Council’s popular food and garden waste service makes it easy for residents to turn everyday food scraps and garden clippings into valuable compost.
To help reduce the amount of waste sent to landfill, all households that do not currently have a food and garden waste bin service will receive a new food and garden waste (green lid) bin in June 2026.
What this means for you
- If you don’t have a food and garden waste bin, one will be delivered to you between 1 June and 26 June 2026, along with a kitchen caddy and a roll of compostable caddy liners to get you started.
- Your food and garden waste bin will be collected every two weeks starting on Monday 6 July 2026. See Check my bin collection day for your collection schedule.
- Your rubbish bin will still be collected weekly.
- If you already have a food and garden waste bin, nothing is changing. It will still be collected as usual.
- The food and garden waste service is now part of the standard kerbside collection service. All households will receive this service, and you no longer need to opt in or out.
More information will be sent by mail to households receiving the new bin in April and May 2026.
Why is every household receiving a food and garden waste bin
Almost half of household waste is made up of food. Using your food and garden waste bin keeps this waste out of landfill, cuts emissions, and turns it into compost.
This compost is used in the parks, schools, community spaces, gardens and farms in Victoria.
As part of the Victorian Government’s kerbside reform, all councils are required to introduce a standard four-bin system across the state.
Community pop-up sessions
Have questions about your food and garden waste service? Visit one of our community pop-up sessions and speak with our team to learn more about the food and garden waste service, including what can go in your bin, how to use it correctly, and the benefits of reducing waste at home.
See upcoming pop-up sessions
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
I paid for the opt-in food and garden waste service before it became mandatory. What does this mean for me?
Nothing will change for you, and the service will be incorporated into the annual waste service charge from the 2026/27 financial year. This will be for all residential properties in the City of Whittlesea.
I am a renter and I have paid the full fee – do I get a reimbursement?
Yes, renters who have already paid the full fee are eligible for a partial (pro-rata) reimbursement due to the transition to the kerbside service.
Why is the service now mandatory?
The food and garden waste service has become a standard service for all residential properties, mandated under the Victorian Governments Kerbside Reform, to help reduce the amount of organic waste going to landfill.
Food and garden waste makes up a large portion of household rubbish, and diverting it helps lower landfill costs, reduce greenhouse gas emissions, and support more sustainable waste management across the community.
Will my rates increase because of this service?
Like other kerbside bin services, the food and garden waste service fee will be included in the overall waste charge on your rates.
For residents already using the service:
- The separate food and garden waste fee will no longer appear on your rates.
- It will now be included within the waste charge.
Why am I required to have this bin if I don’t want it?
The food and garden waste bin is now part of the standard waste service and is mandatory. Even if you choose not to use it, the bin remains allocated to your property to ensure consistency across the service and to support long‑term waste reduction goals.
Note: food waste will no longer be accepted in the garbage bin and inspections may be conducted. Penalties may apply if food waste is found in the garbage bin.
For more FAQs, please refer to the document below.
FAQs - food and garden waste bin service(PDF, 283KB)
It's important that the right items are placed into your food and garden waste bin.
If the wrong items go in, they can't be composted at the composting facility.
Please note which items you can and can't put in your bin and ensure that all members of your household are aware.
Acceptable items
You can put the following into your food and garden waste bin:
- bread and cake scraps
- common garden weeds
- dairy products
- egg shells
- flowers
- food scraps from meals
- food that has passed its use by date
- fruit and vegetables
- grass clippings
- leaves
- loose tea leaves and coffee grounds
- meat and seafood (raw and cooked, including bones)
- prunings
- small branches

Unacceptable items
Please don't put the following items into your food and garden waste bin because they can't be composted at the composting facility:
- Any cady liners that are not lime green or marked AS 4736
- Batteries and e-waste
- building material, concrete, soil, rocks and bricks
- cigarette butts
- vapes and e-cigarettes
- cardboard boxes or pizza boxes
- coffee pods or takeaway coffee cups
- dog or cat droppings
- food and garden waste in plastic bags
- glass
- hair (including pet hair)
- household garbage
- kitty litter
- nappies or baby wipes (including compostable or biodegradable nappies)
- paper plates and coffee cups
- plant pots
- plastic bags and plastic packaging (including bags, cling wrap, ties)
- products labelled as compostable (like coffee cups, plates and takeaway containers)
- rubbish or recyclable items
- scrap metal
- sharps, medicines, batteries and toys
- tea bags
- tree stumps and ash
- vacuum dust
- wooden icy pole sticks.

When you receive your new food and garden waste bin, you will receive one free roll of 150 compostable caddy liners to help collect food waste in your home.
Using these liners makes handling your food waste easier, meaning you can help the environment with less clean-up.
Residents can collect their free annual roll of 150 compostable liners from:
- Civic Centre, 25 Ferres Boulevard, South Morang – Weekdays, 8:30am to 5:00pm
- Whittlesea Service Hub, 63 Church Street, Whittlesea – Weekdays, 9:30am to 5:00pm
Proof of residence is required upon collection.
If you are unable to collect in person, please contact us on 03 9217 2170.
Purchase additional caddy liners
If you want to purchase additional caddy liners, they are available from most major supermarkets.
- Please make sure that the liners are 100% compostable Australian certified bags. They'll be lime green in colour.
- Your kitchen caddy is 7 litres, so choose a 7 or 8 litre capacity liner.
You don't have to use caddy liners. You can simply place food scraps directly into the food and garden waste bin and give it a wash after each use. Alternatively, you can use newspaper to line the kitchen caddy to reduce mess in the bins.
Tips on opening caddy liners
The bin liner bags we provide to use in your kitchen caddy can sometimes be a little tricky to open.
They're fragile because they're made from corn starch and designed to break down easily. They may not seem to open all the way or they may appear have split down the middle.
If you place the bag in front of you with the arrows up, and then rub the top of the bags between your thumb and forefinger, the sides will separate into a full bag. It’s a little similar to what you would do to the plastic fruit bags at the supermarket.
Below is a handy video that may also help you with your bags.