WEEE Regulations Explained for UK Businesses

The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Regulations 2013 require UK businesses to ensure all electrical and electronic waste is disposed of through licensed treatment facilities — not general waste — and to keep records proving compliance. Non-compliance can result in enforcement action by the Environment Agency.

The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Regulations 2013 are the UK law governing the disposal of electrical and electronic waste. They make it illegal for UK businesses to put WEEE in general waste and require documented disposal through licensed treatment facilities. This guide covers what the regulations require, who they apply to, and how to comply.

Who do the WEEE Regulations apply to?

The regulations apply to two groups:

  • Businesses disposing of WEEE — any organisation that discards electrical or electronic equipment (including computers, phones, printers and servers) must ensure it goes to a licensed WEEE treatment facility, not general waste. This applies to businesses of all sizes.
  • Producers of electrical equipment — manufacturers, importers and distributors of electrical equipment have additional obligations, including joining a producer compliance scheme and financing the take-back of old equipment. This is a separate and more complex area of the regulations.

What the WEEE Regulations require businesses to do

  1. Separate WEEE from general waste — electrical and electronic equipment must not be placed in standard business waste streams, skips or landfill.
  2. Use a licensed WEEE treatment facility — equipment must be collected and processed by an authorised treatment facility (ATF) or approved WEEE handler.
  3. Keep records — you should retain a WEEE disposal record as evidence that equipment was handled compliantly. This is required for Environment Agency compliance and for any ISO or ESG reporting.

The penalties for non-compliance

The Environment Agency enforces the WEEE Regulations. Placing WEEE in general waste can result in fixed penalty notices and, in serious cases, prosecution. Beyond the regulatory risk, disposing of IT equipment without proper data destruction also creates data breach liability under UK GDPR.

WEEE and data protection — two obligations in one collection

Most business IT equipment is both WEEE and a potential data breach risk. A professional IT asset disposal service handles both: certified data destruction satisfies UK GDPR, and licensed WEEE disposal satisfies the WEEE Regulations 2013 — one collection, two compliance obligations met.

For more, see what is WEEE? or book a WEEE recycling collection in London.

Frequently asked questions

The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Regulations 2013 are the UK legislation governing the disposal of electrical and electronic waste. They require businesses to ensure WEEE is separately collected, handled by licensed treatment facilities, and documented. They also impose producer responsibility obligations on manufacturers and distributors of electrical equipment.

If your business disposes of any electrical or electronic equipment — including old computers, phones, printers or servers — the WEEE Regulations apply. You must not put WEEE in general waste; it must go to a licensed WEEE treatment facility. This applies to businesses of all sizes, including sole traders.

Non-compliance with the WEEE Regulations 2013 can result in enforcement action by the Environment Agency, including fixed penalty notices and prosecution. In practice, businesses that place WEEE in general waste — or use unlicensed carriers — risk both regulatory penalties and reputational damage if a data breach results from inadequate disposal.

You prove WEEE compliance by retaining documentation confirming that your WEEE was collected and processed by a licensed treatment facility. Reputable ITAD providers issue a WEEE disposal record on completion of each collection. Combined with a certificate of data destruction, this gives you an audit-ready compliance file.

No — Recycle4Charity collects mixed loads of business IT and electronic equipment in a single visit. You do not need to sort or separate equipment in advance. We handle categorisation and routing at our facility.