Most food scrap drop-off programs accept houseplants, cut flowers, and small plant trimmings. Large quantities of yard waste (grass clippings, branches, leaves) often need to go to a separate yard waste drop-off — check your local public works department for those programs.
What Plant Material Is Generally Accepted
- Dead or living houseplants (including potting soil at many sites)
- Cut flowers and floral arrangements (remove plastic or foam florist materials)
- Small plant trimmings from indoor herbs and houseplants
- Small amounts of yard trimmings at many sites
- Loose leaves in small quantities
What Typically Needs to Go to a Yard Waste Program
- Large quantities of grass clippings
- Bags of leaves
- Tree branches and large woody material
- Brush and shrub trimmings in bulk
Most municipalities run separate yard waste drop-off programs (often at transfer stations) that operate independently from food scrap programs. Check your city or county public works website for yard waste drop-off locations.
Specific Program Rules
NYC's smart bins accept "house plants and flowers" explicitly. NYC community garden drop-offs also accept yard waste and houseplants. Chicago's program does not accept yard waste. Portland OR's curbside system accepts all yard waste with food scraps. Check your specific program's accepted materials list for definitive guidance.