Industrial and consumer metal recyclers
The phrase "metal recyclers near me" tends to surface a slightly different mix than "scrap yards" — more industrial-leaning operations, more buy-back centers, and more specialty recyclers focused on a single material stream.
Categories of recyclers
- Industrial recyclers — primary buyers from manufacturers, demolition firms, and large fleets
- Consumer buy-back centers — aluminum cans, small ferrous, occasional non-ferrous
- Auto recyclers — vehicle bodies, catalytic converters, drivetrain components
- E-waste recyclers — typically R2-certified; circuit boards, hard drives, batteries
- Precious-metal refiners — gold, silver, PGMs from electronics or industrial scrap
Vetting checklist
When picking a recycler for an unfamiliar material:
- License — state scrap dealer license required almost everywhere
- Material acceptance list — confirm they actually buy what you have
- Pricing transparency — published or quoted on phone, not vague
- Certifications — R2 or e-Stewards for e-waste; ISRI membership for general
- Reviews — recent reviews showing realistic experiences, not just five-star fluff
What gets rejected
Even at recyclers that buy a wide range of material, certain items get refused or require special handling:
- Pressurized vessels (tanks, cylinders) — must be cut, drained, or certified empty
- Refrigerants — appliances need EPA-certified refrigerant evacuation
- Hazardous materials — anything with PCBs, asbestos, or radioactive contamination
- Mixed industrial with unknown content — paperwork required