Household Hazardous Products

Household Hazardous Waste Project, University of Missouri

A household hazardous product is one whose use or disposal poses a threat to human health or the environment. Hazardous products should not be put in the trash, down the drain, into storm drains or burned unless you are instructed to do so by local waste authorities.

This guide will help you learn to safely handle hazardous products or even find alternatives to hazardous products.

What makes a product hazardous?

Products are considered hazardous if they have one or more of the following properties:

Flammable/combustible: Can be easily set on fire.

Explosive/reactive: Can detonate or explode through exposure to heat, sudden shock, pressure or incompatible substances.

Corrosive: Chemical action can burn and destroy living tissues or other materials when brought in contact.

Toxic: Capable of causing injury or death through ingestion, inhalation or skin absorption. Some toxic substances cause cancer, genetic mutations and fetal harm.

Signal words

Labels of hazardous products are required by federal law to list signal words. DANGER or POISON indicate that the product is highly toxic, corrosive or extremely flammable. WARNING or CAUTION indicate that the product is moderately or slightly toxic.

General categories of hazardous products

Thousands of consumer products are hazardous, but for ease of remembering, they can be broken into the following general categories:

Automotive products — Examples: gasoline, motor oil, antifreeze, windshield wiper fluid, car wax and cleaners, lead-acid batteries, brake fluid, transmission fluid.

Home improvement products — Examples: paint, varnish, stain, paint thinner, paint stripper, caulk, adhesives.

Pesticides — Examples: insecticide and insect repellent, weed killer, rat and mouse poison, pet spray and dip, flea collars, mothballs, disinfectant, wood preservative.

Household cleaners — Examples: furniture polish and wax, drain opener, oven cleaner, tub and tile cleaner, toilet bowl cleaner, spot remover, bleach, ammonia.

Other — Examples: household batteries, cosmetics, pool chemicals, shoe polish, lighter fluid, prescription medicines, arts and crafts materials.

Think before you buy

Use it safely

Store it safely

Cleaning up spills

These directions apply to liquid pesticides, paints, solvents and other household hazardous products.

A word on disposal

In most cases, the best thing to do with a leftover product is to use it all according to the label directions or find someone who will use it. Banned or restricted pesticides, old medicines and products whose safety instructions are no longer readable should not be used or shared. Some household hazardous wastes, including old lead-acid batteries, button batteries, used motor oil and antifreeze can be recycled. For many household hazardous products there may be no safe disposal available. These products must be stored safely until your community holds a household hazardous waste collection.

Safer alternatives

All-purpose cleaner

Drain cleaner

Furniture polish

Lime and mineral deposit remover

Metal cleaner/polish

Pests

Spot remover

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