Hazardous Waste & Fluids Handling: the full procedure
How the shop labels, stores, recycles, and disposes of used oil, filters, antifreeze, solvents, batteries, tires, and refrigerant without contaminating drains or soil.
- Applies to: All technicians and the shopβs designated waste/environmental coordinator.
- Frequency: Every time a regulated fluid, part, or waste is generated, plus a weekly container check.
- Scope: Covers labeling, storage, recycling, and disposal of shop waste streams. Classification, storage, and disposal defer to the EPA, the state environmental agency, and the product SDS, and all refrigerant work to EPA Section 608/609 certified technicians.
What you need
- Labeled DOT-approved drums / totes
- Drip pans & funnels
- Oil-filter crusher / drainer
- SDS binder
- Refrigerant recovery machine
The procedure, step by step
- Make a waste determination — Treat each stream (oil, antifreeze, solvent, battery, etc.) per its SDS and EPA/state rules; under RCRA the generator is responsible for an accurate hazardous-waste determination.
- Capture β no drain dumping — Drain all fluids into proper containers; never pour oil, antifreeze, or solvent down a floor drain, sink, or storm drain — one gallon of oil can foul a million gallons of water.
- Manage used oil — Store used oil in containers/tanks marked "Used Oil," keep it free of contaminants, and send it for recycling per EPA 40 CFR 279.
- Drain & recycle oil filters — Hot-drain filters of all free-flowing oil (puncture/crush or equivalent); properly drained non-terne filters can be recycled or disposed as non-hazardous.
- Handle universal wastes — Store lead-acid and lithium batteries and other universal wastes in labeled, sealed, leak-proof containers and route them to a recycler, not the trash.
- Segregate antifreeze, solvents & tires — Keep antifreeze and spent solvents in separate labeled containers (do not mix waste streams), and stage scrap tires for a licensed tire recycler.
- Certified refrigerant recovery — Only EPA Section 608/609 certified technicians recover refrigerant with proper equipment; venting refrigerant to the atmosphere is prohibited.
- Label, store & log pickups — Keep every container labeled and closed, store on secondary containment away from drains, and retain SDS, recycling, and disposal/manifest records.
Quality check before you finish
- Each waste stream classified per SDS/EPA before disposal.
- No fluids entering any drain.
- Used-oil and waste containers correctly labeled and closed.
- Oil filters hot-drained before recycling/disposal.
- Batteries and universal wastes routed to a recycler.
- Refrigerant handled only by 608/609-certified techs.
- SDS binder and disposal/recycling records current.
This is a free, source-anchored standard operating procedure (SOP) you can print and hand to staff. It documents the work sequence for a Auto Repair Shop business — not safety or regulatory rulings, which defer to the cited authorities, the applicable code, and your own health-and-safety plan. Open the tool above to print it, toggle ink-saver, or (with a free ToolFluency Business account) edit it to match your own workflow.
Sources
- EPA β Used Oil Management Standards (40 CFR 279) (epa.gov)
- EPA β Section 608 (Clean Air Act) Refrigerant Rules (epa.gov)
- EPA β RCRA Universal Waste & Generator Determination (epa.gov)
About Free Hazardous Waste & Fluids SOP for Auto Shops
Free printable hazardous waste SOP for auto shops: label, store, recycle, and dispose of used oil, filters, antifreeze, batteries, tires, and refrigerant safely.
How to use
- Read the full procedure top to bottom before the work β the SOP runs in order and each step builds on the last.
- Toggle Ink-saver (black & white) for a cheaper mono print for the binder; leave it off for the full-color version.
- Click Print SOP to print or save as PDF. Print one per crew, laminate it for the binder, or attach it to the job in your scheduling system.
- Train new hires on it and have staff sign off. Found something out of date? Use the feedback link β flagged SOPs are re-researched against the source list.
Frequently asked questions
Can a shop pour used oil or antifreeze down a floor drain?
Never. EPA prohibits improper disposal — one gallon of used oil can contaminate up to a million gallons of drinking water. All fluids must be captured and recycled or disposed through proper channels.
Who is allowed to recover refrigerant from an A/C system?
Only technicians certified under EPA Section 608 (or 609 for motor-vehicle A/C) using approved recovery equipment; venting refrigerant to the atmosphere is illegal under the Clean Air Act.
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