How to Dispose of Old TVs and Electronics in Southern California: 2026 E-Waste Guide

That dead flat-screen leaning against your garage wall isn’t going anywhere on its own — and you can’t just set it on the curb. In California, TVs, monitors, computers, and a growing list of battery-powered gadgets are classified as hazardous electronic waste (e-waste), and dumping them in the trash is illegal. If you’re staring down a pile of old electronics in Los Angeles, Orange County, or the Inland Empire, here’s exactly how to get rid of them legally, cheaply, and without the headache.

Why You Can’t Throw Electronics in the Trash in California

California has some of the strictest e-waste rules in the country. Old TVs and monitors contain lead, mercury, and other heavy metals that leach into soil and groundwater. Under state law, these “covered electronic devices” must be recycled through approved channels — not tossed in your weekly bin.

There’s also a 2026 update worth knowing: as of January 1, 2026, Senate Bill 1215 expanded California’s Covered Electronic Waste Recycling Program to include battery-embedded products — think electric toothbrushes, vapes, wireless earbuds, portable speakers, and other gadgets with sealed-in batteries. That means even more of your old tech now has to go through proper recycling.

Your Disposal Options, Ranked

Not every option fits every situation. Here’s how Southern California residents can clear out electronics:

1. Free Manufacturer & Retailer Drop-Off

  • Best Buy accepts TVs 50 inches and under for free at the customer service desk — up to three items per household per day. Most SoCal locations (Burbank, Santa Ana, Riverside, San Bernardino) participate.
  • Staples and Office Depot take smaller electronics like computers, keyboards, and printers at no charge.
  • Because California’s recycling fee is collected at the point of purchase, residents typically pay nothing to recycle TVs, monitors, and computers at certified collectors.

2. Municipal E-Waste Collection Events

Most SoCal counties run free e-waste drop-off events at community centers, fairgrounds, and fire stations. Los Angeles County, Orange County, Riverside County, and San Bernardino County all schedule these quarterly or seasonally. Check your city’s public works or sanitation website for the next date — these are the cheapest route if you can wait and haul it yourself.

3. Certified Local Recyclers

Independent recyclers across the region accept e-waste, sometimes for a small fee ($10–$30 per large screen) for plasma or oversized units. These are handy when you’ve missed a collection event and don’t want to wait.

4. Full-Service Junk Removal (When You Want It Gone Today)

The catch with every option above? You still have to lift the 80-pound rear-projection TV, load it into your car, and drive it across town. For a single small TV, that’s fine. For a garage full of dead electronics — old tube TVs, broken monitors, tangled cables, dead printers, e-waste from an office cleanout — hauling it yourself is exhausting and time-consuming.

That’s where a junk removal crew earns its keep. 911 Junk CA picks up your electronics directly from wherever they sit — upstairs bedroom, backyard shed, second-floor office — loads everything, and routes it to certified recycling facilities so it’s handled legally. No lifting, no trips to the dump, no figuring out which facility takes what.

What Counts as E-Waste?

If you’re cleaning out a home or office, here’s a quick checklist of items that need proper e-waste disposal in California:

  • TVs (flat-screen, plasma, LCD, LED, and old tube/CRT sets)
  • Computer monitors, desktops, and laptops
  • Printers, scanners, and fax machines
  • Cell phones, tablets, and routers
  • Stereo equipment, speakers, and DVD/Blu-ray players
  • Battery-embedded gadgets (new under SB 1215): earbuds, vapes, electric toothbrushes, portable chargers

How Much Does Electronics Removal Cost?

If you drop items off yourself, you’ll usually pay nothing for covered devices, or up to about $30 for a large or non-covered screen at a private recycler. Full-service pickup is priced by volume — how much space your items take up in the truck. For most households clearing a few TVs and assorted electronics, it’s a single, affordable load. The trade-off is simple: a little money saves you the hauling, the gas, and the research into which facility accepts what.

Tips Before You Recycle

  • Wipe your data. Factory-reset phones, tablets, and computers and remove hard drives if you’re security-conscious.
  • Don’t break the glass. Cracked screens release hazardous material — keep units intact.
  • Bundle small items. Bag up cables, chargers, and small gadgets together so nothing gets lost.
  • Working electronics? Consider donating to local charities or schools before recycling — reuse beats recycling.

Get Your Old Electronics Hauled Away — Free Quote

Whether it’s one ancient big-screen or an entire office’s worth of dead tech, 911 Junk CA makes electronics disposal effortless across Los Angeles, Orange County, Riverside, San Bernardino, and the surrounding Southern California communities. We do the lifting and make sure everything is recycled the right way.

Call 911 Junk CA today for a free, no-obligation quote and reclaim your garage, office, or living room — the responsible way.

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