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LIVING IN AUSTRIA

EXPLAINED: The new rules about recycling household waste in Austria

Austria has very strict rules for waste separation and recycling. Here's what you need to know.

vienna trash cans and worker
Trash cans with funny sayings in Vienna (Photo: MA 48 / Christian Houdek)

Waste separation is definitely a tricky subject for many people who have recently moved to Austria. Make a mistake and your neighbour will angrily let you know. The good news is that things are about to get simplified as the country has decided on a standard for waste separation.

From now on, all packaging that is not glass or paper goes in the yellow garbage cans of the cities. This includes plastic packaging such as fruit cups, yoghurt pots or bubble wrap. 

Here is what you need to know about recycling in Austria:

Yellow bins: lightweight packaging

Since January 1st, 2023, all packaging except glass and paper will be collected in the yellow garbage bins. 

Lightweight packaging is mainly made of plastic or metal (aluminium or tinplate). Composite materials, for example, beverage cartons, also count as lightweight packaging. Other examples include plastic bottles for food, cans, jar lids, and other packaging that are not made of glass or paper.

Do not throw in any plastic objects (such as children’s toys, for example), any extremely dirty packaging, plastic coffee capsules or large waste.

READ ALSO: How to dispose of unwanted furniture or whitegoods in Vienna legally

Brown bins: Organic waste

Also known as Biomüll, it usually has a brown colour. This is where you should throw away your lawn, tree and hedge cuttings. Weeds, shrubs, windfall, leaves, water plants, unseasoned and uncooked fruit and vegetable scraps, stale bread, coffee grounds, or tea leaves. You can also throw away your Christmas tree in them (unless it is too large).

Organic waste disposal is no place for plastic, eco-plastic bags, or eco-plastic products. You should also not throw away meat, bones, food leftovers, large branches, eggs, dairy products, content from vacuum cleaner bags, cat litter, varnished or laminated wood, hazardous waste, composite materials such as nappies or milk cartons, or soil.

Red bins: Paper and cardboard

The Altpapier Karton, a red-coloured waste carton, is where you should dump your newspapers, magazines, catalogues, brochures, books, writing paper, letters, copybooks and telephone directories, as well as clean frozen food boxes, paper bags, and cardboard boxes (folded or filled with paper).

This is not a place to drop any composite materials, such as milk and beverage cartons, carbon paper, dirty papers, wet wipes or kitchen rolls (which belong in the residual waste with other heavily soiled paper) or receipts.

READ ALSO: Why does Vienna’s waste department have a helicopter and a military plane?

Grey bin with grey lid: Clear glass

The clear glass (Weissglass) container, a grey one, will hold clear non-returnable glass bottles and pickle jars (they should be empty but not necessarily cleaned). You can also drop clear, condensed milk, soft drinks, clear glass containers, and transparent wine and liquor bottles.

Do not throw in any coloured glass, bottle caps, corks, lead seals (such as champagne bottles), screw tops, plastic bottles, mirrors, window glass, flat or wired glass, light bulbs, china, crystal glass or drinking glasses.

Grey bin with green lid: Coloured glass

The green container is reserved for Buntglass or coloured glass. This is where you should throw your coloured non-returnable glass bottles, such as slightly coloured glass, wine, soft drinks, and liquor bottles.

Brown and green glass can go in here together, along with other non-clear glasses. 

Just as with the clear glass, it is essential not to throw bottle caps, corks, lead seals (such as the ones from champagne bottles), screw tops, plastic bottles, mirrors, window glass, flat or wired glass, light bulbs, china, ceramics, crystal glass or drinking glasses.

Black bin: Other waste

The black box will receive all your other waste (Restmüll) and any other residual waste that shouldn’t be thrown in the recycle bins and is not hazardous or bulky.

Hazardous waste or bulky trash

It is illegal to dispose of hazardous or bulky waste in these containers. Instead, there are several collection points in Vienna and other cities where you can leave them. City services will also collect bulky waste for a small fee.

Member comments

  1. I never knew that food leftovers and meat are not organic waste. So if I grow lettuce in my yard and need to dispose of part of it after making salad –> that’s NOT organic…. 🤔
    I don’t understand this logic – is this really what the source says?

    1. Hi, thanks for the comment – I know it can be very confusing, I’m always second guessing myself when separating the waste at home. About your lettuce, I believe it would be ok if it is unseasoned and uncooked (source says it’s ok “ungewürzte und ungekochte Obst- und Gemüseabfälle”). And if you get it from your garden and dispose of it with a bit of soil, as well (“Pflanzen mit geringen Mengen anhaftender Blumenerde im Wurzelbereich”).

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For members

HEALTH

Patients in Vienna face long waits for specialist health appointments

Waiting times to get appointments with health specialists in Vienna have increased significantly, a new study has revealed.

Patients in Vienna face long waits for specialist health appointments

Accessing essential healthcare within a reasonable timeframe is becoming increasingly difficult for Viennese residents.

The Vienna Medical Association presented their new study this week which shows that waiting times for appointments with health specialists have increased significantly in recent years.

The study, which involved contacting over 850 doctors’ practices via so-called “mystery calls,” revealed that child and adolescent psychiatry currently had the longest waiting times in the city.

Patients can expect to wait an average of 90 days for an appointment.

Other specialisations where patients have to wait long to receive help include radiology (57 days), neurology (45 days), ophthalmology (44 days), pulmonology (36 days), internal medicine (33 days), and dermatology (28 days).

The waiting time for seeing a gynaecologist has increased fourfold since 2012, with patients now waiting an average of 32 days.

READ MORE: Why are there fewer public sector doctors in Austria?

No new patients accepted

In certain specialist areas, there is no capacity to accommodate new patients. The situation where no new patients are accepted occurs particularly often in paediatric practices, where more than half of the public healthcare practices have put a freeze on admissions.

In child and adolescent psychiatry, 40 percent do not accept new patients, and among gynaecologists, it is almost a third (30 percent). Family doctors also struggle with welcoming new patients, and many of their practices have already reached full capacity.

The Medical Association calls for immediate action, urging the health insurance sector to become more attractive and receive better funding. This could involve measures to incentivise doctors to work within the public system, potentially reducing wait times and improving patient access to care.

During the study presentation, Johannes Steinhart, president of the association, described the increased waiting times as the result of neglect within the established health insurance sector. He said he believes that the public health system is massively endangered.

Naghme Kamaleyan-Schmied, chairwoman of the Curia of the resident doctors in the association, pointed out that while the population of the federal capital has grown by 16 percent since 2012, the number of public doctors has fallen by 12 percent in the same period.

The association now wants to make the public healthcare system more attractive to doctors, which could cut down waiting times and make it easier for patients to receive care. The association’s demands for this to happen include increasing flexibility in contract options, integrating health and social professions in individual practices, reducing bureaucracy, and improving fees.

ÖGK, Österreichische Gesundheitskasse, Austria’s largest public healthcare fund, is currently creating 100 additional public health positions, with almost two-thirds of the positions already having applicants, as well as planning for another 100 positions. They also aim to create a central telemedicine service and a platform for making appointments by phone and online, which is meant to reduce waiting times and improve access to care.

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