New York Porch

Rules & Licenses · New York City

DSNY Setout Rules Start With the Clock and the Bin

Before you drag bags to the curb, check DSNY's setout time and container rules for your building size and collection type.

Published June 24, 2026 · Last verified June 24, 2026

The most useful DSNY check is now boring in a good way: time plus container. DSNY’s residential setout page explains when trash, recycling, and compost can go out, and the NYC Bin page explains which small residential buildings must use official bins.

On real blocks, a tidy setout can still be wrong if it is too early, in the wrong container, or handled as loose bags where a bin rule applies. Before blaming a super, tenant, or neighbor, look up the collection schedule, building size, and DSNY container rule.

The same curb looks different at 5 p.m., 8 p.m., and the morning after collection. That is why this rule matters in everyday life, not just in fine print. A small building, a larger apartment house, a mixed-use block, and a rowhouse can all have different practical routines even when they share the same sidewalk.

Check the DSNY schedule for the address, then check whether the building size triggers an official-bin rule.

If you are a tenant, ask the super or owner how the building handles the new container setup. If you are an owner, read the DSNY page before buying bins or changing setout habits. In New York City, sanitation is a block-by-block rhythm, and the official timing is the thing to trust.

Filed under: Rules & Licenses Manhattan dsnytrashsetoutcontainerssanitation

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Last reviewed
June 24, 2026

Use this carefully: Hours, fees, forms, rules, and local conditions can change. Confirm with the official source before acting.

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