How Is PET Recycled? Process, Testing & Recycled Content Guide

Written by Rahul Verma | Updated: April 9, 2026

How Is PET Recycled? Process, Testing & Recycled Content Guide

Written by Rahul Verma |  Updated: April 9, 2026
polyethylene terephthalate Recycling PET Process | Infinita Lab
polyethylene terephthalate PET plastic material testing in laboratory

Polyethylene terephthalate (PET) is the most widely recycled plastic worldwide, with established collection and processing infrastructure driven by beverage bottle deposit systems and curbside recycling programs. PET’s recyclability is a key sustainability advantage for the packaging industry, and material testing ensures that recycled PET (rPET) meets the quality standards required for food-contact and other demanding applications. For companies seeking PET and rPET testing at a US-based testing lab, Infinita Lab provides comprehensive polymer analysis through its accredited laboratory network.

The PET Recycling Process

Collection and Sorting

PET bottles and containers are collected through curbside programs, deposit systems, and commercial waste streams. Automated sorting using near-infrared (NIR) spectroscopy separates PET from other plastics, with additional color sorting to separate clear from colored PET.

Washing and Flaking

Sorted PET is shredded into flakes, washed to remove labels, adhesives, and food residue, and subjected to hot caustic washing and friction washing to achieve the purity required for food-grade recycling.

Reprocessing

Clean PET flakes are dried, melted, and either extruded into pellets for injection molding and fiber spinning, or processed through solid-state polymerization (SSP) to restore intrinsic viscosity for food-contact bottle applications. Chemical recycling (glycolysis, methanolysis) produces virgin-quality monomers for the highest-quality applications.

Testing Recycled PET

Quality testing includes intrinsic viscosity (ASTM D4603) for molecular weight, DSC thermal analysis (ASTM D3418), contamination and color measurement, acetaldehyde content for food-contact safety, tensile properties (ASTM D638), and FTIR identification to confirm material purity.

Why Choose Infinita Lab for PET Recycling Testing?

At the core of this breadth is our network of 2,000+ accredited labs in the USA, offering access to over 10,000 test types. From advanced metrology (SEM, TEM, RBS, XPS) to mechanical, dielectric, environmental, and standardized ASTM/ISO testing, we give clients unmatched flexibility, specialization, and scale. You are not limited by geography, facility, or methodology—Infinita connects you to the right testing, every time.

Looking for a trusted partner to achieve your research goals? Schedule a meeting with us, send us a request, or call us at (888) 878-3090 to learn more about our services and how we can support you. Request a Quote

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Can PET be recycled into food-contact packaging?

Yes. FDA-approved recycling processes (including solid-state polymerization and chemical recycling) produce rPET that meets food-contact safety requirements. Many beverage brands now use 25–100% rPET content in their bottles.

What is intrinsic viscosity testing for PET?

Intrinsic viscosity (IV) per ASTM D4603 indicates PET molecular weight. Higher IV means higher molecular weight and better mechanical properties. Bottle-grade PET requires an IV of 0.72–0.86 dL/g.

What is solid-state polymerization?

SSP heats PET pellets below their melting point under vacuum or inert gas to increase molecular weight (IV). This process restores recycled PET to bottle-grade specifications after the molecular weight reduction that occurs during mechanical recycling.

What is chemical recycling of PET?

Chemical recycling breaks PET back into its monomers (terephthalic acid and ethylene glycol) through glycolysis, methanolysis, or hydrolysis. These monomers are purified and repolymerized into virgin-quality PET.

What contaminants affect rPET quality?

PVC contamination causes degradation and discoloration. Acetaldehyde affects taste in beverage applications. Colored PET limits end-use options. Metal and adhesive contamination reduce mechanical properties. Testing screens for all these contaminants.

ABOUT AUTHOR

Rahul Verma

Rahul Verma is a Manager – Sales & Operations at Infinita Lab, where he has been working for the past three years. In this role, he works closely with customers to understand their material testing requirements and provides tailored testing solutions by coordinating with laboratories and technical teams. His work primarily focuses on customer engagement, project coordination, and helping clients identify the most appropriate analytical and characterization techniques for their materials.... Read More

Home / Blog / How Is PET Recycled? Process, Testing & Recycled Content Guide

Discover more from Infinita Lab

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading

×

Talk to an Expert

    Connect Instantly

    (888) 878-3090
    Ensure Quality with the Widest Network of Accredited Labs
    • ddd
      Quick Turnaround and Hasslefree process
    • ddd
      Confidentiality Guarantee
    • ddd
      Free, No-obligation Consultation
    • ddd
      100% Customer Satisfaction

      ddd

      Start Material Testing