- 252 million tubes of toothpaste are sold in the UK every year.
- Colgate, Haleon and WRAP transform second most wish-cycled product and encourage more local authorities to collect toothpaste tubes at kerbside.
Asim Chaudhry, Warwick Davis, Josie Gibson and Big John voice four characters for Recycle Week campaign videos.
Whether you’re a roller or a squeezer, the age-old question of what to do with the tube once every inch of toothpaste has been used has finally been answered. For Recycle Week 2025, the humble toothpaste tube has become recyclable and should head for the recycling and not the bin from now on, meaning fewer landfillings for the UK.
Each year more than 252* million tubes of fluoride fresh toothpaste are sold in the UK. Twice a day, millions of us brush our teeth—yet until now, those toothpaste tubes have been a recycling nightmare, with tubes traditionally containing a sheet of aluminium sandwiched between the plastic rendering them a recycling nightmare. Today, that changes. In a landmark move driven by toothpaste brands including Colgate and Haleon, the makers of Sensodyne, Corsodyl and Aquafresh - in partnership with climate action NGO WRAP and industry, the UK’s second most wish-cycled** item is finally recyclable.
Now, toothpaste tubes are made from the same material as milk bottles using high-density polyethylene. This means all tubes, sold nationwide, are now technically 100% recyclable and can be recycled into a range of new items, from garden furniture and plastic piping to bleach bottles.
The new tubes are collected by a growing number of local authorities via their kerbside collections, or at any Boots store across the UK. WRAP recommends checking if your local authority collects tubes via the Recycle Now Locator. Full list below.
Catherine David, WRAP CEO, said “This is another game-changing moment for recycling. In partnership with Colgate and Haleon, we’ve taken one of the most infuriating packaging formats and given it a sustainable makeover. We're on a mission to ensure all items that can be recycled are recycled, and I’m delighted that now no toothpaste tube need become a landfilling! And many other items that we bin can in fact be recycled so if unsure, check the Recycle Now locator and keep the packaging out of the bin."
More and more local authorities are now accepting toothpaste tubes, with 3 million households now able to accept tubes in their kerbside collections*** alongside plastic pots, tubs and trays, which are made of the same material. WRAP, which works with councils to improve and increase collections, is leading a drive to encourage more to check with their recycling facilities and add toothpaste tubes to their collections.
Adrian Sen, Sustainability Innovation Senior Manager, Colgate-Palmolive “At Colgate-Palmolive, we're reimagining a healthier future for people, their pets and our planet. We are committed to making all our packaging recyclable, reusable or compostable and have been a pioneer in introducing recyclable toothpaste tubes to the market. It's important to us to make this technology available to all. The leadership and collaborative spirit of WRAP have been vital in helping to make this a reality and create awareness with consumers. Their work in bringing together industry, local authorities, and consumers is crucial for building a more circular economy. We are grateful for their guidance and partnership as we continue our journey to eliminate plastic waste and reimagine a healthier future for all people and our planet.”
Joe Muscat, Environmental Sustainability & Innovation Director, Haleon "WRAP’s collaborative approach and deep expertise have been instrumental in helping Haleon ‘rescue’ materials that were once considered unrecyclable. Thanks to WRAP’s leadership, we’ve turned toothpaste tubes from unrecyclable waste into packaging that can now be part of a truly circular economy. With more local authorities starting to collect them, we’re urging others to follow suit and help rescue millions more tubes from the rubbish bin.”
Boots continues to support Recycle Week, with stores across the UK accepting toothpaste tubes and other hard-to-recycle items through their Recycle at Boots scheme, where Advantage Card points can be earned for participating.
Candice Smith, Head of ESG at Boots, “We love helping our customers to be more sustainable with their habits at home, so are pleased that recycling toothpaste tubes is going to become easier for everyone in the future. In the meantime, you can still recycle all of your hard to recycle health and beauty empties, including old toothbrushes, empty serum tubes, plastic packaging from wipes, and cosmetic packaging at Boots – and get rewarded in the process!”
The tube revolution comes as the UK celebrates the annual Recycle Week, delivered by WRAP’S Recycle Now campaign in partnership with businesses and local authorities. With toothpaste tubes now in the crosshairs for many recycling crews, three new characters have also been added to the Rescue Me! Recycle campaign to raise awareness of the range of common household items that can be recycled, but too often end up in the residual bin.

These include aluminium foil, shampoo bottles, toothpaste tubes, trigger sprays, aerosols, yoghurt pots, aftershave and perfume bottles, and toilet roll tubes. WRAP estimates**** that approximately 79% of households miss 2 items or more on average per week, meaning 2.3 billion of these items are binned every year when they could be recycled.
Recycle Now is urging consumers to rescue these recyclables from the rubbish by checking via the Recycle Now Recycling Locator what’s accepted as part of their kerbside collection, household recycling centres or through in-store retail collections.
Celebrities Asim Chaudhry (Minty the toothpaste tube), Warwick Davis (Trigger the spray bottle), Josie Gibson (Ally the aluminium foil), and Big John (Rolly the toilet roll tube) are voicing the characters of four of the eight most wasted packaging items for a special social media and digital advertising campaign during Recycle Week.
Other characters include: Shampers (the shampoo bottle), Spritz (the perfume bottle), Yogi (the yoghurt pot) and Deo (the aerosol).
Notes to Editor
- The UK puts *252 million tubes of toothpaste onto the market every year. Circana, (2025), Circana Data Portal - custom data toothpaste units sold in a 52 week period in the UK. Retrieved 16/08/25
- **Toothpaste tubes are the second most ‘wish-cycled’ item in the UK (25%) behind drinking glasses (33%), food & drink foil pouches (25%), plastic film lids (22%) and glass cookware (22%). Wish-cycling is when people put an item that cannot be recycled in with the recycling.
- ***Under simpler Recycling legislation, all local authorities will have to collect toothpaste tubes by the end of March 2026. WRAP is working to raise awareness of the change. Currently 37 local authorities collect toothpaste tubes at kerbside. They include
- Breckland District Council
- Chorley Borough Council
- Adur and Worthing Borough Council
- Preston City Council
- Dorset council
- Somerset Council
- Stockton-on-Tees Borough Council
- Pendle Borough Council
- Fylde Borough Council
- South Oxfordshire District Council
- Vale of White Horse District Council
- Cardiff Council
- West Northamptonshire Council
- Chichester District Council
- Isle of Wight Council
- Middlesbrough Council
- West Lancashire District Council
- Blackburn with Darwen Borough Council
- North West Leicestershire District Council
- Newcastle-under-Lyme Borough Council
- Nuneaton and Bedworth Borough Council
- Sandwell Metropolitan Borough Council
- Huntingdonshire District Council
- Thurrock Borough Council
- London Borough of Waltham Forest
- London Borough of Richmond upon Thames
- Bath & North East Somerset Council
- Cornwall Council
- Swindon Borough Council
- North Somerset Council
- Arun District Council
- Bolsover District Council
- Horsham District Council
- Wyre Borough Council
- East Devon District Council
Basildon District Council
- **** Estimate 2,267,824,007 items across the UK/year. Based on WRAP's Local Authority scheme data as of September 2025 and research from WRAP's Recycling Tracker survey in the UK: Spring 2025 which surveyed 4,507 UK adults responsible for rubbish/recycling on recent disposal behaviours. Based on an average of 2.5 items missed/UK household/recycling collection.
- Recycle Week is the UK’s largest annual recycling campaign:
- www.recyclenow.com/RecycleWeek Download the toolkit here.
- For more than twenty years, Recycle Now has motivated people to recycle more things, more often from around the home. Using ground-breaking research and behaviour change science, it develops interventions and campaigns to motivate citizens to change their behaviour. Recycle Now is the citizen facing recycling campaign of WRAP.
- WRAP is a global environmental action NGO catalysing policy makers, businesses and individuals to transform the systems that create our food, textiles and manufactured products. Together these account for nearly 50% of global greenhouse emissions. Our goal is to enable the world to transition from the old take-make-dispose model of production to more sustainable approaches that will radically reduce waste and carbon emissions from everyday products. To do so we examine sustainability challenges through the lens of people’s day-to-day lives and create solutions that can transform entire systems to benefit the planet, nature and people.
- Our work includes: UK Plastics Pact, UK Food & Drink Pact, UK Textiles Pact and the campaigns Love Food Hate Waste and Recycle Now. We run Food Waste Action Week and Recycle Week.