07/10/2026 | Press release | Archived content
Published on July 10, 2026
The City and County of Denver has officially adopted new Rules and Regulations for the voter-approved Universal Recycling and Composting Ordinance (URCO), a significant milestone for one of the most impactful waste diversion policies in the city's history. The new rules provide detailed guidance for three key sectors - buildings and food businesses, permitted events, and construction and demolition projects - and set the stage for the coming September 1, 2026, compliance date.
URCO is the result of the Waste No More ballot initiative, which was introduced on the ballot by community members and approved by 70% of Denver voters in 2022. URCO expands recycling and composting access across the city and is intended to keep valuable materials out of landfills. Denver City Council adopted updates to the ordinance in September 2025, and [these%20Rules%20and%20Regulations]these Rules and Regulations provide details and guidance to help buildings, businesses, event organizers, contractors, and developers understand how to comply with the new requirements.
"Denver voters sent a clear message in 2022, and these rules are how we deliver on that promise to reduce pollution, keep resources circulating in our community and further our climate and sustainability goals," said Elizabeth Babcock, Executive Director of the City and County of Denver's Office of Climate Action, Sustainability and Resiliency. "We're committed to making this new law manageable and successful for every business, building, and project it touches. That means giving people clear guidance, practical tools, and real support as they work to comply with URCO. Compliance is within reach, and our job is to make sure everyone has what they need to get there."
With the Rules and Regulations process now complete, the city is shifting its focus toward community education, outreach and resource development. Additional guidance materials, signage templates, best practices guides and other tools will be made available throughout the summer as the September 1 deadline approaches.
URCO requirements apply to multi-family residential buildings, non-residential buildings, food businesses, permitted events, and permitted construction and demolition projects
The newly adopted rules clarify how the ordinance requirements work in practice.
Who must comply:
Who doesn't need to comply:
What's required:
Standards Defined in the newly adopted Rules and Regulations:
The rules set clear expectations for:
Who must comply:
What's required:
Standards Defined in the newly adopted Rules and Regulations
The rules set clear expectations for:
Who must comply:
What's required:
Standards Defined in the newly adopted Rules and Regulations:
The rules provide:
The City and County of Denver is taking an education-first approach to implementing and enforcing URCO's new requirements. The city will focus on making sure buildings, businesses, event organizers, and project permit holders have clear information, practical resources and time they need to understand what is required and comply successfully before fines enter the picture.
More resources, including sample signage, fact sheets and best practices guides will be made available throughout the summer ahead of the September 1, 2026, compliance date. Building owners, managers, food business operators, event organizers, and contractors are encouraged to review the newly adopted Rules and Regulations, talk to their hauler about recycling and composting options and reach out to the city with questions.
For questions or more information about URCO, visit https://www.denvergov.org/universalrecycling or contact [email protected].