that process that material so new products can be made from recycled content.
Making products from recycled content helps reduce the amount of pollution and habitat destruction generated by creating goods from virgin materials. It’s important to remember that recycling takes a team effort.
Check out this short video for an overview of how recycling turns waste into resources.
How does a recycling facility work?
In Franklin County, when recyclables are collected from your curb or a drop-off box, they are taken to a Materials Recovery Facility (MRF). At the MRF, people and mechanical power are used to sort out the recyclables into different categories. A series of blowers/ fans, lasers, magnetics, and other technologies are used to sort each material into bales. Glass isn't baled, instead it is typically crushed and collected in a large dumpster which is sold to companies who melt down the glass and create new bottles and other products.
Check out this short video or virtual tour for a deeper dive:
What's our county's recycling rate?
According to data released by SWACO in 2023, Franklin County’s recycling and composting rate, known as a diversion rate, is 54% while the national average is only 34%. By working together as a community, we are preserving natural resources while helping to create jobs and support local industry.
Why is recycling important?
Recycling creates a more resilient economy for local businesses and residents, provides opportunities for innovation and creates a brighter, safer future for all of us, including our kids.
Recycling conserves natural resources like timber and minerals and reduces the amount of energy required to create goods. More efficient processes help to also reduce greenhouse gas emissions which contribute to adverse health impacts from air pollution and human-caused climate change.
Recycling also creates well-paying jobs in recycling and manufacturing industries.
In 2022, over 76% of landfilled materials in Franklin County could have been recycled and had a potential value of $23 million. On average, 500-600 full semi-trucks of materials are landfilled a day in Franklin County with over half of this coming from the commercial sector (businesses and multi-family housing). That means almost 400 full trucks worth of material could have been recycled.
I recycle everything, even if I'm not sure if it's accepted. Is this okay?
Recycling has become part of the culture in Franklin County. People care about preserving natural resources and creating local jobs. While wanting to recycle everything is admirable, 'wish-cycling' can negatively impact the amount of materials you actually recycle.
Sorting facilities are highly engineered to deal with certain material types, and when other goods are introduced into the system many things can go wrong. The first step of this sorting process requires people to sort out contamination. The cleaner the material is of potentially dangerous or unaccepted items, the safer the workers are and the less likely the machines are to get jammed. Metal hangers, hoses, and plastic bags can easily get caught in machine gears and lead to a work stoppage or costly repair. Please be sure to recycle your plastic bags at a Bring Me Back location near you to keep the recycling process running smoothly. Likewise, putting batteries into the recycling can also creates a dangerous working environment for employees because batteries can cause fires in these facilities. Please find a location near you to recycle your batteries using our Recycling and Reuse Search Tool. Items that aren't accepted for recycling but are placed into the recycling bin anyway, just take a long detour to the landfill. These materials are not recycled if they aren't listed as accepted.
How do I recycle items not accepted?
Of course, there are many ways to reuse, recycle, and safely dispose of other items that aren't accepted in your residential program. Questions about what to do with old electronics, chemicals, paint, batteries, and more? Use SWACO's Reuse and Recycling Search Tool to help you quickly find a location near you accepting a wide range of items from tires to bicycles!
What do I do with my yard waste?
Dedicated loads of Yard Waste are banned from SWACO’s Franklin County Landfill by state law. Try backyard composting! A compost pile or bin is a great way to recycle yard waste and enhance your garden. Many Franklin County communities also offer curbside yard waste collection services. Call your local government offices to determine whether your community offers this service. Residents in Franklin County may also take leaves, grass and brush to a compost facility.
For more information, visit SWACO's Yard Waste page.
Yard Waste page.
How do I recycle plastic bags?
Plastic bags are not accepted in curbside or drop-off recycling bins. In order for the recycling industry to continue to thrive, the materials collected need to closely align with what the sorting facility can actually handle. Plastic bags are big problems for our local recycling facility because bags can easily get caught in machine gears. Please be sure to recycle your plastic bags at a Bring Me Back location near you to keep the recycling process running smoothly. For a map of locations and more information about this program, click here.
What does a recycling symbol on a product mean?
Buying recycled content goods helps support this industry. Look for products like paper (toilet paper, paper towels) and plastic goods that say 'Made from recycled content'. Typically, products have a recycling symbol with a percentage, indicating the portion of the product that's made from recycled content.
Post-consumer recycled content indicates the product is made from goods that were recycled after they were used. Compared to being made from recycled scrap at a manufacturing facility or another pre-consumer scrap.
What do the numbers of plastics mean?
There are seven types of consumer plastic or resin- each has unique characteristics. A recycling symbol with or without a number doesn't necessarily indicate that an item is accepted for recycling. The numbers on plastic are an identification code communicating what type of plastic the item is made from. In Franklin County, the number of a plastic doesn't matter. Plastic bottles, clear clamshells, jugs, tubs and some cups are accepted! Say goodbye to the days you had to read that tiny number!
Why aren't napkins, paper towels, or tissues accepted for recycling?
Soft paper products are usually made from a high percentage of recycled paper. Each time natural fibers are recycled, they become shorter and shorter. After 5-7 times through the recycling process, paper fibers are too short to be recycled again- however- these fibers are the perfect length for rapid composting! Compost your soft paper products or avoid them entirely with reusable options. Think about it- for all of modern human history until recently people used cloth for cleaning up their messes and wiping their hands.
Why isn't Styrofoam accepted?
Expanded polystyrene (EPS), commonly called 'Styrofoam', is recyclable in some communities, but is not currently accepted anywhere in Franklin County. Used Styrofoam cups cannot be easily recycled into new cups like aluminum cans or glass bottles, and there isn't a market for this type of material locally. Additionally, Styrofoam isn't very economical to transport because it is mostly made of air- so a semi-truck full of cups isn't actually a large weight of material. Recycling, like all industries in the modern economy, relies on supply and demand. What can you do to combat Styrofoam waste? Encourage businesses using this material to opt for greener alternatives and bring your own container for leftovers or cup for coffee.
Some communities offer Styrofoam drop-off recycling! Check out SWACO's Recycling Convenience Center (located at 2566 Jackson Pike), Hilliard's drop-off program or consider Dublin's drop-off program.
What do I do with prescription drugs?
View resources regarding
prescription drug disposal.
When are pizza boxes accepted?
All pizza boxes even with grease are accepted in Franklin County’s recycling program. Please remove the liner and pizza food residue before recycling the box.
How can I report illegal dumping and littering?
SWACO funds the Environmental Crimes Task Force of Central Ohio program which allows citizens to report illegal dumping and littering in Franklin County. For more information, visit the
It's a Crime website.
Why are aluminum and steel cans accepted but other metals aren't?
Since steel and aluminum cans are accepted for recycling, you may assume tossing an old screw or worn out pot into the curbside bin wouldn't be a problem. However, metals not shaped like cans can easily get into other streams (I.e. paper, glass) and then contaminate that load because the sorting facility wasn't designed to handle irregularly shaped metals. You can take your scrap metals to local facilities, or consider donation if the item you are trying to dispose of is still in usable condition. If you have metal screw top caps, you can put these into a can and crush the top of the can, containing the metal.
Check out our Reuse and Recycling Search Tool to find locations for where to recycle or donate your item in question.
Why are beverage/food cartons accepted?
Cartons come in two major packaging types: shelf-stable (or aseptic like a soup broth container) and refrigerated (gable-top like a milk carton). All cartons are made mostly of paper but gable-top cartons have additional plastic layers and shelf-stable cartons contain additional layers of plastic and aluminum. Both broth, juice, milk and other similarily shaped carts are accepted for recycling. You don't need to compress the container, but please pour out all the liquid and remove lids/ straws. The Carton Council was formed in 2009 by businesses who use cartons with the goal of increasing carton recycling. The Council was able to increase local collection programs by helping to develop markets for these materials. It's important to note, ice cream and egg cartons are not accepted.
Learn more about the carton recycling process from the Carton Council.
What's made from recycled plastic bottles?
Five 2-liter PETE bottles can make one square foot of polyester carpet and 35% of this type of carpet in the US is made from recycled plastic! 5 2-liter bottles can also make an XL t-shirt! The possibilities don't stop there though- this material can also be used as fiberfill in a winter jacket or sleeping bag. In fact, many items made from plastic can be made from recycled plastic including car bumpers, sails for boats, parts for cars, chairs, and more bottles.
Click here to learn more.
What's made from recycled aluminum cans?
Aluminum cans are recycled into new cans as well as car parts, window frames, wire, tubing and electronics. Aluminum placed in your recycling bin is more valuable than any other item in the recycling stream because it can be recycled endlessly without the material breaking down or decreasing in quality. Recycling one cans saves enough energy to power a tv for 2 hours! Why? Creating goods from recycled content saves energy because it prevents the mining, transportation, and processing of virgin materials to make the item. Each step of the process extracting and processing virgin materials requires energy consumption which can be avoided by utilizing recycled content. According to the Aluminum Association, nearly 75 percent of all aluminum produced in the U.S. is still in use today.
Click here to learn more.
What's made from recycled glass?
Glass can be endlessly recycled without decreasing quality. According to the Glass Recycling Association, 33% of new glass container contain recycled glass and 60% of recycled glass is used for new containers or insulation. The Glass Packaging Institute (GPI) reports, "Over a ton of natural resources are conserved for every ton of glass recycled, including 1,300 pounds of sand, 410 pounds of soda ash, 380 pounds of limestone, and 160 pounds of feldspar". Additionally, according to GPI for every 6 tons of recycled glass, a ton of carbon dioxide, a greenhouse gas contributing to climate change, is reduced.
Click here to learn more.
What's made from recycled cartons?
According to the Carton Council, approximately 30 cartons can create a single 2’x2’ ceiling tile, while about 400 cartons make up a wallboard. Learn more about the carton recycling process from the Carton Council.
Click here to learn more.
I've heard of a circular economy, but what exactly does that mean?
Recycling and building a more circular economy takes a team effort. Here's how it works - residents, businesses and event organizers place items accepted for recycling into recycling containers. MRF’s properly sort the recyclables. Manufacturers purchase these commodities for use as raw materials in order to create recycled-content products. Recyclables are bought and sold just like raw materials so prices go up and down depending on supply and demand in the United States and globally. And, of course, you and I do our part to purchase materials made from recycled-content.
This is how a circular economy works.

The circular economy is an aspirational framework organizations and businesses may use to re-think and re-design their processes and products to have a positive impact on society and the environment we depend on. With creativity and innovation, our society can start to transition from a 'take-make-waste' society to a more circular economy recognizing the true value of natural resources.
To learn more about Ohio's circular economy, check out this page.
I want to reduce and reuse! What should I do?
REDUCE
- Reflect on what's in your landfill bin and make small commitments to reduce waste! What are you sending the landfill that could have been avoided or recycled?
- Do you have a few single-use coffee cups in your landfill bin? Choose reusables over disposables!
- Opt for items with less and/or recyclable packaging.
REUSE
-
- Donate! Your trash is another person's treasure. Donate old clothes, electronics, household goods and more to local charities to help neighbors in need and to contribute to work-training programs.
- Buy Used! Support your local economy and find unique items at low prices by shopping at second-hand stores. Buying used = guilt-free shopping. Used or DIY items can make memorable presents too.
- Share! Do you need a power saw when you use it twice a year? Let your friends and family borrow what you have and ask to borrow their goods! Save money, space and have an excuse to hangout with people you enjoy.
Why are recycling and landfill bins sometimes emptied into the same container?
Some trucks or custodian carts have divided sections for recycling and trash. However, if recycling carts are too contaminated (non-recyclable items mixed with acceptable items), then 'recycling' becomes destined for the landfill. This is one of the reasons understanding what's accepted for recycling is so important! Recycling is subject to the old adage- one apple can ruin the bunch.
Why are recyclables not sorted out at the landfill?
The Sanitary Landfill is regulated by the Ohio EPA and the landfill is currently not permitted to recycle on location. Additionally, sorting recyclable materials out of mixed materials ("trash") produces materials that are difficult to sell on the commodity market. The recycling industry is volatile and it's already very difficult to run a successful recycling operation, finding a buyer in the region who will accept highly contaminated materials for recycling is difficult to manage successfully.
The best economic and environmental option is for residents, students, and businesses to reduce, reuse, and recycle while minimizing how much they landfill.
Interested in starting a recycling program at work?
Contact us at [email protected] and visit our Business Champion Programs page to learn how SWACO can support your organization in launching or improving a workplace recycling initiative.
General FAQs
Where can I view Agendas & Minutes from the Board of Trustees meetings?
View the most recent and previous
Agendas & Minutes.
What community programs are available?
Learn more about the community programs on our
Communities page.
Where can I find grant information?
For more information, please visit our
Grants page.
Where can I find more information regarding employment opportunities?
For more information, please visit our
Careers page.
Composting
Interested in starting a composting program at work?
Email [email protected] and explore our Business Champion Programs page to discover how SWACO can help your business implement a successful composting program.
