Cash For Cars Canada
Canada · Vehicle Recycling · Environmental Standards

Vehicle Recycling in Canada — The Process, Materials, and Environmental Standards

When a vehicle reaches the end of its useful life in Canada, it enters a regulated recycling chain — drainage of hazardous fluids, recovery of reusable parts and high-value components, separation of steel and aluminum, and certified processing of the remaining materials. This guide explains the Canadian vehicle recycling process, the materials recovered, and the environmental regulations governing end-of-life vehicles.

Vehicle recycling facility processing end-of-life cars in Canada
75-85% Approximate share of every end-of-life vehicle's weight recovered through the Canadian recycling process.
Certified recycling chain
Hazardous fluid drainage
Reusable parts recovery
Canadian environmental standards
Short Answer

How Vehicle Recycling Works in Canada — The Short Answer

Vehicle recycling in Canada is a regulated industrial process: licensed auto recyclers receive end-of-life vehicles, drain hazardous fluids (oil, coolant, refrigerants, battery acid), remove reusable parts (engines, transmissions, alloy wheels, doors, electronics), extract catalytic converters for precious metal recovery, and process the remaining steel body through metal shredders. Approximately 75-85% of every vehicle's weight is recycled. Provincial environmental regulations govern fluid disposal and hazardous materials handling at every certified facility.

Process · Five Stages

The Canadian Vehicle Recycling Process — Five Stages

End-of-life vehicles move through five distinct stages from intake to material recovery at a certified Canadian auto recycler.

STAGE 01

Vehicle Intake and Documentation

When an end-of-life vehicle arrives at a licensed Canadian auto recycler, the recycler verifies vehicle ownership documentation (provincial ownership permits — Ontario green permit, BC ICBC pink slip, equivalent provincial documents elsewhere), records the Vehicle Identification Number (VIN), and assigns the vehicle to either the parts-recovery or scrap-processing track. Vehicles with intact components route through parts recovery first; pure scrap vehicles move directly to fluid drainage.

STAGE 02

Hazardous Fluid Drainage and Battery Removal

Canadian environmental regulations require certified recyclers to drain all hazardous fluids before further processing. This includes engine oil, transmission fluid, coolant, brake fluid, power steering fluid, gasoline, and air conditioning refrigerants (ozone-depleting substances under federal regulations). The lead-acid battery is removed for separate recycling. Fluids are stored in approved containment and disposed of through licensed waste management facilities per provincial environmental regulations.

STAGE 03

Reusable Parts Recovery

Recyclers inventory and recover parts with resale market demand: complete engines, transmissions, alternators, starters, intact doors, body panels in good condition, alloy wheels, infotainment electronics, headlights and taillights, mirrors, and seats. Typical individual part recovery values: engines $200-$500, transmissions $150-$400, doors $50-$200, alloy wheels $25-$75 each. Recovered parts enter the auto-parts secondary market through licensed parts dealers.

STAGE 04

Catalytic Converter and Precious Metals Recovery

The catalytic converter is removed and processed separately. Catalytic converters contain platinum, palladium, and rhodium — precious metals that by weight can exceed gold. Per-vehicle catalytic converter value ranges from $100-$500 depending on vehicle type, engine size, and converter generation. Certified processors refine the metals back into the manufacturing supply chain.

STAGE 05

Steel and Aluminum Recovery

The remaining vehicle body — primarily steel with aluminum components — enters a metal shredder. The shredder breaks the vehicle into fragments; separators (magnetic for steel, eddy current for aluminum) sort the fragments by metal type. Canadian steel scrap trades at $0.08-$0.12 per pound; aluminum at $0.70-$0.90 per pound. Recovered steel and aluminum re-enter manufacturing as feedstock for new products.

Recovered Materials

What Materials Are Recovered from a Recycled Vehicle

A typical end-of-life vehicle yields recovered materials across seven categories.

MaterialApproximate ShareRecovery ProcessEnd Use
Steel60-70% of vehicle weightMagnetic separation after shreddingNew steel products (construction, automotive sheet, manufacturing)
Aluminum5-10% of vehicle weightEddy-current separation after shreddingAluminum products (cans, sheet, transportation, building materials)
Reusable parts (engines, transmissions, electronics, panels)10-15% of vehicle weightManual removal before shreddingAuto-parts secondary market
Catalytic converter (platinum, palladium, rhodium)<0.5% of vehicle weight, >5% of recovery valueRemoved separately; refined through certified processorsPrecious metals back into manufacturing supply chain
Plastics and rubber8-12% of vehicle weightLimited recovery; some routed to industrial recyclingVariable — partial recycling, partial landfill
Glass2-4% of vehicle weightLimited recovery in standard recycling streamsVariable
Hazardous fluids and battery<1% of vehicle weightDrained and removed before processingLicensed hazardous-waste disposal; battery recycling

Overall, approximately 75-85% of an end-of-life vehicle's weight is recovered through the Canadian recycling process, making vehicles one of the most-recycled consumer products by weight. Steel recovery is the highest-volume stream; catalytic converter precious metals are the highest-value-per-pound stream.

Recovery profiles vary by vehicle type. Older vehicles are mechanically simpler to dismantle and tend to yield higher recoverable parts value if components remain intact. Newer vehicles (post-2010) carry more aluminum, electronics, and integrated plastics that require additional separation. Hybrid and electric vehicles add a further layer: lithium-ion batteries and high-voltage systems must be isolated and processed separately through specialist battery recyclers.

Not every material recycles efficiently — some plastics, insulation, adhesives, and contaminated components still require regulated disposal, which is why recovery rates stop short of 100%.

Regulations · Canada

Canadian Environmental Regulations and Vehicle Recycling

Federal regulations

Vehicle recycling in Canada operates under multiple regulatory frameworks. Federal regulations cover ozone-depleting substances (air conditioning refrigerants under the Ozone-depleting Substances and Halocarbon Alternatives Regulations), interprovincial movement of hazardous waste, and Canadian Environmental Protection Act (CEPA) requirements applicable to end-of-life vehicle processing.

Provincial regulations

Provincial regulations govern day-to-day recycler operations: licensing requirements (administered by Ontario's Ministry of the Environment, Conservation and Parks; BC's Ministry of Environment and Climate Change Strategy; Alberta Environment and Protected Areas; equivalent provincial regulators elsewhere), waste storage and disposal standards, fluid containment requirements, and reporting obligations. Most provinces require auto recyclers to hold a current operating licence.

End-of-life vehicle programs

Some provinces operate specific end-of-life vehicle programs that incentivize older-vehicle retirement and certified recycling. British Columbia's BC Scrap-It Program, for example, offers incentives for retiring older high-emission vehicles for certified scrap or replacement with lower-emission transportation. Other provincial and municipal programs exist on similar bases. These programs operate alongside the standard recycling regulatory framework, not in place of it — vehicles retired through a Scrap-It-type program still pass through the recycling chain described above.

Certified Recyclers

Where Vehicle Recycling Happens — Certified Recyclers and the Supply Chain

The Canadian recycler landscape. Canada has hundreds of licensed auto recyclers operating across the country, from independent single-facility operators to large multi-location enterprises. Industry associations include the Automotive Recyclers of Canada (ARC) and the Ontario Automotive Recyclers Association (OARA). Major recycler clusters concentrate around the Greater Toronto Area, BC's Lower Mainland, and the Calgary-Edmonton corridor.

How vehicles reach the recycling chain. When a vehicle reaches end-of-life, it typically enters the recycling supply chain through one of three routes: (1) direct sale by the owner to an auto recycler or junk yard, (2) sale to a scrap car removal service that arranges pickup and routes the vehicle to a licensed recycler, or (3) insurance disposition after a total-loss claim, where the insurer's salvage process places the vehicle with an auction or recycler.

Cash For Cars in the supply chain. Cash For Cars operates as a service intermediary in this chain, picking up end-of-life vehicles from owners across Canada and delivering them to a partner network of licensed auto recyclers. The recyclers then handle the technical recycling steps described in the earlier sections. See scrap car removal for the service-side process.

Owner Pathway

How to Get Your End-of-Life Vehicle into the Canadian Recycling Chain

Free pickup
Cash on collection
Partner-network coverage

The practical route for most owners. For most Canadian vehicle owners, the simplest path into the recycling supply chain is selling to a scrap or junk car removal service that arranges pickup and routes the vehicle to a licensed recycler. Cash For Cars provides this service across Canada — free pickup, cash on collection, and partner-network coverage across the Lower Mainland (BC), the Greater Toronto Area (Ontario), and beyond.

What the process looks like. Get a free estimate using the scrap and junk car value calculator — typical Canadian scrap car values range from $150-$800 for sedans, $300-$1,500 for SUVs, and $500-$2,500 for trucks. Confirm pickup with your local partner. Prepare your provincial vehicle ownership documentation. Receive cash on collection. The vehicle enters the partner network's licensed recycler chain immediately after pickup.

Where to go next. For the full service-side walkthrough, see scrap car removal. For the calculator, use the link above. For city-specific pickup logistics, see Cash for cars in Surrey, BC or Cash for cars in Toronto, ON.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions — Vehicle Recycling in Canada

How much of a vehicle is actually recycled?
Approximately 75-85% of an end-of-life vehicle's weight is recovered through the Canadian recycling process. Steel makes up the largest recovered stream at 60-70% of vehicle weight; aluminum, reusable parts, and catalytic converter precious metals make up most of the rest. Hazardous fluids and some plastics, rubber, and glass are handled through specialized waste streams.
What happens to the engine and transmission when a car is recycled?
If functional or repairable, they're removed before shredding and enter the auto-parts secondary market through licensed parts dealers. Typical individual values: engines $200-$500, transmissions $150-$400. If damaged beyond reuse, they're shredded with the rest of the vehicle for metal recovery.
What hazardous materials are in a vehicle?
Engine oil, transmission fluid, coolant (antifreeze), brake fluid, power steering fluid, gasoline, air conditioning refrigerants (ozone-depleting substances), and the lead-acid battery. Canadian environmental regulations require these materials to be drained, removed, and disposed of through licensed waste-management facilities before further vehicle processing.
Are vehicle recyclers in Canada regulated?
Yes. Vehicle recycling operates under federal regulations (Canadian Environmental Protection Act; Ozone-depleting Substances and Halocarbon Alternatives Regulations; interprovincial hazardous-waste rules) and provincial regulations administered by provincial environmental ministries — Ontario, British Columbia, Alberta, and equivalents elsewhere. Most provinces require auto recyclers to hold a current licence.
What is recovered from a catalytic converter?
Catalytic converters contain platinum, palladium, and rhodium — precious metals used as catalysts to reduce vehicle emissions. By weight, these metals can exceed gold. Per-vehicle converter values range from $100-$500 depending on vehicle type, engine size, and converter generation.
Where do recycled vehicle materials end up?
Steel re-enters manufacturing as feedstock for new steel products (construction beams, automotive sheet, manufacturing components). Aluminum feeds new aluminum products (cans, transportation components, building materials). Catalytic converter precious metals are refined and re-enter the precious metals supply chain. Reusable parts enter the auto-parts secondary market.
Is the BC Scrap-It Program part of vehicle recycling?
The BC Scrap-It Program is a separate provincial incentive program that rewards retirement of older high-emission vehicles. Vehicles retired through Scrap-It enter the recycling chain through certified Scrap-It-affiliated recyclers. Scrap-It provides the incentive (cash or transit and transportation credits); the recycling chain processes the vehicle as described in the main sections of this guide.
Ready to Recycle?

Ready to Recycle Your End-of-Life Vehicle?

If your vehicle has reached the end of its useful life, the scrap car removal service routes it into Canada's certified recycling chain — free pickup, cash on collection, and partner-network coverage across the country. Use the calculator below for a free estimate, see scrap car removal for service details, or contact the team to discuss your specific vehicle.

menucross-circle