Clothing & Textile Recycling in Melbourne North Clothing & Textile Recycling in Melbourne North

Clothing & Textile Recycling in Melbourne North

Professional clothing & textile recycling for businesses across Melbourne North. We negotiate rates up to 30% lower than standard pricing.

$20-34/pickup
Typical Cost Range
up to 30%
Typical Savings
Melbourne North
Service Area

Looking for clothing & textile recycling in Melbourne North? Bundle Waste compares rates across a network of waste providers in Melbourne to find the best deal for your business. Our clients in Melbourne North typically save up to 30% on their clothing recycling costs.

How Much Does Clothing & Textile Recycling Cost in Melbourne North?

Bin Size / FrequencyPrice Range
240L-bin-per-pickup$20-34/pickup
660L-bin-per-pickup$34-56/pickup
1100L-bin-per-pickup$48-74/pickup
bulk-per-tonne$65-125/tonne
collection-bag-service$12-20/bag

Prices are indicative Melbourne market rates. Bundle Waste typically negotiates up to 30% below these rates.

Clothing & Textile Recycling Services Available

Collection and recycling of clothing, textiles, uniforms, linen, and fabric waste from businesses including hospitality, retail, healthcare, and corporate uniforms across Melbourne and regional Victoria.

Waste Types Covered

  • clothing
  • uniforms
  • linen
  • towels
  • curtains
  • carpet
  • fabric off-cuts
  • leather
  • shoes
  • rags

Bin Types Available

  • 240L textile bin
  • 660L textile bin
  • 1100L textile bin
  • cage bin
  • bulk bag (1m³)

Melbourne North-Specific Information

Melbourne's northern corridor stretches from the established inner suburbs of Brunswick and Coburg through to the industrial heartlands of Campbellfield, Somerton, and Epping. This region features a strong mix of manufacturing, warehousing, food production, and logistics operations along major arterials like the Hume Highway. Rapid residential growth in Craigieburn and surrounding areas is also driving new commercial development. Large volumes of industrial and manufacturing waste including metals, plastics, and timber. Food processing facilities generate significant organic waste. Warehousing and logistics operations produce high volumes of cardboard, shrink wrap, and pallets. Skip bins and front-lift services are common across industrial estates.

Regulations and Compliance

Victoria's Circular Economy Act 2024 and product stewardship frameworks are moving towards mandatory textile waste reduction. The National Clothing Product Stewardship Scheme (Seamless) launched in 2023.

Landfill Levy: Textiles in landfill incur the $169.79/tonne levy. An estimated 800,000 tonnes of textiles go to Australian landfill annually — textile recycling avoids this levy entirely.

  • Branded uniform destruction for security compliance
  • Textile waste increasingly targeted by Recycling Victoria landfill diversion goals
  • National Clothing Product Stewardship Scheme (Seamless) voluntary membership
  • Workplace donation of clean textiles may qualify for tax deductions under ITAA 1997

Industries We Serve in Melbourne North

Related Services and Locations

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does commercial textile recycling cost in Melbourne North?+
Commercial textile recycling in Melbourne North costs: 240L textile bin — $25-70/month (collected monthly), 660L bin — $45-110/month, bulk collection — $100-350/tonne. Clean, wearable clothing in good condition may be collected for free or at reduced rates as it has resale value. Soiled or damaged textiles cost more to process. Branded uniform destruction costs $2-6/kg due to the added security requirement. Bundle Waste negotiates up to 30% below standard textile collection rates and identifies free collection opportunities for high-quality textile streams.
What happens to recycled textiles in Melbourne North?+
Recycled textiles follow several pathways: wearable clothing (40-50% of collected items) is sorted, graded, and sold to second-hand markets domestically and internationally; worn but clean textiles become industrial wiping rags ($200-500/tonne value); fabric off-cuts and damaged textiles are shredded into fibre for insulation, furniture filling, and automotive padding; and remaining textiles (10-15%) become recycled yarn or are used as fuel in cement kilns. Major textile recyclers in Melbourne North include Upparel, SCR Group, and Textile Recyclers Australia. Less than 15% of collected textiles end up in landfill.
How can hotels reduce linen and textile waste?+
Hotel textile waste reduction: 1) Linen management programme — track linen life cycles and repair before replacing (extends life by 30-50%). 2) Towel reuse programme — saves up to 20% on laundry and replacement costs. 3) Donate retired-but-usable linen to charities (tax deductible under ITAA 1997). 4) Recycle damaged linen as industrial rags ($200-500/tonne value versus $169.79/tonne landfill cost). 5) Partner with a textile recycler for end-of-life uniforms and linen. A 200-room hotel generates approximately 2-4 tonnes of textile waste annually — proper recycling saves $500-1,500/year versus landfill disposal.
How much do skip bins cost in Melbourne's northern suburbs?+
Skip bins in Melbourne's north (Broadmeadows, Epping, Craigieburn) cost $220–400 for 4m³, $320–550 for 6m³, and $450–800 for 10m³. Prices are 5–10% below CBD rates. Industrial areas like Campbellfield and Somerton have competitive pricing due to proximity to transfer stations.
How much does clothing and textile recycling cost for businesses?+
Commercial textile recycling in Melbourne costs $0–3/kg depending on quality and volume. Good-condition clothing may be collected free. Damaged textiles cost $1–3/kg. Minimum collection is usually 100–200kg. Fashion retailers generating 50+ kg/month should arrange scheduled collections at $50–120/pickup.
What waste management does a Melbourne airport business need?+
Airport precinct businesses must comply with Melbourne Airport's waste management requirements in addition to standard regulations. Airport waste contracts are typically managed through the airport operator. Security-cleared waste operators may be required for airside operations. Costs are 10–20% higher than comparable off-airport businesses due to security and access requirements.

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Updated 25 June 2026