Handing old equipment to a recycler means trusting them with your data, your compliance record, and your environmental footprint. Some vendors earn that trust. Others resell drives untouched or ship containers of e-waste overseas. These six questions separate the two groups quickly, and any recycler worth using will answer them without hesitation.
1. Where Does My Equipment Actually End Up?
This is the question that exposes bad actors fastest. Some operations that call themselves recyclers simply consolidate e-waste and export it to unregulated scrapyards abroad, where it is burned or dumped. A legitimate recycler can walk you through the chain: what gets processed locally, what goes to downstream partners, and who those partners are.
Good answer: a specific description of the downstream flow. Bad answer:"It all gets recycled, don't worry."
2. How Is My Data Destroyed, and to What Standard?
"We wipe everything" is not a standard. The benchmark is NIST SP 800-88, the federal guideline that defines Clear, Purge, and Destroy methods for sanitizing media. Ask which method applies to your drives, how SSDs are handled differently from spinning disks, and what happens to drives that fail sanitization.
If the vendor cannot name the standard they follow, assume there is no standard.
3. What Documentation Will I Receive?
For any device that stored data, you want a Certificate of Destruction: a serialized record tying each specific drive to a date and destruction method. This is what you show an auditor, a client, or a regulator if disposal is ever questioned. Without it, you are relying on memory and goodwill.
Ask to see a sample certificate before committing. Check that it lists individual serial numbers rather than a vague "one lot of drives."
4. What Certifications Do You or Your Downstream Partners Hold?
Industry certifications audit how facilities process material. They matter most at the downstream stage, where materials are physically separated and refined. Ask two things: whether the recycler itself holds certifications, and where certified facilities appear in their downstream chain.
Honesty matters more than badges here. EverTrade, for example, is not R2 certified. We follow NIST SP 800-88 for data sanitization, we route material through certified downstream partners, and we say so plainly on our credentials page. A vendor that vaguely implies certifications it does not hold is showing you how it handles the truth.
5. What Does It Cost, and What Is Actually Free?
Pricing in this industry is not uniform, so get specifics up front:
- Drop-off is free at many recyclers, including EverTrade, for most items
- TVs and CRT monitors usually carry handling fees because leaded glass costs money to process responsibly
- Pickup is typically a paid, quoted service that depends on volume and location
- Data destruction with certificates may be included or itemized, so ask
Be wary of anyone who promises everything is free with no conditions. Responsible processing has real costs, and if the customer is not paying them, the corner is being cut somewhere else.
6. Can You Handle My Volume and Location?
A recycler that fits a ten-laptop office refresh may not fit a data center decommission, and vice versa. Confirm the practical details: service area, whether on-site pickup is offered for your quantity, turnaround time for certificates, and experience with your industry's requirements if you are in healthcare, legal, or finance.
EverTrade serves the Greater Houston metro, roughly an 80 km radius around Sugar Land. Drop-off at our Sugar Land facility is free for most items, and on-site pickup is available case by case for qualifying business quantities.
Put It All Together
Six questions, five minutes on the phone, and you will know more about a vendor than most businesses learn after years of using one. For a deeper walkthrough of the Houston market specifically, read our guide to choosing a Houston computer recycler or compare professional ITAD versus DIY disposal.