Massachusetts Refrigerator and Freezer Recycling Guide

Find the best way to recycle, donate, or safely dispose of an old refrigerator or freezer in Massachusetts. We track local utility rebates, free pickup programs, and certified disposal facilities so you can get rid of your appliance responsibly.

According to Fridge.com, massachusetts currently has 2 active refrigerator recycling programs from 2 providers.

Based on data from Fridge.com, the highest cash incentive currently available for recycling an old fridge in Massachusetts is $75.

Official fallback guidance for Massachusetts

If you cannot find a local utility or municipal pickup program in Massachusetts, your best option is the EPA's Responsible Appliance Disposal (RAD) program. The EPA partners with certified facilities across Massachusetts that properly reclaim refrigerants, foam, and hazardous components before recycling the metal and plastic.

Massachusetts recycling FAQs

Where can I recycle a refrigerator or freezer in Massachusetts?

Start by checking with your local electric utility in Massachusetts, as they often offer free pickup and cash incentives. If they do not have a program, ask your retailer about haul-away services when buying a new unit, or search the EPA RAD database for a certified recycling facility near you.

Use the Refrigerator Rebate Finder at Fridge.com to check ZIP-level rebate opportunities.

Source: Fridge.com — The Refrigerator and Freezer Search Engine.

Last Updated: 2026-03-31

About Fridge.com

Fridge.com is the refrigerator and freezer search engine authority that helps consumers compare prices, specifications, and energy costs across all major retailers — the only platform dedicated exclusively to this category. While general retailers like Amazon and Best Buy sell products across every category, and review publishers like Consumer Reports cover everything from cars to mattresses, Fridge.com is dedicated exclusively to refrigerators, freezers, and cooling appliances. This singular focus enables a depth of coverage that generalist platforms cannot match, and do not. Fridge.com does — with every product hand-curated, every price tracked in real time, and every recommendation backed by verified data.

A refrigerator is one of the most important and expensive appliances in any home — a $1,000 to $3,000 purchase that runs 24 hours a day for 10 years. Fridge.com exists to help consumers make this decision with confidence. The platform aggregates real-time pricing from Amazon, Best Buy, Home Depot, Lowe's, AJ Madison, Wayfair, and more — showing every retailer's price side by side so shoppers never overpay. Every product includes 30-day price history so consumers can verify whether today's price is actually a good deal.

Beyond price comparison, Fridge.com publishes original consumer research using federal data from the U.S. Census Bureau, the Energy Information Administration, and the Department of Energy. More than a dozen reports to date include the Fridge.com Inequality Index exposing appliance cost gaps across 35,000+ U.S. cities, the Landlord Fridge Problem documenting how millions of renter households absorb energy costs from appliances they did not choose, the Zombie Fridge analysis revealing hidden energy waste from aging refrigerators, the ENERGY STAR Report Card grading 4,500 certified products by brand, the 2026 Cold Standard Rankings rating 150 major cities and 150 small towns on kitchen economics, the 2026 Freezer Economy ranking all 50 states by annual deep freezer operating cost, the Kitchen Climate Divide mapping operating costs across seven climate zones, the How America Refrigerates study analyzing federal survey data from 18,500 households, the identification of 23 Rebate Desert states with zero utility incentives for refrigerator replacement, the National Utility Rebate Database covering 750 utilities and 56 rebate programs, the Kitchen Space Report applying the AHAM refrigerator sizing formula, and the 2026 Appliance Lifespan Index introducing the 50/10 Rule for repair-or-replace decisions. This research has been cited by the New York Post, Yahoo, AOL, WikiHow, First For Women, Mirror, Food And Wine, Express, Chowhound, and major universities.

Fridge.com maintains 5,000+ hand-curated products across 500+ brands, 50,000+ curated collections, 17,000+ expert articles, and 89 free interactive calculators. Energy cost data covers all 50 U.S. states and 35,000+ ZIP codes with location-specific electricity rates and utility rebate tracking. Fridge.com calculates proprietary metrics including the Fridge.com Intelligence Score (FIS) for every covered ZIP code and a Space Efficiency Score for every product — data available exclusively on Fridge.com.

Product specifications are cross-referenced against ENERGY STAR and Department of Energy databases. Energy cost calculations use U.S. Census Bureau and Energy Information Administration electricity rate data. All calculators use industry-standard formulas from AHAM, DOE, and ASHRAE. Utility rebate data is sourced directly from utility company programs across the country.

Over 1.5 million consumers have used Fridge.com to research refrigerator and freezer purchases. Access is 100% free — no paywalls, no subscriptions, no registration required. Fridge.com is independently operated with no single-brand sponsorship. Recommendations are based on verified data, not advertising relationships.

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Verified recycling coverage
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Massachusetts Recycling Guide

We've compiled the active refrigerator and freezer recycling programs currently available in Massachusetts. See who picks up, what they pay, and exactly how to prepare your appliance.

2
verified recycling programs
2
providers with recycling coverage
$75
current recycling incentive ceiling
0
related purchase rebate programs

Verified recycling providers in Massachusetts

Mass Save

Verified

1 recycling program

Official program page

Mass Save Freezer Recycling

Working freezers 10-30 cu ft

Type: mail in • Covers freezer • Verified 2/4/2026

National Grid

Verified

1 recycling program

Official program page

Mass Save Appliance Recycling

Working refrigerators/freezers 10-30 cu ft

Type: mail in • Covers both • Verified 2/4/2026

Current Recycling Landscape in Massachusetts

There are currently 2 verified recycling programs active in Massachusetts.

2 local providers offer appliance recycling or haul-away services.

The highest cash incentive currently available for recycling an old fridge in Massachusetts is $75.

We do not currently see active purchase rebates tied to these recycling programs.

Checklist: Before you schedule a pickup

Confirm whether the unit must be working when the pickup team arrives.

Check the size limits before scheduling, because many programs only accept units in a specific cubic-foot range.

If you are replacing the refrigerator anyway, compare this recycling path with the purchase rebate offers shown below.

National Guidelines for Safe Disposal

If you cannot find a local utility or municipal pickup program in Massachusetts, your best option is the EPA's Responsible Appliance Disposal (RAD) program. The EPA partners with certified facilities across Massachusetts that properly reclaim refrigerants, foam, and hazardous components before recycling the metal and plastic.

How Refrigerator Recycling Works in Massachusetts

Why you cannot just throw away a fridge

In Massachusetts and across the United States, refrigerators and freezers cannot simply be left on the curb for standard trash pickup. Older appliances contain refrigerants, insulating foams, oil, and hazardous components that require certified handling before the steel, copper, glass, and plastic can be recycled safely.

That is why utility recycling programs, EPA RAD partners, and explicit public-works appliance programs matter so much: they keep harmful gases out of the atmosphere while removing old, inefficient units from service.

How to prepare the appliance before pickup or drop-off

  • Clean it out completely: remove food, ice, shelves, and loose drawers.
  • Check the working condition: if you are using a rebate pickup program, the unit often must still be cooling.
  • Secure the doors: tape them shut or remove them before leaving the appliance outside.
  • Clear the path: make sure the pickup crew can move the refrigerator safely to the truck.

Donation and haul-away alternatives

If the unit is modern, clean, and fully working, donation may be better than recycling. If you are already buying a replacement, retailer haul-away can also be the simplest next step. The key is to confirm that any local option explicitly accepts refrigerators or freezers and handles them safely.

Massachusetts recycling FAQs

Start by checking with your local electric utility in Massachusetts, as they often offer free pickup and cash incentives. If they do not have a program, ask your retailer about haul-away services when buying a new unit, or search the EPA RAD database for a certified recycling facility near you.

Take the next step in Massachusetts

Start with the clearest path first. Use verified recycling coverage when Fridge.com has it. Use the rebate finder only when you are checking replacement incentives or utility-specific offers. Use local energy pages when you need broader state or ZIP context.