Drywall (gypsum board) is one of the most environmentally benign construction materials to recycle. It is made of approximately 90% calcium sulfate (gypsum) sandwiched between two layers of paper facing - both components are 100% recyclable, and gypsum recycling is a well-established industrial process with active demand. Despite this, the vast majority of construction drywall waste in the United States still goes to landfill, primarily because contractors do not know where to take it or do not believe the economics justify the effort.
This guide explains the recycling chain, shows how much drywall your renovation projects likely generate, walks through how to find recyclers and what conditions they require, and covers the LEED credit and regulatory compliance implications of drywall diversion. The economics are more favorable than most contractors realize, and in several states diversion is no longer optional.
Drywall Composition: Why It Is 100% Recyclable
Standard gypsum board (sold under brand names like Sheetrock, ToughRock, and National Gypsum) has a simple two-component composition:
- Gypsum core (~90% by weight): Calcium sulfate dihydrate (CaSO₄·2H₂O) - a naturally occurring mineral that is also produced synthetically as a byproduct of coal-fired power plant flue gas desulfurization. The gypsum can be reground and reprocessed indefinitely without loss of material properties.
- Paper facing (~10% by weight): Recycled paper bonded to both faces of the gypsum core. The paper is separated from the gypsum during recycling and processed as paper fiber.
There are no toxic components in standard gypsum board, no hazardous materials requiring special handling under normal conditions, and no technical barriers to recycling. The recycling process is simply a reverse of manufacturing: the board is ground, the paper is separated and processed as fiber, and the gypsum powder is either returned to wallboard manufacturing or used in agricultural or industrial applications.
Type X and Type C fire-rated drywall contain glass fibers for fire resistance. These are still recyclable at most facilities, though the glass fiber content is lower quality for some end uses. Moisture-resistant (green board) and cement board products may have restrictions at some facilities - check before hauling.
Standard gypsum drywall is the only major construction material that is simultaneously 100% recyclable into the same product (new wallboard), an agricultural input (soil amendment), and an industrial additive (cement production). There is no technical reason for drywall to go to landfill on any construction project.
How Much Drywall a Typical Renovation Generates
Drywall waste on construction projects comes from two distinct sources with different characteristics:
New Installation Cutoffs
When installing new drywall, panels are cut to fit around windows, doors, electrical outlets, corners, and irregular framing. These cutoffs generate approximately 0.5–0.75 lbs per square foot of finished wall area during new construction and renovation work. This material is completely clean and untouched by demolition - it is some of the highest-quality drywall waste for recyclers.
Demolition Removal
When existing drywall is torn out during renovation or demolition, the generation rate is higher: approximately 1.0–1.1 lbs per square foot of floor area for a full gut renovation (removing wall and ceiling surfaces throughout). This material may be painted, taped, and textured, but remains recyclable at most facilities.
Worked Example
A 2,000 square foot whole-house gut renovation generates approximately:
- Demolition drywall: 2,000 sqft × 1.0 lb/sqft = 2,000 lbs (1 ton)
- New installation cutoffs: assume 1,800 sqft of new drywall installed × 0.65 lb/sqft = 1,170 lbs (~0.6 tons)
- Total: approximately 3,170 lbs (1.6 tons) of drywall waste
At a landfill tipping fee of $80 per ton, that is $128 in avoidable disposal cost - or zero dollars if hauled to a recycler that accepts drywall for free.
What Recycled Gypsum Becomes
Recycled drywall gypsum has three high-value end uses that create genuine demand from processors:
New Wallboard Manufacturing
This is the highest-value end use. Major wallboard manufacturers - USG Corporation, National Gypsum, CertainTeed, and Georgia-Pacific - all use recycled gypsum content in their products. The recycled gypsum is re-ground to specification, blended with fresh synthetic gypsum (from power plants) and/or natural gypsum, and processed into new board. Manufacturer take-back programs at some facilities directly accept clean drywall scraps from contractors.
Agricultural Soil Amendment
Granulated gypsum is widely used in agriculture as a soil amendment that improves drainage in clay-heavy soils, reduces sodium levels in irrigation-damaged fields, and provides bioavailable calcium and sulfur for plant growth. It is approved for use in organic farming (OMRI listed) and has no application rate restrictions under standard agricultural use. Agricultural gypsum processors actively seek supply and may pay for clean gypsum material in volume.
Cement Production Additive
Portland cement requires gypsum as a setting-time retardant - without it, cement would harden almost immediately upon mixing with water. Recycled gypsum ground to the appropriate fineness is accepted by some cement producers as a substitute for mined or synthetic gypsum. This is a lower-value outlet but represents steady industrial demand.
Finding Drywall Recyclers: Manufacturer Take-Back Programs and C&D Recyclers
The most reliable sources for finding drywall recyclers near your job site:
Manufacturer Take-Back Programs
Several major manufacturers operate or support drywall recycling collection programs:
- USG Corporation: Operates a network of authorized gypsum recyclers across the United States that accept USG brand drywall. Check their website for the current facility locator.
- National Gypsum: Partners with regional recycling facilities for clean drywall acceptance. Some locations offer direct drop-off for contractors.
- CertainTeed: Similar manufacturer partnership programs in key markets.
Manufacturer programs typically have the clearest acceptance criteria and most reliable no-cost or low-cost acceptance for clean material.
Independent C&D Recycling Facilities
Most regional C&D recycling facilities that handle multiple material types accept drywall as one of their materials. Use these resources to locate them:
- Your state environmental agency's C&D recycler directory
- The Construction & Demolition Recycling Association (CDRA) facility finder
- The Gypsum Association's recycler locator tool
Agricultural Gypsum Processors
In agricultural regions of the Midwest, Southeast, and Pacific Coast, agricultural gypsum processors may be willing to accept clean drywall waste directly from contractors. Search for "agricultural gypsum" or "soil amendment gypsum" in your region. These processors may offer the best economics, including direct purchase, for high volumes of clean material.
Contamination Rules: What Recyclers Accept and Reject
Understanding contamination criteria prevents rejected loads and wasted hauling trips. The contamination rules for drywall recycling are simpler than most contractors expect:
Generally Accepted
- Painted drywall: Latex and oil-based paint on drywall facing is accepted at most gypsum recyclers. The paper facing - whether painted or not - is processed as a separate paper stream. Paint contamination in normal residential renovation quantities is not an issue.
- Taped and textured drywall: Joint compound (mud) on seams and texture coatings are part of the normal demolition drywall stream and are accepted without restriction at standard facilities.
- Standard scraps and cutoffs: New installation cutoffs of any size are the most desirable material - these are essentially raw gypsum with no contamination.
- Type X and fire-rated board: Accepted at most facilities; the glass fiber content is a minor processing consideration, not a contamination issue.
Rejected - Cannot Be Recycled
- Water-damaged drywall: Gypsum that has been wetted and dried repeatedly undergoes chemical changes that reduce recyclability. More critically, water-damaged drywall almost always contains mold growth, which contaminates the gypsum stream and is a health hazard in processing facilities.
- Mold-affected drywall: Any drywall with visible mold growth must be landfilled. This is the single most common rejection reason. Keep drywall dry on site and do not commingle it with materials that may have moisture exposure.
- Drywall with asbestos-containing materials: Pre-1980 textured coatings ("popcorn ceilings") and some joint compounds contained asbestos. These require abatement and cannot enter the standard drywall recycling stream.
- Gypsum-crete flooring: Gypsum-based concrete underlayments are not standard drywall gypsum and are not accepted at most wallboard recyclers.
Cost: Recycling vs. Landfill
| Drywall Condition | Recycling Cost | Landfill Tipping Fee | Savings per Ton |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clean new installation scraps | Free or paid to you | $60–$120/ton | $60–$120+ |
| Demo drywall (painted/taped) | Free–$20/ton | $60–$120/ton | $40–$120 |
| Contaminated (mixed with other debris) | $40–$80/ton (if accepted) | $60–$120/ton | $0–$80 |
| Water-damaged / mold-affected | Not accepted | $60–$120/ton | None - must landfill |
The cost advantage of drywall recycling is most pronounced for clean new installation scraps, which are essentially a liability that can become either zero-cost or a small revenue stream. Demolition drywall in good condition also recycles at favorable economics compared to landfill in most markets.
The key operational requirement is keeping drywall dry and separated from contaminating materials (concrete, soil, metal) from the moment it comes off the wall. A dedicated drywall staging area or a separate small container on the job site is usually all that is needed for a standard renovation project.
State Landfill Bans for Drywall
Several states have implemented regulatory restrictions on drywall disposal in C&D landfills, driven by a specific chemistry concern: when gypsum decomposes in the anaerobic (oxygen-free) conditions of a landfill, it reacts with organic matter to produce hydrogen sulfide (H₂S) - a toxic gas with a distinctive rotten egg odor. As gypsum content in C&D landfills has increased, so have complaints about landfill odors affecting nearby communities.
Current State Restrictions
- California: Some jurisdictions restrict drywall in C&D landfills, and the state's mandatory diversion requirements effectively require recycling at most project scales.
- Massachusetts: DEP guidelines restrict drywall disposal in unlined landfills and actively promote gypsum recycling programs.
- Washington: The Department of Ecology has implemented disposal restrictions and supports gypsum recycler development to handle diverted material.
- Oregon: Similar to Washington - restrictions on C&D landfill disposal and active state recycler development programs.
Additional states are implementing or considering similar restrictions as landfill capacity decreases and hydrogen sulfide odor complaints increase. Contractors operating in multiple markets should verify current drywall disposal rules with their state environmental agency.
LEED MRc2 Credit for Gypsum Diversion
Under the LEED BD+C rating system, drywall recycling contributes to the MRc2: Construction and Demolition Waste Management credit. This credit is awarded for diverting C&D materials from landfill disposal by weight (or by cost, with restrictions).
How Drywall Contributes to the Credit
On renovation and new construction projects, drywall typically represents 20–25% of total project waste by weight (after concrete is accounted for). Diverting this stream - combined with wood, metal, and other recyclable streams - is how most LEED projects achieve the 50–75% diversion thresholds required for credit points.
1 credit point for 50% diversion; 2 credit points for 75% diversion. Drywall recycling documentation requires hauler manifests and facility receipts showing material type, date, and weight. The facility must be a legitimate recycling operation with a verifiable end use for the gypsum (new board, agricultural, or cement use).
For a full guide to LEED construction waste credit documentation requirements and strategies for hitting the 75% threshold, see our guide on LEED Recycling Diversion Credits: How to Hit 75% on Construction Projects.
For broader construction waste estimation and recycling strategy, including how drywall fits into a full project diversion plan, see our Construction Waste Estimation: A Complete Guide. For understanding how drywall waste relates to other C&D material streams, see our Construction & Demolition Waste Management guide.
Calculate Drywall Recycling Savings for Any Project
WasteCalc API estimates drywall tonnage by project type and size, then returns nearby recyclers and cost comparisons vs. landfill for any ZIP code.
Join the Waitlist →Frequently Asked Questions
Can drywall from construction be recycled?
Yes. Drywall (gypsum board) is 100% recyclable. The gypsum core and paper facing are both recyclable. Clean drywall scraps are accepted by manufacturer take-back programs and independent C&D recycling facilities, typically free or at low cost.
What happens to recycled drywall?
Recycled gypsum has three primary end uses: manufacturing new drywall (the gypsum is re-ground and returned to the production process), agricultural soil amendment (gypsum improves drainage and adds calcium and sulfur to farmland), and cement production additive (gypsum controls the setting time of Portland cement).
Is painted drywall accepted for recycling?
Most gypsum recyclers accept painted drywall. The paper facing - whether painted or unpainted - is processed along with the gypsum. Water-damaged and mold-affected drywall is not accepted and must be landfilled.
Which states ban drywall from C&D landfills?
California, Massachusetts, Washington, and Oregon restrict or ban drywall from C&D landfills, primarily due to hydrogen sulfide gas generated when gypsum decomposes in anaerobic landfill conditions. Other states are implementing similar restrictions.
How much drywall does a typical renovation generate?
A full gut renovation generates approximately 1 lb of drywall per square foot of floor area disturbed. A 2,000 sqft whole-house renovation generates roughly 1 ton of demolition drywall plus additional new installation cutoffs - total around 1.5–2 tons, representing $90–$240 in avoidable landfill tipping fees.