The 8 London boroughs with weekly bin collections as UK councils dropping fortnight pick ups mapped

Staff
By Staff

There are just 10 councils which retain the traditional weekly collection of household waste bins and of these, only two are outside London

While a new interactive map show how millions of people across the UK face losing fortnightly ‘black bin’ collections there are eight London boroughs which are receiving weekly collections. Bin collections are being reviewed by town hall chiefs in response to government initiatives to hit recycling targets, as well as the pressure of tightening budgets.

Many authorities across the country are planning to cut back on the frequency of collecting non-recyclable household waste, which in many areas is placed in black or grey wheelie bins. At least ten councils – none in London – are planning to switch from fortnightly to three-weekly collections of general household waste in the next few months.

It means that a total of more than 40 local authorities in the UK will have the reduced service in place by the end of next year as the policy spreads to more areas. The eight London boroughs still providing weekly collections, however, are Barnet, Hammersmith and Fulham, Kensington and Chelsea, Westminster, Islington, Tower Hamlets, Redbridge and Barking and Dagenham. You can see all the areas affected in this interactive map:

Councils in England are bringing in changes ahead of the government’s “Simpler Recycling” legislation which will require local authorities to meet more stringent recycling requirements by March 2027. The policy was published in November last year, with the government declaring that it would help solve the ‘muddled and confusing patchwork of approaches’ to bin collections.

But it did not include a rule which Rishi Sunak’s government had proposed, requiring councils to ‘provide a minimum standard of a fortnightly collection’ for residual waste – opening the way for more local authorities to move to three-weekly collections.

Earlier this week West Berkshire became the latest area to switch to collecting non-recyclable waste every three weeks instead of fortnightly. Councillor Stuart Gourley, in charge of environmental issues at the authority, said: “We’re seeing some new government legislation coming in 2027/28 and if we carry on doing what we’re doing now, we could end up with an extra £1.4m bill to pay.”

Recycling and waste collection policy is overseen by the devolved governments in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. More than half of local authorities in Wales already have three-weekly collections for non-recyclable waste – Wales has the highest recycling rates in the UK and the Welsh government is aiming to be a ‘zero waste’ nation by 2050.

Last year, the Scottish government passed a Circular Economy Act which set new targets for local authorities on household waste and recycling. In four UK council areas – Clackmannanshire and Falkirk in Scotland and Conwy and Denbighshire in Wales – general household waste bins are now collected every FOUR weeks, and another council – East Ayrshire – will also move to the four-week schedule from May next year.

Of the 362 waste collecting local authorities in the UK, the majority still have fortnightly bin collections but in the last few months several councils in England have announced plans to move from collecting general waste bin collections every two weeks to once every three weeks.

A survey of waste collecting policies by councils in the UK shows that a total of around 2 million people will be affected by the announced changes and more councils could join the move to collecting waste once every three weeks. Across the UK, our survey found that there are currently a total of 34 local authorities which collect general waste every three weeks, with a further 10 councils set to join them between now and June 2026. Nine of the ten councils making the change are in England.

It means that by the end of next year nearly one in eight UK local authorities will be collecting general household rubbish less frequently than every two weeks. There are just 10 councils which retain the traditional weekly collection of household waste bins and of these, only two – Portsmouth and Milton Keynes – are outside of central London.

Councils collecting non-recyclable waste every three weeks

Here is a list of council areas where general, non-recyclable waste household waste is already collected every three weeks, plus areas which have announced plans to move to three-weekly collection in the coming months:

England

North Somerset

West Northamptonshire

East Devon

Mid Devon

North Hertfordshire

Warwick

East Hertfordshire

Bury

Salford

Oldham

Rochdale

Somerset

Wigan

Bracknell Forest

Blackpool (from April 2026)

South Gloucestershire (from May 2026)

West Berkshire (from September 2025)

Cheshire East (from April 2026)

Braintree (from June 2026)

Lancaster (from April 2026)

Mid Suffolk (from June 2026)

Mid Sussex (from November 2025)

East Suffolk (from 2026)

Scotland

Aberdeenshire

Argyll and Bute

East Dunbartonshire

East Renfrewshire

Glasgow

North Ayrshire

North Lanarkshire

South Ayrshire

Moray

West Dunbartonshire (from November 2025)

Wales

Isle of Anglesey

Blaenau Gwent

Flintshire

Gwynedd

Ceredigion

Carmarthenshire

Vale of Glamorgan

Newport

Pembrokeshire Powys

Rhondda Cynon Taf

There is no central official record kept of the frequency of non-recyclable waste collections in each local authority in the four nations of the UK, and the above list and map is based on a survey of publicly-declared waste collection policies across 362 waste-collecting authorities.

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