Mail-in programs offer rewards for recycling old clothes

Several mail-in services now accept used clothing, shoes, and textiles from consumers across the U.S., providing store credits or rewards to keep items out of landfills. These programs handle items in any condition from various brands, with options for subscriptions and brand-specific trade-ins. Participants can earn credits redeemable at retailers like Nike, Sephora, and Patagonia.

Americans discard about 17 million tons of textiles annually, with many donation bin items failing to find new homes. Mail-in programs such as Trashie, Retold Recycling, Patagonia Worn Wear, ThredUp, and ReGirlfriend step in to repurpose these materials. Trashie provides prepaid bags for up to 15 pounds of any-brand items, even worn socks or stained T-shirts, earning $5 in TrashieCash per $20 bag at partners including Sephora and Starbucks. Its Unlimited plan costs $68 yearly for endless bags and escalating rewards, with 95% of items repurposed, reused, or recycled into over 600 categories. Retold offers subscription bags holding five pounds each, yielding $15 in rewards per bag usable at sustainable brands like Dropps and Plaine Products, accepting all textiles except unprocessable ones like leather. Consumer Reports notes rewards only for subscribers. Patagonia Worn Wear trades clean, usable Patagonia gear for gift cards worth up to 20% of original prices, sometimes doubled in promotions, with maximum credits reaching $200 for jackets. ThredUp's consignment kits pay cash or enhanced store credit for resalable women's and kids' name-brand clothes, deducting a $14.99 fee, while routing unsold items to partners. ReGirlfriend, via SuperCircle, gives $10 credit per Girlfriend activewear piece or $5 for others, up to 10 items, with a refundable $15 deposit and personalized discounts. Experts recommend sorting items by condition, checking fees, and prioritizing local recycling where available to maximize value.

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CalRecycle has selected Landbell USA to administer California's Responsible Textile Recovery Act, marking the first US law holding clothing producers accountable for waste. The program starts on February 27, 2026, with requirements phasing in through 2030. Brands selling clothes and household textiles in the state will fund collection and processing.

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Athletes from 16 countries will wear uniforms made from recycled fabric at the World Cup in June. Nike says the outfits come from its first elite performance apparel produced entirely from textile waste using advanced chemical recycling. The move highlights both progress and limits in efforts to make fashion more sustainable.

Apple has increased maximum trade-in values for several of its devices this week. The adjustments affect selected iPhones, iPads, Apple Watches, MacBooks and desktop Macs. Some models saw higher payouts while others received reductions.

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Las Condes' Home Collection Program for Organic Waste marked its first year by recycling over 2,000 tons, avoiding 367 tons of carbon dioxide emissions. Mayor Catalina San Martín celebrated the results by delivering compost to residents and called for greater community involvement.

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