Textiles: Material-Specific Data | US EPA (2024)

Table of Contents
Overview Summary Table and Graph

Note:

This web page contains material-specific information and data on textiles.

Looking for other information? Take a look at the products and at the other materials we studied.

Still have a question about the data? Check out our Frequent Questions page.

The main source of textiles in municipal solid waste (MSW) is discarded clothing, although other smaller sources include furniture, carpets, tires, footwear, and other nondurable goods such as sheets and towels. There also is data specific to clothing and footwear, and to towels, sheets and pillowcases.

This web page is a brief summary of textile material-specific data specific to MSW. For more comprehensive information, check out the 2018Data Tables on the Advancing Sustainable Materials Management: Facts and Figures Report page.

On this page:

  • Overview
  • Summary Table and Graph

Overview

Textiles: Material-Specific Data | US EPA (1)

EPA measures the generation, recycling, composting, combustion with energy recovery and landfilling of textile material in MSW.

EPA estimated that the generation of textiles in 2018 was 17 million tons. This figure represents 5.8 percent of total MSW generation that year. Generation estimates for clothing and footwear were based in part on sales data from the American Apparel and Footwear Association. EPA also found that significant amounts of textiles enter the reuse market, but the amount of reused textiles is not included in the generation estimate. Reused garments and wiper rags enter the waste stream eventually and become a part of MSW generation.

The recycling rate for all textiles was 14.7 percent in 2018, with 2.5 million tons recycled. Within this figure, EPA estimated that the recycling rate for textiles in clothing and footwear was 13 percent based on information from the American Textile Recycling Service. The rate for items such as sheets and pillowcases was 15.8 percent in 2018.

The total amount of textiles in MSW combusted in 2018 was 3.2 million tons. This was 9.3 percent of MSW combusted with energy recovery.

Landfills received 11.3 million tons of MSW textiles in 2018. This was 7.7 percent of all MSW landfilled.

Please read the EPA Methodology Document for further information on estimating generation and management of textiles.

Summary Table and Graph

The data below are from 1960 to 2018, relating to the total number of tons of textiles generated, recycled, composted, combusted with energy recovery and landfilled.

1960-2018 Data on Textiles in MSW by Weight (in thousands of U.S. tons)
Management Pathway1960197019801990200020052010201520172018
Generation1,7602,0402,5305,8109,48011,51013,22016,06016,89017,030
Recycled50601606601,3201,8302,0502,4602,5702,510
Composted----------
Combustion with Energy Recovery-10508801,8802,1102,2703,0603,1703,220
Landfilled1,7101,9702,3204,2706,2807,5708,90010,54011,15011,300

Sources: American Apparel and Footwear Association, International Trade Commission, the U.S. Department of Commerce's Office of Textiles and Apparel, and the Council for Textile Recycling.

A dash in the table means that data is not available.

Textiles: Material-Specific Data | US EPA (2024)
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