Skip to main content
CityRuleLookup
πŸ—‘οΈ Trash & Recycling/Recycling Requirements

Recycling Requirements: Castro Valley vs Hayward

How do recycling requirements rules compare between Castro Valley, CA and Hayward, CA?

Castro Valley and Hayward have similar restriction levels.

Castro Valley, CA

Alameda County

Heavy Restrictions

Alameda County mandates recycling and organics separation under SB 1383 and StopWaste Mandatory Recycling Ordinance. Residents must separate paper, containers, and organics.

View full Castro Valley rules β†’

Hayward, CA

Alameda County

Heavy Restrictions

Hayward follows California AB 341, AB 1826, and SB 1383, requiring residents and businesses to separate recyclables and organics from the landfill stream.

View full Hayward rules β†’

Key Facts Comparison

FactCastro ValleyHayward
LawsSB 1383, StopWaste Mandatory Recycling Ordinance-
StreamsGarbage, recycling, organics required-
ContaminationMay incur service fees-
ContactStopWaste (510) 891-6500-
Residential streams-Blue recycling, green organics
State laws-AB 341, AB 1826, SB 1383
MF threshold-5 or more units
Edible food-Tier 1 and 2 recovery

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Castro Valley FAQ

Do I have to separate food scraps?

Yes. California SB 1383 mandates organics separation including food scraps for all residents and businesses statewide.

What plastics are recyclable in Alameda County?

Rigid plastic containers (bottles, tubs, jugs) are recyclable. Plastic bags, film, and foam go in the garbage. Check stopwaste.org for the guide.

Hayward FAQ

Can I put plastic bags in recycling?

No. Plastic bags jam sorting equipment; take clean film plastic to grocery store take-back bins and keep the blue cart bag-free.

What happens if my cart is contaminated?

Contaminated carts may receive a tag, a warning, and eventually contamination fees or reclassification as garbage service.

Want to add a third city?

Use our full comparison tool to compare up to three cities.

Open Comparison Tool