Did you know that Amazon will recycle your old small electronic devices for free?

Cal Jeffrey

Posts: 4,176   +1,424
Staff member
Why it matters: What do you do with your old phones, corrupted hard drives, and other electronic devices? My family has a junk drawer. I always promise to clean out and take the e-waste to a recycler, but I never do. The closest recycler is an hour's drive from me, so it's not very convenient to make the side trip. Some day maybe.

Fortunately, Amazon has had an easier way to rid yourself of electronic junk for a while — aside from throwing it in the landfill. Please don't do that.

Over the weekend, The Verge noticed a tweet from technologist Dave Zatz pointing out that Amazon has a small electronics recycling program. All you need to do is box the stuff up and apply for a shipping label through Amazon's recycling portal. Then drop off the package at your local UPS store. Or, if you're business has regular pickups, place it with the rest of the outgoing parcels.

Your junk is sent to Amazon's third-party recycling partner Re-Teck, which will erase or destroy any identifying marks or personal information, then send it for "material reclamation." Amazon recommends performing a factory reset or zeroing drives before sending them in, but this is not a prerequisite, especially for non-functional devices. Amazon also suggests checking its trade-in page first to see if any of your e-waste qualifies for a trade-in on other purchases since these two programs are different.

Both have been around for several years. Amazon launched its trade-in program in 2011, and the recycling initiative has existed since at least 2018. However, Amazon's recycling page is hard to find unless you already know about it. There are no direct links on the store website, and we could only find it by performing a search query on the customer service page.

The resulting recycling site is also hosted under the "amazonrecycling" domain name. Despite its difficulty to find it organically, once there, you will find a web form to fill out with the appropriate information, including name, address, email, and what devices are in the shipment. After registration, you will receive a shipping label to apply to the package.

The program is open to anyone, not just Prime members or Amazon customers, but it is not without limitations. Televisions, PC towers, or other large appliances do not qualify. However, Re-Teck accepts all the smaller obvious suspects like smartphones, e-readers, tablets, chargers, gaming consoles, controllers, keyboards, and other peripherals. Essentially, anything that can fit in a small box should be acceptable. However, the recycler will not take loose batteries or devices with leaking or swollen power cells.

Image credit: Jeremy Keith

Permalink to story.

 
*Smacks* Bad Cal Jeffrey, bad! No sponsored posts, you.

Instead of giving *usable* technology to a megacorporation that is going to turn a profit off it, why not list it on FreeCycle / Marketplace / Kijiji / Craigslist, or even take it to a thrift store? Give people in need a chance to use it, to enjoy it.

It really doesn't help that Amazon also sells refurbished things. Does Amazon really need your help with filling its shelves?

Why not write us a useful piece about how to wipe Apple / Android devices, how to use dBan, and hell, even at your laziest, suggest people support small businesses.
 
Can't wait to send these old devices to Africa so people can get exposed to heavy metals while "recycling"

Cheers to all the cobalt or hexavailent-chromium
 
*Smacks* Bad Cal Jeffrey, bad! No sponsored posts, you.

Instead of giving *usable* technology to a megacorporation that is going to turn a profit off it, why not list it on FreeCycle / Marketplace / Kijiji / Craigslist, or even take it to a thrift store? Give people in need a chance to use it, to enjoy it.

It really doesn't help that Amazon also sells refurbished things. Does Amazon really need your help with filling its shelves?

What, even the broken ones or the hardware that is so out of date to be effectively unusable? I found a 256 Mbyte USB drive in a drawer not long ago.
 
What, even the broken ones or the hardware that is so out of date to be effectively unusable? I found a 256 Mbyte USB drive in a drawer not long ago.
They need not be used as phones. Photography and games, maybe even check the weather over wireless. That's all something I do
 
In Australia we have e-waste recycling centre, that take it for free and many larger stores have e-waste recycling for batteries, phones, cables, ink cartridges, all for free. Amazon is not doing anything magnanimous IMO.
 
Back