Plastic Wrap and Bags

Plastic bag/wrap/film facts

  • Plastic bags are among the most common sources of marine debris, where they can be mistaken as food by birds and fish.
  • Plastic bags donโ€™t biodegrade, meaning it will take hundreds of years for them to decompose in a landfill. (www.earth911)
  • More than 4.83 million tons of plastic film has been generated before 2020 and only about 9.1% of that plastic is recycled. (www.ecologycenter.org)
  • Today, we use about 100 billion plastic bags each year in the US, with the average lifespan of just 12 minutes per bag. (environmentamerica.org)
    • Thatโ€™s 300 per person!

Recycling plastic bags

What can I drop at the grocery store?
Various collection programs are used by local retailers. For example, Stop&Shop and Shawโ€™s use NexTrex to recycle plastic wrap into โ€œeco-friendly outdoor productsโ€. For the full list of items that NexTrex accepts, please visit nextrex.com/view/educate.

ACCEPTED (partial list)
Please recycle only clean, dry plastic bags and film. NexTrex mainly accepts polyethylene (PE) plastic film (#2 and #4).

  • Remove receipts and any other items from bags.
  • If the package will stretch when you pull it, it can be included.
  • Retail, carryout, produce, newspaper, bread, dry cleaning bags
  • Zip-top food storage bags (clean and dry)
  • Plastic shipping envelopes (remove labels), bubble wrap and air pillows (deflate)
  • Product wrap on cases of water bottles, paper towels, diapers
  • Plastic cereal box liners (but if it tears like paper, do not include)

NOT ACCEPTED
If it tears like paper, is shiny, or makes a crinkly/crunchy sound in your hand, donโ€™t put it in the bin.

  • Black plastic bags are generally not accepted.
  • Degradable/compostable bags or film packaging
  • Pre-washed salad mix bags and frozen food bags
  • Candy bar wrappers and chip bags

What about the โ€œcompostableโ€ produce bags?
“Compostable” bags are designed to break down in controlled settings, but they don’t always decompose completely in home compost, leaving behind plastic-like fragments. 

More information

Check out these resources for more information.