RegulationsIn force (recast 2012/19/EU)

WEEE: Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (Directive 2012/19/EU)

The EU directive on waste electrical and electronic equipment. It sets collection, recovery and recycling targets, makes producers responsible for end-of-life handling, requires producer registration, and introduces the crossed-out wheelie-bin symbol.

Issuer
European Union
Updated
2026-06-12

Overview

WEEE governs what happens to electrical and electronic equipment once it is thrown away. It pushes the cost and the effort of collecting, recovering and recycling old equipment onto the producers who put it on the market, rather than onto the public purse.

The core idea

Whoever sells the equipment is responsible for what becomes of it as waste. This is extended producer responsibility. Producers register, report what they place on the market, and fund the take-back and recycling of equivalent waste.

Instrument
EU directive, recast as 2012/19/EU
Scope
The same EEE covered by RoHS
Principle
Extended producer responsibility
Symbol
Crossed-out wheelie bin

What it sets

WEEE puts numerical targets on the system and obligations on the people in it.

1Register
Producers register in each member state where they place equipment on the market.
2Collect
Separate collection of waste equipment is organised, away from household waste.
3Recover and recycle
Collected equipment must hit recovery and recycling targets, which differ by equipment category.
4Report
Producers report quantities placed on the market and treated.

The wheelie-bin symbol

The crossed-out wheelie bin marks equipment that must not be dropped into normal household waste. It signals that the item should be handed to separate collection so it can be treated, and hazardous components removed, rather than landfilled or incinerated with mixed rubbish.

Where it sits

WEEE covers the same electrical and electronic equipment as RoHS. The two work as a pair. RoHS keeps hazardous substances out of equipment at the design stage, and WEEE handles that equipment responsibly at end of life. WEEE also operates within the wider framework of the Waste Framework Directive, which sets the general principles of EU waste law.

National laws transpose WEEE into each member state, for example the ElektroG in Germany.

Note: general educational information, not legal advice. Check the official source before relying on it.

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Related entries

EUwasteEEEextended producer responsibilityrecycling