The landfill levy is one of the single largest components of your waste management bill, yet most businesses have no idea what rate they are actually paying or how it compares to other states. If your business operates in multiple states, or you are simply trying to understand why your waste costs keep rising, this guide breaks down the current levy rates across Australia and explains what they mean for your bottom line.
What Is the Waste Levy?
The waste levy (also called the landfill levy) is a government-imposed charge on every tonne of waste deposited at landfill. It is designed to discourage landfill disposal and incentivise recycling and resource recovery. The levy is set by each state government and varies significantly depending on where your business is located.
The levy is paid by the landfill operator, but it is passed through to businesses via their waste invoices. It typically appears as a separate line item, though some providers bundle it into their per-lift rates, making it harder to identify. Understanding how to spot the levy on your invoice is covered in our guide to hidden fees on waste invoices.
2026 Levy Rates by State
Here are the current landfill levy rates as of the 2025-26 financial year. Note that rates can differ between metropolitan and regional areas, and between different waste types.
| State | Metro Rate (per tonne) | Regional Rate (per tonne) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| NSW | $171.30 | $88.20 | Highest metro levy in Australia |
| South Australia | $156.00 | $78.00 | Second highest, strong diversion incentive |
| Victoria | $106.19 | $35.40 | Large metro/regional gap |
| Queensland | $95.00 | $95.00 | Flat rate, no metro/regional split |
| Western Australia | $70.00 | $70.00 | Putrescible waste rate; inert waste lower |
| Tasmania | $7.50 | $7.50 | Minimal levy |
| ACT | Varies | N/A | Gate fee based, no published per-tonne levy |
| NT | No levy | No levy | No landfill levy in place |
A business sending 100 tonnes of waste to landfill pays $10,619 in levy costs in Melbourne, but $17,130 for the same waste in Sydney. That is a $6,511 difference driven entirely by geography.
Victoria in Detail
Since most of our clients are based in Victoria, it is worth looking at the Victorian levy structure more closely. The Victorian landfill levy has increased steadily over the past decade and shows no signs of plateauing.
Victoria distinguishes between three main waste categories for levy purposes:
- Municipal waste — Waste from households and council collections
- Commercial and industrial (C&I) waste — Waste from businesses, which is what most of our clients generate
- Construction and demolition (C&D) waste — Waste from building and demolition activities
The metro rate of $106.19 per tonne applies to both C&I and C&D waste disposed at metropolitan landfills. The regional rate is significantly lower at $35.40 per tonne. However, most Melbourne businesses use metropolitan landfills due to transport costs, so the metro rate is what appears on your invoice.
How Levy Increases Affect Your Costs
Levy rates across most states have been increasing by 3 to 10 per cent per year. This means your waste costs are going up even if your waste volumes remain the same and your provider has not changed their base rates.
Many waste contracts include levy pass-through clauses that allow the provider to increase your rates in line with levy increases, outside of any CPI adjustments. This is standard practice, but it means your total cost can creep up significantly over the life of a multi-year contract.
For a Melbourne business currently paying $106.19 per tonne in levy, a five per cent annual increase would see that rate reach approximately $135 per tonne within five years. On 200 tonnes of waste per year, that is an extra $5,762 in levy costs alone.
How Levies Differ by Waste Type
Not all waste attracts the same levy. Understanding this is key to reducing your overall levy exposure:
- General waste to landfill — Full levy applies. This is the most expensive waste stream.
- Recycled materials — No levy applies to material that is genuinely recycled (sent to a recycling facility, not landfill). This is why recycling is almost always cheaper than general waste.
- Organic waste to composting — No levy if diverted to a licensed composting or anaerobic digestion facility.
- Construction and demolition waste — Same levy rate in Victoria, but lower in some other states for inert waste (concrete, bricks, soil).
- Prescribed industrial waste — Additional levies and fees apply on top of the standard levy rate in Victoria.
Impact on Businesses Operating Across States
If your business has sites in multiple states, levy differences can create significant cost variations between locations. A site in Sydney generating the same waste volumes as a site in Melbourne will pay 61 per cent more in levy costs. A site in Perth will pay 34 per cent less.
This has practical implications for waste strategy. Businesses with multi-state operations should:
- Ensure waste contracts account for state-specific levy rates rather than using a blended national rate
- Prioritise waste diversion programs in high-levy states where the financial return is greatest
- Check that levy pass-through clauses in contracts reference the correct state levy schedule
- Consider whether waste is being disposed of in the most cost-effective jurisdiction (for border regions)
Strategies to Reduce Your Levy Exposure
The levy only applies to waste that goes to landfill. The most effective way to reduce your levy costs is to divert waste away from landfill through recycling, composting, and source reduction. Here are the most practical strategies:
Increase Recycling Rates
Every tonne of recyclable material (cardboard, paper, plastics, metals, glass) diverted from general waste to a recycling stream avoids the full landfill levy. At Victorian metro rates, that is a saving of $106.19 per tonne before you even account for the difference in collection costs.
Divert Organics
Food and organic waste sent to composting facilities avoids the levy entirely. For food-heavy businesses like restaurants, hotels, and food manufacturers, organic diversion can be the single biggest cost-reduction strategy.
Source Reduction
The cheapest waste is the waste you do not produce. Review purchasing decisions, packaging requirements, and operational processes to identify where waste generation can be reduced at the source. Our guide to creating a waste reduction plan covers this in detail.
Use a Waste Partner
A waste partner can analyse your waste composition, identify diversion opportunities, and restructure your waste setup to minimise levy exposure. We regularly help Melbourne businesses reduce their effective levy costs by 20 to 40 per cent through better waste stream separation and right-sizing.
Checking Your Invoice
The first step to managing your levy costs is knowing how much you are currently paying. Check your waste invoices for levy line items. Some providers show the levy separately; others bundle it into the per-lift rate. If you cannot identify the levy component on your invoice, ask your provider for a rate breakdown.
Compare the levy rate on your invoice to the current state rate listed above. If it is higher, your provider may be adding a margin to the levy pass-through — which is a red flag worth investigating.
If you would like us to review your invoices and identify opportunities to reduce your levy exposure, request a free audit. We benchmark your rates, including levy charges, against current market data.
