Paint Disposal · Phoenix, AZ · Local guide
Latex Paint Disposal in Phoenix
Arizona has NO PaintCare program — do not expect PaintCare drop-offs. Options: (1) GreenSheen Paint in Phoenix (1626 S 51st Ave, 602-278-6445) accepts latex/acrylic in original containers, no volume limit, charged by the pound; (2) Mesa HHM facility (2412 N Center St) and Chandler HHW (appointment, 480-782-3510, max 25 gal) accept latex paint free for residents; (3) Phoenix HHW home pickup accepts it within the annual collection. Small quantities (<1 inch in can) can be air-dried and trashed — Phoenix garage heat actually accelerates this.
Where to drop off latex paint disposal in Phoenix
3 local options, verified against listing sources.
Maricopa County household hazardous waste program
City of Phoenix HHW Program
Free at-home HHW pickup, capped at one collection per residential solid waste account per calendar year. Schedule by phone.
Phone: (602) 262-6251 · Website: official program page ↗
Other local programs
-
Maricopa County Waste Resources & Recycling (Transfer Stations)
County transfer stations (e.g., Cave Creek, Hassayampa, Rainbow Valley) accept TVs, computers, printers, gaming systems, and other electronics as standard intake (CRT monitors $21/each, appliances $8/each, vehicle-based load fees $6-$12). Up to 5 gallons of used oil/antifreeze per visit accepted free. Explicitly DO NOT accept household batteries or HHW.
Phone: 602-506-4006
-
City of Mesa Household Hazardous Materials Facility
Permanent year-round drop-off for Mesa residents at 2412 N. Center St., Bldg. #2, Mesa (Wed-Sat 7am-2pm). Accepts paint, automotive fluids, batteries, electronics, pesticides, cleaners, fireworks. Includes a Swap Shop for free reuse of paint, automotive fluids, and household chemicals.
-
City of Chandler Recycling-Solid Waste Collection Center (HHW by appointment)
Appointment-only HHW intake at 955 E. Queen Creek Rd., Chandler. Accepts up to 25 gallons paint (containers <=5 gal), 10 gal automotive fluids, rechargeable batteries, CFL/fluorescent bulbs, pool chemicals, propane tanks, cooking oil. Does NOT accept medications, ammunition, or large lithium batteries.
Phone: 480-782-3510
-
City of Scottsdale HHW Home Collection
Up to 3 free curbside HHW pickups per residential address per year. 2026 collection months: Jan-May and Jul-Nov (no June/December). Max 20 gallons per appointment; sign-ups open the 1st of each month at 8 a.m. Accepts paint, solvents, pesticides, pool chemicals, rechargeable batteries; does NOT accept electronics or appliances.
Phone: 480-312-5600
-
GreenSheen Paint Phoenix (latex paint recycler)
Privately operated latex paint and stain recycling facility at 1626 S. 51st Ave., Phoenix. Accepts latex (acrylic) paint in original containers, no quantity limit, but charges by the pound. Drop-off during business hours only.
Phone: 602-278-6445
-
Goodwill of Central and Northern Arizona + Dell Reconnect
Free drop-off of any brand/model of computer equipment at any Goodwill donation center (Phoenix metro has dozens of locations). Hard drives wiped at no charge. Does not accept TVs.
-
Call2Recycle drop-off network
Free rechargeable battery (and cellphone) drop-off at participating Phoenix-area Home Depot and Lowe's stores. Find your nearest store via the locator.
-
Li-Cycle Spoke 3 (lithium-ion processor, Gilbert)
Commercial lithium-ion battery recycling facility in Gilbert capable of processing full EV battery packs without dismantling (up to ~10,000 tonnes/year). B2B intake; not a consumer drop-off, but relevant for downstream traceability claims.
-
Heritage Battery Recycling / Cirba Solutions (Eloy)
Commercial Li-ion recycling facility in Eloy (Pinal County, between Phoenix and Tucson). Handles EV pack disassembly, sorting, diagnostics. Industrial intake only.
-
Westech Recyclers (Phoenix)
Full-service electronics recycling and ITAD company serving businesses and the community since 1999. R2 and NAID AAA certified. Free drop-off for most electronics. Provides secure data destruction.
Phone: (602) 256-7626
-
R3eWaste (Phoenix R2-certified recycler)
R2 and RIOS certified electronics recycler in Phoenix. Residential drop-offs Monday-Friday. Accepts computers, monitors, printers, and other electronics. Provides secure data destruction.
Phone: (602) 314-6061
What to know in Phoenix
Local rules and laws
- Arizona has NO statewide e-waste recycling mandate and NO landfill ban on consumer electronics. Disposal is voluntary and market-driven.
- Arizona adopts the federal Universal Waste Rule (under the Arizona Hazardous Waste Management Act, enforced by ADEQ): batteries (lithium, NiCd, mercury, silver-oxide, lead-acid), pesticides, mercury-containing devices, electric lamps (fluorescent/HID), and hazardous waste aerosol cans CANNOT be landfilled and must be recycled.
- Arizona prohibits the disposal of lead-acid batteries in landfills and the incineration of lead-acid batteries (per ADEQ).
- Arizona has NO paint stewardship law; PaintCare does NOT operate in Arizona. Any Phoenix-area page that lists PaintCare drop-offs is inaccurate.
- City of Phoenix limits HHW home pickup to one (1) collection per residential solid waste account per calendar year; eligibility requires a residential City Services account number.
- City of Phoenix uses an 'Oops/Shine On' curbside cart-tagging program: bins tagged 'Oops' (red) for contamination will not be collected after 2 weeks of repeated tags.
- Arizona Revised Statutes Title 49 (Environmental Quality): regulates solid waste management including transfer station operations, landfill bans, and universal waste. ARS § 49-863 specifically addresses the management of used oil.
Useful local details
- Garage and shed storage of leftover paint is risky in Phoenix: summer interior garage temperatures regularly exceed the 60-80F shelf-life range for latex paint, accelerating curing into an unusable rubbery solid that then must be handled as HHW. Local guides recommend climate-controlled storage or prompt disposal.
- Service split is unusual: the City of Phoenix runs HHW pickup but Maricopa County transfer stations explicitly REFUSE batteries and household hazardous waste. Residents who drive to a county transfer station with a bag of batteries will be turned away.
- East Valley residents have dedicated permanent HHW facilities (Mesa, Chandler) while Phoenix proper uses an at-home pickup model with annual frequency caps — the right channel depends entirely on which city's utility bill the resident pays.
- Phoenix Fire Department has publicly tied lithium-ion batteries to garbage-truck and MRF fires; PFD has co-hosted free battery drop-off events with Public Works (e.g., Steele Indian School Park during Fire Prevention Week, Oct 9, 2025, 3-6pm, with a 5-lb-per-resident cap).
- Scottsdale's HHW pickup explicitly excludes June and December from its 2026 calendar — likely a heat/holiday operational choice — so residents holding paint or pesticides into late spring should book by May.
- Mesa's HHM facility runs a Swap Shop where residents can take usable donated paint, automotive fluids, and chemicals for free — a regional quirk worth flagging on paint-disposal pages.
- Dust storm (haboob) and monsoon damage routinely destroys outdoor-stored electronics; local restoration guidance treats damaged electronics as hazardous waste rather than standard recycling intake.
- Arizona is not a PaintCare state, so no producer-funded paint take-back exists — residents rely on municipal HHW programs and GreenSheen (fee-based). This is a common point of confusion for Californians moving to Phoenix.
- Phoenix's 'Zero Waste' plan includes public education campaigns targeting lithium-ion battery disposal because of the growing fire risk at the North Gateway Transfer Station and MRF facilities.
- The Phoenix metro area is home to two major commercial Li-ion recycling facilities (Li-Cycle in Gilbert and Cirba Solutions in Eloy), making it one of the best-served regions for EV battery recycling infrastructure in the US — though both are B2B only.
For general paint disposal info — what's recyclable, how to prepare items, where the materials go — see the national paint disposal guide. For all Phoenix options, browse paint disposal in Phoenix.
Related Phoenix guides
Sources verified for this guide
- www.phoenix.gov/administration/departments/publicworks/residential-trash-recycling/household-hazardous-waste-collection.html
- www.maricopa.gov/3366/Accepted-Items-Fees
- www.mesaaz.gov/residents/trash-recycling/trash-recycling-for-single-family-homes/household-hazardous-materials-program
- www.chandleraz.gov/residents/recycling-and-trash/household-hazardous-waste-disposal
- www.scottsdaleaz.gov/solid-waste/collection-services/household-hazardous-waste
- www.paintcare.org/paintcare-states
- greensheenpaint.com/locations/greensheen-distribution-center-phoenix
- www.goodwillaz.org/dell-reconnect
- locations.call2recycle.org/az/phoenix
- www.azcommerce.com/news-events/news/2021/4/li-cycle-to-build-new-lithium-ion-battery-recycling-facility-in-arizona
- www.recyclingtoday.com/news/heritage-battery-recycling-to-construct-lithium-ion-battery-recycling-facility-in-arizona
- www.azdeq.gov/recycling-e-waste
- www.bestbuy.com/site/services/recycling/pcmcat149900050025.c
- www.r3ewaste.com
Updated · 2026-05-19