Plastic bottle, can, glass bottle

Beverage container materials in deposit return schemes

Deposit return systems (also known as deposit return schemes or DRS) can play a crucial role in encouraging the return of drink container materials. Learn more about the types of beverage container materials included in a DRS, to promote recycling and create a fair playing field.

Effective deposit return systems accommodate the drinks sold on the market today. This means considering beverage type, size and material the container is made of. The material included in a deposit system – such as plastic, metal, glass and liquid paperboard – is defined by legislation. Typically, policymakers focus on the beverage packaging commonly used by producers, as well as considering the recyclability of container materials.

What types of materials are included in deposit return schemes?

The most common types of materials found in deposit return systems are plastic, cans (aluminum and steel), and glass. Several programs also include liquid paperboard (cartons) and reusable containers.

Even leaving out one type could mean millions of recyclable containers are wasted and potentially littered. A broad scope of accepted materials reduces consumer confusion about eligible containers, so it encourages more DRS participation from the public and means more recyclable materials become part of the Clean Loop Recycling system.

Considerations for drink containers in DRS

  • Ease of recyclability: An effective DRS should include as many material types as possible, as most drink container materials are highly recyclable, representing a low threshold for recycling efforts.
  • Level playing field: Including all container types creates a fair playing field among beverage producers. Otherwise, it risks consumers switching to container types left out of the DRS, to avoid perceived price rises.
  • Corporate social responsibility: Sustainability is high on the public agenda and consumers are paying more attention than ever to businesses' green credentials. DRS participation contributes to recycled-content goals and green commitments.
  • Potential of the technology: Today’s reverse vending technology can handle all types of drink containers. This opens new possibilities for what can be collected — even new material types in future recycling systems.
Boys picking up containers

Incentivizing beverage container returns

A key aspect motivating high collection rates in a DRS is a financial incentive to return drink containers for recycling. This is what separates deposit systems from other programs: the deposit encourages consumers to treat packaging as a resource, rather than trash. Home recycling bins are convenient but do not address on-the-go consumption, which one study found is 30-50% of US beverage consumption.¹ On-the-go consumption can be a key contributor to litter.

The European average collection rate for PET beverage containers in a curbside system is 47%, versus 94% in DRSs.² In the US, on average 27% of non-deposit containers are collected for recycling vs 72% of deposit containers.³ As regions (especially European Union member states) pursue ambitious recycling, collection and recycled-content targets in coming years, DRSs have proven to be a reliable way to achieve high performance.
Girl returning bottle in Buffalo

The importance of separate collection

Maximizing the number of containers collected is half the challenge – the other half is maintaining the material’s purity throughout the process to drive high rates of recycling. This ensures drink container materials can join the Clean Loop and become new containers, reducing the need to create containers from virgin materials. 

When a container is returned separately in a DRS, it avoids contamination from other kinds of household recycling or waste; contamination can make the recycling process complex and costly. When materials remain pure and of high quality from the beginning, the risk of being downcycled, incinerated or landfilled is reduced.

Plastic material in deposit return schemes

Glass material in deposit return schemes

Cans material in deposit return schemes

Can moving through reverse vending machine

Spotlight: The Netherlands

Until recently, the Netherlands’ DRS only included PET plastic bottles over one liter, leaving out smaller plastic containers and all aluminum containers. Of the approximately 900 million small plastic bottles sold every year in the Netherlands, around 100 million are estimated to end up in the environment. As a result, the government introduced a deposit on plastic containers smaller than 1 liter from July 2021.¹⁸

The government also found that 150 million beverage cans are thrown away each year. As a result of rising litter volumes for cans, it added to the DRS from 2023.¹⁹

The glass, metal and plastic PET container industries agree that deposit systems lead to higher recycling rates, as well as better quality, higher value material enabling circularity. We support efficient, effective deposit systems. Deposits produce a resilient supply of material that our industries need to make new beverage containers.

Joint statement Can Manufacturers Institute, National Association for PET Container Resources, and Glass Packaging Institute (USA)²⁰

Liquid paperboard material in deposit return schemes

It is essential to seize the moment by implementing an ambitious DRS, that includes a wide range of packaging materials. Limiting the scope of the scheme would be a missed opportunity, particularly if low carbon, renewable packaging formats, such as carton packages, are excluded. If cartons were to be included in the DRS, it would increase the volume of good quality, recycled paperboard available to the industry, allowing further investment to be made in carton recycling infrastructure.

Alex Henriksen Tetra Pak²¹ 

Upcoming beverage container materials and types

The effectiveness of high-performing deposit return systems is seeing growing interest in other container materials and beverage types.

Download the "Unlocking Circularity" white paper

DRS White paper cover

Deposit return scheme best practices

Learn the success factors of high-performing deposit return systems for recycling beverage containers.

Download TOMRA’s white paper discussing what effective deposit return systems deliver, the key elements high-performing deposit systems share, and dozens of case studies on real-world implementation of deposit return policy. 
Download white paper

1  “Container Recycling Institute Releases Special 2013 Vermont Bottle Bill Report,” Container Recycling Institute and Vermont Public Interest Research Group. 2013.
2 DRS: Derived from GlobalData sales and redemption data from European deposit system operators. 2019. Available upon request. Curbside: “PETCORE Europe Presentation 2020,” Eunomia. 2020.
3 “Beverage Market Data Analysis 2015,” Container Recycling Institute. 2017.
4 "What is rPET Plastic," TOMRA. 2025. 
5 "The plastic water bottle industry is booming. Here’s why that’s a huge problem", CNN. 2023.
6 “Production, use, and fate of all plastics ever made,” Geyer, Jambeck, Law. 2017.
7 "The New Plastics Economy: Rethinking the future of plastics," World Economic Forum. 2016.
8 "Plastic ingestion by humans could equate to eating a credit card a week," WWF. 2019.
9 "The life cycle of plastics," WWF. 2025. 
10 "The potential of Deposit Refund Systems in closing the plastic beverage bottle loop: A review", Picuno, Gerassimidou, You, Martin, Iacovidou. 2025.
11 "Facts About Glass Recycling," Glass Packaging Institute.
12 "Global Deposit Book," Reloop Platform. 2024.  
13 "How long does it take for waste to decompose?", Divert.
14 "Supporting glass recycling," Verallia. 
15 “Northeast MRF Glass Survey,” Northeast Recycling Council. 2018.
16 "Glass Recycling FAQ," GWR Waste Management. 2020.
17 Annual Reports, Infinitum.
18 "Tomorrow the Netherlands expands their deposit return scheme to include beverage cans," TOMRA. 2023.
19 "Tomorrow the Netherlands expands their deposit return scheme to include beverage cans," TOMRA. 2023.
20 "Leading Beverage Container Manufacturers Agree: Well-Designed Deposits Are Key to Getting More Containers Back for Recycling," Real Clear Energy. 2021.
21 "It's time to raise the UK's recycling ambitions and create a world leading all-material Deposit Return Scheme", PoliticsHome. 2021.
22 "Go Nature, Go Carton," Tetra Pak. 
23 "A changing landscape: The history of deposit return schemes," TOMRA. 2022.
24 "Unlocking Circularity: Insights from high-performing Deposit Return Systems," TOMRA. 2025.