Certified Medical Waste Disposal Providers Serving Washington, D.C.
Every provider in the Medical Waste Pros D.C. network holds the certifications the District’s healthcare facilities and regulated waste generators require. Our providers maintain ISO 14001 Environmental Management System certification, documenting systematic environmental protection across collection, transport, and treatment. ISO 45001 Occupational Health and Safety certification governs worker safety throughout the disposal process. ISO 9001 Quality Management System certification ensures consistent, auditable service delivery. Providers holding membership in the Healthcare Waste Institute (HWI) follow industry best practices for responsible management of infectious and hazardous healthcare waste. All providers comply with the Department of Energy and Environment’s (DOEE) Hazardous Waste Branch requirements and hold current Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) identification numbers for hazardous waste transport and disposal in the District.
Washington D.C.’s Unique Compliance Landscape: DOEE, Federal Facilities, and the Hazardous Waste Framework
D.C.’s medical waste regulatory framework is distinctive in several ways that matter for every generator operating in the District — from a single-chair dental practice to a major teaching hospital.
DOEE is D.C.’s state-equivalent authority — and it operates differently. Because the District is not a state, the DOEE functions as both the local environmental agency and the state-equivalent authority for hazardous waste under the DC Hazardous Waste Management Act of 1977 (DC Code § 8-1301 et seq.), with regulations found in the District of Columbia Municipal Regulations (DCMR) Title 20, Chapters 20 through 42. Medical waste is defined in the DC Hazardous Waste Act as “solid waste from medical research, medical procedures, or pathological, industrial, or medical laboratories” — a definition broad enough to cover hospitals, clinics, pharmacies, dental offices, and research institutions alike. DOEE’s Hazardous Waste Branch requires any facility that produces hazardous waste to register as a hazardous waste generator and obtain an EPA identification number; fees range from $250 for very small quantity generators with eight or more employees to approximately $1,000 for large quantity generators.
The Hazardous Waste Generator Improvements Rule now applies in D.C. Washington D.C. adopted the Hazardous Waste Generator Improvements Rule in 2023, aligning the District’s generator classification, re-notification, and compliance requirements with the federal rule that strengthened requirements for conditionally exempt, small quantity, and large quantity generators. This means D.C. generators must have confirmed their generator status and re-notified EPA by September 1, 2025, if they had not done so previously.
Subpart P Hazardous Waste Pharmaceuticals applies. D.C. adopted EPA’s Subpart P Management Standards for Hazardous Waste Pharmaceuticals in 2024, meaning that healthcare facilities in the District must manage hazardous waste pharmaceuticals — those meeting the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act’s (RCRA) P-list or U-list criteria — in designated accumulation containers, properly labeled, and disposed of as hazardous waste. Hazardous pharmaceuticals cannot be poured down the drain or placed in biomedical waste containers. Controlled substance disposal requires Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) authorization under 21 CFR Part 1317.
Federal facilities operate under a parallel framework. Federal agencies with facilities in D.C. — HHS, NIH offices, FDA, the State Department’s medical unit, Congress’s attending physician offices, and others — are subject to federal facility RCRA provisions with DOEE oversight, not the standard commercial generator registration process. The OSHA Bloodborne Pathogen Standard (29 CFR § 1910.1030), the Needlestick Safety and Prevention Act, and the Department of Transportation’s (DOT) Hazardous Materials Regulations (49 CFR Parts 171–180) apply across both commercial and federal generators. Civil penalties for noncompliance are severe, with penalties up to $25,000 per violation — and every day a violation continues constitutes a separate offense.
D.C. Shredding Company Network Statistics
Commercial vs Residential Shredding in D.C.
Average Local Shredding Order Size
Businesses/large organizations and high-volume residential customers are matched to D.C.-area shredding companies with the required certifications and service offerings.
| Shredding Customer | Average # of Boxes |
|---|---|
| Business and Government | 1.1 |
| Residential and Home Office | 0 |
| Small Volume Drop-Off | 1 |
| Local Shredding Drop-Off Sites | 8 |
Most Popular Industries Served
| Healthcare Systems |
| Government Agencies |
| Financial Institutions |
Industry Spotlight: The Federal Government and Diplomatic Community as RMW Generators
No feature of Washington D.C.’s medical waste market is more locally distinctive than the role of the federal government and the diplomatic community as regulated medical waste (RMW) generators. The Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in the District provides acute care and mental health services to D.C.-area veterans, generating clinical waste across its inpatient and outpatient programs. Federal research agencies whose Washington offices include laboratory functions generate research-grade RMW from biological and chemical research activities. Beyond the federal government, D.C.’s more than 175 foreign embassies on Embassy Row and throughout the city maintain medical staff and on-site health clinics that generate sharps, blood-contaminated materials, and pharmaceutical waste from the healthcare services they provide to diplomatic personnel. Medical Waste Pros connects federal and institutional health programs throughout the District with certified local providers offering medical waste disposal and biohazardous waste pickup programs.
Our Most Commonly Requested Medical Waste Disposal Services
Our network of certified local providers handles virtually any medical waste disposal need. Here are the most commonly requested services in our D.C. network:
Biohazardous Waste Disposal for D.C.’s Hospital Network
MedStar Washington Hospital Center operates the region’s only adult burn center alongside a nationally recognized Level I Trauma Center. George Washington University Hospital, Howard University Hospital, Children’s National Medical Center, and Sibley Memorial Hospital complete a hospital community generating regulated medical waste (RMW) at a scale commensurate with the District’s role as the capital region’s primary medical referral center. Medical Waste Pros connects hospitals and surgery centers throughout D.C. with certified local providers offering scheduled medical waste disposal with Department of Energy and Environment (DOEE)-compliant transport, manifest documentation, and Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) ID number compliance. Learn more about biohazardous waste disposal services for healthcare facilities.
Pharmaceutical Waste and Chemotherapy Waste Disposal for D.C. Facilities
D.C.’s adoption of Subpart P in 2024 means that healthcare facilities in the District must now manage hazardous waste pharmaceuticals under a separate compliance track from their general biomedical waste program. The Lombardi Comprehensive Cancer Center at Georgetown, the cancer programs at GWU and MedStar Washington, and the outpatient oncology and infusion clinics throughout the District generate chemotherapy waste that must be carefully characterized to determine applicable waste codes. The District’s large nonprofit and advocacy organization community also operates clinical and research programs generating pharmaceutical waste subject to the Department of Energy and Environment’s (DOEE) requirements. Medical Waste Pros connects pharmacies and long-term care facilities with D.C. providers offering pharmaceutical waste disposal, chemotherapy waste disposal, and controlled substance destruction.
Medical Waste Disposal for D.C.’s University Health Sciences and Research Programs
Georgetown University Medical Center, the George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Howard University College of Medicine, and the many university-affiliated research programs operating in the District generate biomedical waste from clinical training, laboratory research, and clinical trial activities. Georgetown’s research enterprise generates research-grade regulated medical waste (RMW) from its laboratory and translational research programs. D.C.’s large nonprofit think tank and policy research community includes organizations with laboratory and clinical research components that may generate RMW from research activities subject to the Department of Energy and Environment’s (DOEE) generator registration requirements. Medical Waste Pros connects research laboratories and health sciences programs at D.C.’s universities and research institutions with certified local providers offering biohazardous waste pickup and sharps disposal programs structured for academic and research environments.
Medical Waste Disposal for D.C.’s Long-Term Care, Senior Living, and Home Health Programs
Washington D.C.’s eight wards include a significant senior population served by assisted living facilities, memory care programs, skilled nursing facilities, and a large home health agency sector. These facilities generate biomedical waste continuously from clinical services: sharps from insulin and injectable therapy programs, blood-contaminated wound care materials, and pharmaceutical waste from medication management. The Department of Energy and Environment’s (DOEE) hazardous waste framework applies to the pharmaceutical waste streams these facilities generate, with hazardous pharmaceutical waste subject to the District’s Subpart P requirements adopted in 2024 rather than the general biomedical waste pathway. Medical Waste Pros connects long-term care and hospice programs and nursing homes throughout the District with certified local providers offering biohazardous waste pickup and pharmaceutical waste disposal programs that meet DOEE’s requirements, including Subpart P hazardous pharmaceutical waste management.
Washington D.C.’s combination of four Level I trauma centers, the nation’s only NCI-designated Comprehensive Cancer Center in the metro area, the federal government’s vast health and research infrastructure, 175-plus foreign embassies generating diplomatic medical waste, and DOEE’s hazardous waste framework — including its 2023 adoption of the Generator Improvements Rule and 2024 adoption of Subpart P — makes its RMW compliance landscape more institutionally layered than any other city in the Medical Waste Pros service area. Get a free quote to get started.
