Princeton Trash Bills Going Up October 1: Here’s the Full Breakdown
By Bakr Al Qaraghuli, Editor
August 29, 2025
Starting October 1, Princeton’s residential solid-waste line on the utility bill rises from $17.90 to $20.45 per month, an increase of $2.55 (~14%). The City Council approved a contract amendment with Community Waste Disposal (CWD) at its Aug. 25, 2025, meeting to implement the change.
WHAT’S CHANGING AND WHY?
- The city and CWD moved the annual rate-adjustment date from June 1 to October 1 to align with the city’s budget cycle. The next adjustment takes effect Oct. 1, 2025. Future adjustments are tied to changes in CPI, CNG (natural gas) fuel, and landfill/disposal fees, per the contract’s cost-index model.
- The amendment’s model specifies CPI (Dallas–Fort Worth), CNG fuel, and disposal as the three components; the document also notes the first annual adjustment under the updated model begins Oct. 1, 2026 (separate from this year’s increase).
WHAT DIDN’T CHANGE
- No weekly recycling. After soliciting feedback, the city kept recycling every other week and declined optional add-ons.
- No extra bulky/brush pickups or other program changes; service levels stay the same.
THE MATH BEHIND THE NEW $20.45
- Residential Trash: $13.96 (up $1.12)
- Residential Recycling: $4.66 (up $0.37)
- X-Treme Green event: $0.77 (up $0.06)
- Annual Trash-Off: $0.07 (up $0.01)
- Princeton Administrative Fee: $0.99 (new)
Total: $20.45 (was $17.90).
WHY THIS MATTERS (CONTEXT)
Princeton is currently the fastest-growing city in the United States by percentage growth, with a 2024 population estimate of ~37,000, more than double since 2020. That growth drives more tonnage and operating pressure on the system.
Regionally, North Texas peers have also raised or proposed raising solid-waste rates in 2024–25, citing the same cost drivers (CPI/fuel/disposal), for example, Plano (effective Oct. 1, 2024) and Southlake (approved 2024; additional changes proposed for 2025).
LOOKING AHEAD
- Budget calendar: The city indicates a public hearing and adoption of the FY 2025–26 budget and tax rate in early September (scheduled Sept. 8; a second hearing appears on the city calendar for Sept. 11). Refer to the city’s budget page and agenda/minutes for final timing.
- Service quality: Keep reporting missed pickups within 24 hours; that’s how standards are enforced.
- Policy debate: With costs indexed going forward, any expansion (weekly recycling, a second X-Treme Green, etc.) would likely return to Council only if residents and budgets support it; the August survey showed 59% of respondents wanted no add-ons.
BOTTOM LINE
No new services, just a cost alignment to sustain existing ones. The near-term move covers inflation-linked inputs (CPI, fuel, landfill) and adds a small city admin fee. The strategic test ahead is balancing affordability, growth-driven volume, and sustainability as Princeton continues to surge.
That’s the full breakdown on Princeton’s trash bills. We’ll keep covering these changes as they unfold. If you found this useful, help us grow the conversation: share this post and join the Princeton Journal group to stay informed. The more voices we have here, the stronger our community will be. Stay engaged, and let’s keep Princeton accountable together.