Can Plastic Film Be Recycled? A Guide to Recyclability Testing & Compliance

Written by Rahul Verma | Updated: March 21, 2026

Can Plastic Film Be Recycled? A Guide to Recyclability Testing & Compliance

Written by Rahul Verma |  Updated: March 21, 2026
Plastic film recyclability testing | Types of Plastic Film Materials | Challenges in Plastic Film Recycling

Plastic film—including stretch wrap, shrink film, shopping bags, agricultural mulch, and food packaging—represents one of the largest categories of plastic waste by volume, yet one of the most challenging to recycle effectively. As sustainability pressures mount across the packaging, agriculture, and consumer goods industries, understanding the recyclability, testing requirements, and processing challenges of plastic films has become essential for manufacturers, brand owners, and waste management organizations. For companies seeking plastic film material testing at a US-based testing lab, Infinita Lab provides comprehensive polymer analysis and recyclability assessment through its accredited laboratory network.

Types of Plastic Film Materials

The most common plastic film materials include Low-Density Polyethylene (LDPE), Linear Low-Density Polyethylene (LLDPE), High-Density Polyethylene (HDPE), Polypropylene (PP), and Polyethylene Terephthalate (PET). PE-based films dominate the market due to their flexibility, strength, moisture resistance, and cost-effectiveness. Multi-layer and laminated films combining different polymers present the greatest recycling challenges.

Can Plastic Film Be Recycled?

Yes, most single-layer polyethylene and polypropylene films are technically recyclable through mechanical recycling processes. Clean PE films can be collected, sorted, washed, shredded, melted, and pelletized into recycled resin for use in products such as composite lumber, trash bags, shipping envelopes, and new films. However, several practical challenges limit film recycling rates in practice.

Challenges in Plastic Film Recycling

Contamination

Food residue, labels, adhesives, and mixed material contaminants reduce the quality of recycled resin and can render film loads unrecyclable. Clean film streams from commercial and industrial sources are far more recyclable than post-consumer films.

Sorting and Collection

Films jam sorting equipment at material recovery facilities (MRFs), causing most municipalities to exclude films from curbside recycling. Store drop-off programs and commercial collection provide alternative pathways.

Multi-Layer and Laminated Films

Films combining multiple polymer layers (such as PE/PET or PE/nylon laminates) for enhanced barrier properties cannot be mechanically recycled by conventional methods. These structures require chemical recycling technologies or innovative delamination processes.

Degradation During Recycling

Each mechanical recycling cycle degrades polymer properties (molecular weight, tensile strength, clarity), limiting the number of times film can be recycled before the material quality becomes unsuitable for its intended application.

Testing for Film Recyclability and Quality

Material testing supports recyclability assessment through polymer identification via FTIR or DSC (confirming resin type), melt flow rate testing per ASTM D1238 (evaluating processability), tensile testing per ASTM D882 (verifying mechanical performance of recycled film), contamination analysis (identifying impurities affecting recycled resin quality), and thermal analysis via TGA and DSC (assessing degradation and melting behavior).

Advancing Film Recycling Solutions

The industry is advancing film recycling through chemical recycling (pyrolysis and depolymerization) of mixed and contaminated films, design-for-recycling guidelines promoting mono-material film structures, improved washing and sorting technologies, and biodegradable and compostable film alternatives for specific applications in the packaging and agriculture sectors.

Infinita Lab: Your Material Testing Partner

Contact Infinita Lab for Plastic Film Testing and enjoy major benefits like end-to-end testing management, faster turnaround, and reduced administrative burden. Gain confidence in accurate results and reduced stress in vendor coordination. Enhance your reputation for product reliability and innovation. Engineers and R&D managers can focus on core work rather than testing logistics.

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)

Which plastic films are most easily recycled?

Clean, single-layer polyethylene films (LDPE, LLDPE, HDPE) are the most readily recyclable. Clear stretch wrap and clean commercial PE bags have the highest recycling value and are most widely accepted by recyclers.

Why can’t plastic films go in curbside recycling?

Films wrap around sorting equipment at recycling facilities, causing jams and contaminating other recyclable streams. Most municipalities direct consumers to store drop-off programs for clean PE film recycling instead.

What is chemical recycling of plastic films?

Chemical recycling breaks polymer chains back into monomers or petrochemical feedstocks through processes like pyrolysis or depolymerization. This approach can handle mixed, contaminated, and multi-layer films that cannot be mechanically recycled.

How is recycled film quality tested?

Recycled film quality is evaluated through melt flow rate, tensile strength, elongation, dart impact resistance, and contamination analysis. These tests verify that recycled resin meets the performance requirements for its intended application.

What ASTM standards apply to plastic film testing?

Key standards include ASTM D882 for tensile properties, ASTM D1709 for dart impact, ASTM D1922 for tear resistance, ASTM D1238 for melt flow rate, and ASTM D6988 for identification of plastic film composition.

ABOUT AUTHOR

Rahul Verma

Rahul Verma is a dedicated Materials Scientist and Testing Associate with strong expertise in materials characterization, thermal spray coatings, and advanced manufacturing technologies. With a solid foundation in Materials Science & Engineering and hands-on research in additive manufacturing, he specializes in bridging material behavior insights with practical engineering solutions. Currently serving as a Materials Testing Associate at Infinita Lab Inc. (USA), Rahul ensures precise material testing, quality assurance, and customer-focused solutions that help clients overcome complex materials challenges.

His role blends technical rigor with operations and project management, driving efficiency, reliability, and client satisfaction. Rahul’s journey spans academic and industrial research at IIT Patna, where he has contributed to advancements in plasma spray techniques, AI/ML-driven material design, and additive manufacturing.

He has also co-founded GreeNext Materials Group, pioneering sustainable battery regeneration technologies that have a significant impact on both industrial and societal applications. With professional experience in operations leadership, R&D, and client engagement, Rahul brings a results-oriented and analytical approach to materials engineering. He continues to advance innovation in coatings, material performance, and testing methodologies—focusing on durability, sustainability, and real-world applications.

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