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New booking system to keep Household Recycling Centres fair and cost-effective

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Dorchester Household Recycling Centre front entrance

From Monday 23 March 2026, Dorset Council will introduce a simple booking system at our recycling centres in Dorchester, Wimborne, Shaftesbury and Sherborne.

The aim is to make visits smoother, reduce queues, and ensure the service remains fair for Dorset taxpayers.

At the moment, Dorset residents have to pay when they use recycling centres run by neighbouring councils. But their residents can use Dorset sites for free. This isn’t sustainable, and it means Dorset households are picking up costs for people who live elsewhere. Introducing a small charge for non‑Dorset visitors puts this on a fair footing.

This change also tackles trade waste abuse. Our household sites are for residents’ waste only; businesses must use licensed facilities. The booking system will help our teams spot and stop business use, keeping costs down for Dorset taxpayers.

Booking takes only a couple of minutes, and same‑day slots will be available. If you can’t book online, you can call us and we’ll do it for you.

Each site currently sees around 380 visits a day. The new system offers 430 bookable slots daily per site, which can be reserved up to two weeks in advance. Visitors will have a 30-minute arrival window, and multiple bookings on the same day are allowed.

There’s no charge for Dorset residents, but non-Dorset visitors will pay a fee per visit. Our other six recycling centres remain open without booking for Dorset residents, except when disposing of DIY waste.

Cllr Jon Andrews, Dorset Council’s Cabinet Member for Place Services, said:

“We’ve listened to residents and designed a system that’s simple and fair. It improves the experience for Dorset households, ensures taxpayers aren’t covering waste disposal costs for neighbouring areas, and helps prevent business use of household sites. By reducing congestion and improving recycling efficiency, the system also supports a cleaner, greener Dorset.”

Dorset Council remains the top-performing unitary authority for recycling in England, and this system helps us stay ahead.

By spreading demand, we cut queues, ease congestion and reduce emissions. Booking systems have a proven track record: independent reviews, including DEFRA’s, show they don’t lead to more fly-tipping. Instead, they help councils manage demand effectively, boost recycling rates and deliver high levels of public satisfaction.

We know this is a change, but it means shorter waits, fairer use of services and better value for money for Dorset taxpayers. We’ll review the system regularly and listen to residents to keep improving.

Bookings open from Monday 16 March. A short video explaining how to make a booking is also available.

Find out more online.

Categories: Waste

Comments

7 Comments

Comment by posted
Two other councils i have used with online booking require some form of proof of residency. In Reading (Berkshire) and Newbury (West Bekshire) this is via physical proof of address on entry. In Newbury, any vehicle must also be 'pre-registered' against a West Berkshire address via a user's online account. This vehicle registration is referred to as the resident's vehicle permit and 'sits outside' any individual booking. One address is allowed to register up to 3 vehicles. How are Dorset intending to check residency? Thanks 
Comment by posted

People will be required to enter their residency details (ie. where the waste is coming from) when booking.

Comment by posted
Cllr Jon Andrews, you have certainly NOT listened to your residents - no one wants this!! The currenty system works just fine.
Comment by posted
The biggest delay at Wimborne is when the skip lorries arrive. Are these times to be blocked out for bookings or will we still have to wait while skips are changed over? Thank you
Comment by posted

Yes, these times can be blocked out for routine skip compaction and transport. But if anyone shows up for their slot and a skip lorry is working, they'll be allowed straight in after the work has been done.

Comment by posted
As stated, Cllr Andrews never listens to anyone. It's fine as it is. This is just unnecessary bureacracy by a council trying to justify themselves.  Obviously, no Dorset resident would ever go to another council's tip?  You just go to the most convenient. Quid pro quo.
Comment by posted

Many Dorset Council residents use other councils' HRCs, such as in the BCP area or Somerley HRC in Wiltshire, so we have arrangements in place at those sites. But many more people in Somerset and Wiltshire regularly use Sherborne and Shaftesbury HRCs (while not contributing to waste disposal costs) and all our HRCs often have businesses attempting to drop off commercial waste, which is prohibited. Dorchester and Wimborne HRCs also experience frequent site congestion due to their size and location, so the booking system will help with that.