Color-coded recycling dumpster lids in blue, green, brown, and gray HDPE — for single-stream and source-separated commercial recycling. Slotted options for paper, glass, and mixed recyclables. Fits Wastequip, JV Cram-a-lot, and more..
Recycling dumpster lids do two jobs that standard waste lids don't: visual identification (color signals which stream goes into which container) and (sometimes) intake restriction (slotted lids that only accept the right material — paper-slot, can-slot, glass-hole). Getting both right is the difference between a recycling program that works and one that ends up landfill-bound from contamination.
PRT stocks recycling lids in the standard waste-industry color codes — blue (paper and mixed), green (organics or glass depending on jurisdiction), brown (compost), gray (single-stream). Slot configurations available on volume orders.
Choose by color first (matching your jurisdiction's recycling code) and by container size second (recycling lids fit the same S-series and D-series profiles as waste lids). Add slot configuration if you need intake restriction.
Single-stream recycling — where everything goes in one container — usually doesn't need slotted lids. Source-separated programs (separate bins for paper, glass, plastic) benefit from slot restrictions to reduce contamination.
It depends on your jurisdiction. In most US cities: blue = paper or mixed recycling, green = glass or organics, brown = compost, gray = single-stream. Check your local recycling program for the exact color code.
Slotted lids are available — paper slot, can hole, glass-bottle hole — but most operators use plain lids for single-stream programs. Slots are typically for source-separated programs (commercial buildings with multiple bins).
Yes. PRT recycling lids use the same S-series and D-series profiles as standard waste lids. You can convert a waste container to recycling just by swapping the lid color.
Yes. Custom colors are available on volume orders. Most municipal and corporate recycling programs use a standard color code, but private operators sometimes want branded colors.