One of the first things that surprises Indians moving to Germany is the rubbish. Not because it smells — but because there is a system, and the system expects you to know it. Neighbours notice. Landlords mention it. And if you get it wrong, your bag might be left uncollected with a passive-aggressive sticker on it.
This guide explains every bin, what goes where, and the things that trip up almost everyone in the first few months.
Quick Reference
The 5 Bins at a Glance
The Gelber Sack — Yellow Bag (Packaging)
The yellow bag (or yellow bin in some cities) is for anything with the Grüner Punkt (Green Dot) symbol — essentially all packaging made of plastic, metal, or composite material.
- Plastic bottles, yoghurt pots, margarine tubs
- Aluminium foil, tins, cans
- Tetra Pak (juice/milk cartons) — yes, even though they feel like cardboard
- Plastic bags, bubble wrap, polystyrene trays
- Tube packaging (toothpaste, cream)
Common mistake: Putting food-stained packaging in the yellow bag is fine — you do not need to wash everything spotless. A quick rinse is enough.
The Blaue Tonne — Blue Bin (Paper)
Paper and cardboard only. Flatten boxes before putting them in — this is not optional in most buildings, it’s expected.
- Newspapers, magazines, books (without hard covers)
- Cardboard boxes (flattened)
- Envelopes, paper bags, wrapping paper
- Egg cartons, toilet roll cores
Not paper: Greasy pizza boxes go in the black bin, not the blue. Wax-coated paper (like some food packaging) also goes in the black bin.
The Braune Tonne — Brown Bin (Organic)
All food and garden waste. This is the bin most Indians underuse — and it matters, because organic waste in the black bin creates a smell problem and slows composting.
- Vegetable peels, fruit scraps, eggshells
- Cooked food leftovers (including meat and fish)
- Tea bags, coffee grounds and filters
- Bread, rice, pasta
- Garden trimmings, leaves, flowers
Indian kitchen note: Dal water, used spices, and leftover sabzi all belong here. You can use compostable bags (marked with the seedling symbol) to line the bin — regular plastic bags are not allowed.
The Schwarze Tonne — Black Bin (Residual)
This is the catch-all bin for everything that does not belong anywhere else. In Germany, the goal is to keep this bin as empty as possible — it is the most expensive to process and the least environmentally friendly.
- Nappies, hygiene products
- Ceramic, porcelain, mirrors (small pieces)
- Vacuum cleaner bags, ash (cold only)
- Greasy or wax-coated paper
- Composite items that cannot be separated
Glass — The Glascontainer
Glass does not go in your building bins. It goes into communal glass containers on the street, separated by colour: white (Weißglas), brown (Braunglas), and green (Grünglas).
Important: Do not use the glass containers between 10 pm and 7 am — noise laws apply. Your neighbours will definitely hear you.
Indian Kitchen
Where Does It Actually Go?
Pfand — The Bottle Deposit System
Many plastic and glass bottles in Germany carry a Pfand deposit of €0.08–€0.25. Do not throw these in the bin — return them to any supermarket with a Pfand machine (Leergutautomat) and get your money back. Look for the Pfand symbol on the label.
Sperrmüll — Bulky Waste
Large items like furniture, mattresses, and appliances cannot go in any bin. You need to arrange a Sperrmüll (bulky waste) collection — usually free, booked through your city’s waste management website. In many cities, you can leave items on the street the evening before collection and neighbours often take them first.
Elektroschrott — Electronics
Old phones, cables, chargers, small appliances — none of these go in any bin. Take them to a designated Elektroschrott drop-off point, usually at large supermarkets (Saturn, MediaMarkt) or city recycling centres (Wertstoffhof).
Remember
The Golden Rules
- When in doubt, black bin — but use it as little as possible
- No glass in building bins — always the street container
- Return Pfand bottles to the supermarket
- Flatten cardboard before the blue bin
- No noise at the glass container after 10 pm
- Book Sperrmüll online — do not leave furniture outside without a booking