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Recycling Fees

U.S. Appliance Recycling Fees: State Programs for Refrigerators, Washers, and Large Appliances

Reference for U.S. state appliance recycling and disposal fee programs, including advance disposal fees on new appliance purchases and mandatory retailer take-back requirements.

This is a regulated fee — required or governed by law in the jurisdictions below.

United States5 jurisdictionsMandatory

Overview

Several U.S. states impose recycling or disposal fees on the sale of large appliances (also called 'white goods'), including refrigerators, freezers, washers, dryers, and air conditioners. These fees fund proper disposal programs, particularly for appliances containing refrigerants, mercury, or other hazardous materials. Some states require retailers to accept old appliances for recycling when delivering new ones (take-back mandates). Fee structures vary: some charge advance disposal fees at the point of sale, while others fund programs through general waste management fees. Online appliance retailers must understand which states require consumer-facing fees versus retailer-funded take-back programs.

Fee schedule by jurisdiction

5 jurisdictions with active fee requirements.

JurisdictionFee
CaliforniaNo separate POS fee — producer-funded program
ConnecticutDisposal fees apply via municipal programs
OregonNo POS fee — manufacturer take-back requirement
WashingtonNo POS fee — manufacturer-funded recycling
Federal (EPA Section 608)No consumer fee — regulatory compliance requirement

California

No separate POS fee — producer-funded program

Major household appliances containing refrigerants or hazardous materials

CalRecycle oversees proper disposal. Retailers must accept old appliances upon delivery of new ones in many cases.

Connecticut

Disposal fees apply via municipal programs

Refrigerators, freezers, air conditioners, and other CFC-containing appliances

Municipal transfer stations charge disposal fees; no statewide point-of-sale fee

Oregon

No POS fee — manufacturer take-back requirement

Electronics and some large appliances

Oregon E-Cycles and manufacturer responsibility programs cover collection costs

Washington

No POS fee — manufacturer-funded recycling

Electronics and appliances with screens or refrigerants

Covered under Washington's E-Cycle program for electronics; refrigerant-containing appliances handled through EPA Section 608 requirements

Federal (EPA Section 608)

No consumer fee — regulatory compliance requirement

All appliances containing refrigerants (CFCs, HCFCs, HFCs)

EPA requires proper refrigerant recovery before disposal. Violations can result in fines up to $44,539 per day per violation.

Enforcement

Federal EPA regulations require proper refrigerant recovery from appliances before disposal, with fines up to $44,539 per day for violations. State-level penalties vary but may include fines for improper disposal and enforcement actions against retailers who fail to meet take-back obligations.

Shopify compliance

This is a mandatory fee — merchants selling in covered jurisdictions are legally required to collect it. Shopify requires that mandatory fees be clearly disclosed to customers before checkout. Use a Shopify app like Magical Fees to automate collection and ensure compliance.

Last updated: Feb 20, 2026Last verified: Feb 20, 2026Review cycle: annually

This information is maintained by the Magical Apps team and reviewed annually. Always consult official government sources for the most current requirements.

Quick facts

Regulation
State Appliance Recycling and Disposal Fee Laws
Country
United States
Jurisdictions
5
Category
Recycling Fees

Explore U.S. Appliance Recycling and Disposal Fees in practice

See how to automate this fee on Shopify and browse other regulations in this category.

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Reference for U.S. state electronics recycling and e-waste disposal programs. Twenty-five states plus D.C. have e-waste recycling laws; California is the only state that charges a consumer-facing fee at point of sale.

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