Track your progress toward zero-waste goals. Enter your current diversion rate and target to see how far you have come and what remains.
Zero waste is the aspirational goal of diverting 90% or more of all waste from landfill through recycling, composting, reuse, and source reduction. Achieving this target requires systematic planning, incremental progress, and consistent measurement. This calculator helps you track where you stand relative to your goal.
Most organizations and households start with a diversion rate of 20–40%. The path to 90% involves tackling waste streams one by one: first paper and cardboard (easy wins), then organics (composting), then specialized streams like textiles and electronics. Each improvement adds percentage points to your diversion rate.
This tracker computes your current progress as a percentage of your target, estimates the additional waste that must be diverted, and helps you plan the next steps. Whether your goal is 50%, 75%, or true zero waste (90%+), this tool keeps you on track.
This analytical approach supports both immediate cost reduction and long-term sustainability goals, helping organizations balance economic and environmental priorities in their energy management.
Reaching zero waste requires tracking and planning. This calculator shows your progress, remaining gap, and the additional diversion needed to reach your target. Having accurate metrics readily available streamlines utility bill analysis, budget forecasting, and investment planning for energy efficiency projects and renewable energy installations. Consistent measurement creates a reliable baseline for tracking energy efficiency improvements and validating the impact of conservation measures and equipment upgrades over time.
Progress = (Current Rate / Target Rate) × 100 Gap (lbs) = Total Waste × (Target Rate − Current Rate) / 100
Result: 61% of goal achieved
Current diversion: 550 / 1,000 = 55%. Target: 90%. Progress = 55 / 90 = 61%. Additional diversion needed: 1,000 × (90 − 55)% = 350 lbs more to divert from landfill.
Zero waste follows a hierarchy: (1) Refuse what you don't need; (2) Reduce what you consume; (3) Reuse and repair; (4) Recycle and compost; (5) Rot (compost remaining organics). Only after exhausting all these should any material go to landfill.
Break the journey into achievable milestones: 50% is reached by adding basic recycling and composting. 75% requires tackling specialized streams (textiles, electronics, construction debris). 90% demands systemic changes to purchasing, packaging, and product selection.
San Francisco diverts over 80% of its waste through mandatory recycling and composting. Subaru's Lafayette, Indiana plant is a true zero-waste-to-landfill facility since 2004. These examples show that ambitious targets are achievable with commitment and infrastructure.
Zero waste is typically defined as 90% or greater diversion of all discarded materials from landfill and incineration. The remaining 10% accounts for materials with no current recovery pathway. True 100% is aspirational.
Most organizations take 3–7 years to go from baseline to 90% diversion. The timeline depends on starting point, waste composition, available infrastructure, and organizational commitment.
Common barriers: lack of composting infrastructure, limited recycling markets for certain plastics, contamination in recycling streams, products designed without end-of-life recovery in mind, and organizational resistance to change. Documenting the assumptions behind your calculation makes it easier to update the analysis when input conditions change in the future.
Yes, many households achieve 90%+ diversion through recycling all viable materials, composting food and yard waste, buying in bulk with reusable containers, choosing products with minimal packaging, and donating/selling usable items. Monitoring trends in this area over successive periods will highlight improvement opportunities and confirm whether changes are producing the desired effect.
Focus on source reduction: avoid purchasing items that create non-recyclable waste. Choose alternative products with recyclable packaging. Advocate for extended producer responsibility policies that require manufacturers to address end-of-life.
Request weight-based waste reports from haulers. Conduct quarterly waste audits. Track diversion rate monthly. Many waste management companies offer online dashboards with real-time data.