Trash Pickup Schedule
Trash and Recycle Printable Calendar Downloads
Reminders
- If a holiday (only those shown on calendar, New Years, Memorial Day, 4th of July, Labor Day, Thanksgiving, and Christmas) falls on a weekday, Service will be delayed to the following day. Please watch your emails at that time for possible additional changes throughout the week.
- All containers MUST be place outside by 7:00am. Unless we directly discussed with you a different time.
- Containers should be placed in the street with the wheels against the curb or within 2 feet of blacktop
- The container must be placed 4 feet apart from other containers and 8 feet from mailboxes, poles, fences, trees or parked vehicles for easy access.
- Please make sure the lid on your container is closed completely. This is in compliance with City and County codes and failure to do so may result in additional fees.
- Please break down cardboard boxes.
- If you are a Recycling customer, Please read the following for important details about acceptable items from the Loveland Solid Waste and Recycling website.
- DO NOT place recyclables in bags. This causes delays at the sorting centers.
- PAPERCardboard (cut to fit inside cart), Paper milk & juice cartons, Paperboard (cereal, shoe & gift boxes), Newspaper & packing paper, Magazines, catalogs, Paper bags, Paper egg cartons, Phone books, paperback books, Office & junk mail, Wrapping paper, NO foil
- METALCans (aluminum, tin & steel), Aerosol cans (empty & no caps), Clean, balled foil & pie pans, Metal jar lids, Paint cans & lids (must be dry)
- PLASTIC - MUST BE EMPTY • NO LIQUIDS PLEASEBottles & jugs (milk jugs, pop bottles, etc), Plastic tubs & containers (peanut butter, yogurt, shampoo bottles), Prescription bottles
- What about glass?Glass bottles and jars ARE accepted curbside, but because of breakage, only 30% of the glass bottles and jars collected from curbside bins are recycled. As glass is collected, hauled and unloaded, much of it gets broken. At the sorting center, unbroken glass is recovered and shipped to a plant that makes new glass containers. The broken glass, however, is screened from the other recyclables. Contaminants embedded in this broken glass cannot be sufficiently removed to meet the specifications of bottle makers. This glass ends up being used at landfills for daily cover material or is dumped as trash.