What the haul?!? Curbside trash pickup in county is about to get more expensive
STORY BY JON PINE (Week of July 17, 2025)
Garbage keeps getting more expensive – to get rid of.
Even as residents in unincorporated areas of Indian River County – including about 4,500 households on the barrier Island – continue to grumble about having to shell out for universal curbside trash pickup starting Oct. 1, the county commission has raised the amount residents will pay to operate the county landfill.
Up until now, people who wanted regular curbside trash pickup signed up with Waste Management, now called WM, receiving a crisp, clean bill in the mail each month, which they paid in exchange for the service.
A year ago, though, commissioners decided to mandate universal curbside trash pick-up for the nearly 90,000 households in the unincorporated portions of the county, starting this fall.
That move roped in more than 20,000 households that had not been paying for garbage pickup and raised the cost for existing WM customers by more than 20 percent.
When universal service begins, WM will still do the pickup, but customers won’t get monthly bills anymore. Instead the cost will be added as a new line on property tax bills, with an average household paying about $181 plus $4.50 for recyclables.
The county has had universal recycling pickup for years and commissioners went to universal trash pickup in part because some residents were putting household garbage in their blue recycling bins. That saved them the monthly cost of trash pickup but contaminated the recycling stream.
Now garbage costs – and property taxes – are going up again.
Last month, on June 17, commissioners signed off on a consultant’s recommendation to increase the “County Landfill Fee” – which appears as a line item on property tax bills – by 57 percent over the next five years.
Currently, a typical family generates about 1.5 tons of household trash, yard waste, and recyclables each year, and pays around $163 in landfill fees – which are separate from the cost of garbage and recycling pickup.
Those fees will increase by 15 percent annually in 2026, 2027 and 2028, and then by 6 percent per year the next two years, to a total of $260 by 2030 – an increase of about $100 per household.
About 75 percent of unincorporated residents were already subscribing to WM for curbside trash service, according to Himanshu Mehta, managing director of the county’s Solid Waste Disposal District.
“Had we kept things as they were, their rates would have doubled. By choosing universal service, the rates only increased by about 23 percent. We still have one of the lowest collection rates in the area.”
Delivery of new household trash and yard waste carts is underway and will continue through August. Universal collection in unincorporated areas begins Oct. 1, the first day of the next fiscal year. Indian River County has had countywide universal curbside collection of recyclables since 1991.
The county’s four municipalities, the cities of Vero Beach and Sebastian, and the towns of Orchid and Indian River Shores have their own trash hauling contracts and costs.