H2R Decision Matrix Clarifies What Is & Isn’t Deemed ‘Widely Recyclable’

GreenBlue’s How2Recycle program releases a public-facing framework to help brand owners and suppliers understand how recyclability designations are made, and why not every package earns a “Widely Recyclable” label.

According to GreenBlue, the Decision Matrix was developed to address member demand for greater transparency regarding how recyclability determinations are made. Brand owners may submit a package for review only to learn it does not meet the program’s recyclability threshold.
According to GreenBlue, the Decision Matrix was developed to address member demand for greater transparency regarding how recyclability determinations are made. Brand owners may submit a package for review only to learn it does not meet the program’s recyclability threshold.
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As more brands commit to using recyclable packaging, precisely defining what “recyclable” actually means has become a thorny topic. Some packaging developers believe their materials are recyclable in principle, only to find that under the How2Recycle program, the North American labeling system used by more than 500 brand owners, their packaging doesn’t qualify as “Widely Recyclable.”

In Octiober 2025, How2Recycle’s parent organization, GreenBlue, released of the How2Recycle Decision Matrix: Public Summary, to help clarify its logic. For the first time, stakeholders say, the new resource outlines how the program evaluates packaging recyclability and assigns one of four designations: Widely Recyclable, Check Locally, Store Drop-Off, or Not Yet Recyclable. The Decision Matrix consolidates criteria, standards, and data sources that underpin each label decision, including both technical recyclability (whether a material can be reprocessed) and systemic recyclability (whether it is collected, sorted, and sold into viable end markets). According to How2Recycle, the framework aims for more transparency and consistency across member companies while providing brand owners with a clearer understanding of the data behind each designation.

The Decision Matrix and its Companion Guide detail the five core assessment categories and four additional consideration categories that together determine whether a package can carry a recyclability claim. The five core categories include Applicable Law, Collection, Sortation, Reprocessing, and End Markets. 

Helping refine those judgments are four additional considerations: Consumer Experience, Material Health, Product Residue, and Consistency & Common Sense. For example, a material might be technically recyclable, but if consumers struggle to clean or separate it, or if end markets for the recovered material are limited, it may not qualify for a Widely Recyclable label designation.

“Better decisions start with better information,” the organization says in supporting literature. “This matrix gives members, partners, and stakeholders the foundation to understand how we evaluate packaging recyclability.” 


Access the How2Recycle Decision Matrix (a Google document) directly here, and download the accompanying Companion Guide (a PDF) directly here


Why the need?

How2Recycle members include brand owners, packaging suppliers, and retailers. According to GreenBlue, the Decision Matrix was developed to address member demand for greater transparency regarding how recyclability determinations are made. Brand owners may submit a package for review only to learn it does not meet the program’s recyclability threshold. The reasons can vary—a multilayer film may fail sortation at MRFs, a paper-based container might include too much wet-strength resin to repulp, or a material could lack a strong end market.

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