Home Composting vs Industrial Composting: Key Differences Explained

Home composting and industrial composting are not interchangeable systems.
Home composting operates at lower, inconsistent temperatures and can only handle limited organic waste.
Industrial composting uses controlled, high-temperature environments designed to process certified compostable packaging and food waste at scale.

Most compostable packaging and compostable bags are designed for controlled industrial composting environments, unless they are explicitly certified for home composting.

This page explains how composting systems differ, where compostable claims apply, and how these differences relate to recognized certification boundaries such as OK Compost HOME and OK Compost INDUSTRIAL.

What Is Composting?

Composting is a biological process in which microorganisms break down organic materials into nutrient-rich humus under controlled conditions.

Depending on scale, infrastructure, and operating conditions, composting systems are broadly divided into:

  • Home composting systems

  • Industrial (commercial) composting facilities

Each system has very different capabilities and limitations, especially when it comes to processing compostable plastics and compostable packaging.

These limitations are the reason compostability certifications specify whether a product is suitable for home or industrial composting.

What Is Home Composting?

Home composting refers to small-scale composting carried out in backyards, gardens, balconies, or household compost bins.

Typical home composting systems rely on:

  • Naturally occurring microorganisms

  • Moderate, fluctuating temperatures

  • Manual management of moisture and aeration

These systems are generally suitable for plant-based organic waste, such as:

  • Vegetable and fruit scraps

  • Coffee grounds and tea leaves

  • Garden and yard waste

Key limitations of home composting

Home composting systems have strict limitations that directly affect what they can process:

  • Temperatures are too low and inconsistent for most compostable plastics
  • Decomposition speed is slow and unpredictable
  • Material breakdown depends heavily on user management

As a result, most compostable plastics and compostable packaging are not suitable for home composting, unless they are specifically certified for home composting under standards such as OK Compost HOME or AS 5810.

What Is Industrial (Commercial) Composting?

Industrial composting, also known as commercial composting, is conducted in professionally managed, centralized facilities.

These facilities are designed to process large volumes of organic waste from:

  • Households and apartments

  • Restaurants and supermarkets

  • Food processors and institutions

  • Municipal collection and FOGO programs

Industrial composting facilities use controlled systems such as:

  • In-vessel composting

  • Aerated static piles

  • Windrow composting

Why industrial composting can handle compostable packaging

Unlike home systems, industrial composting facilities can maintain:

  • Sustained high temperatures (typically above 55 °C)
  • Controlled moisture and aeration
  • Consistent microbial activity

These conditions allow industrial composting systems to process:

  • All food waste (including meat and dairy)
  • Certified compostable packaging
  • Certified compostable bags and films

This is why most compostable plastics are designed specifically for industrial composting, not backyard compost bins or natural environments.

Comparison: Home Composting vs Industrial Composting

FeatureHome CompostingIndustrial (Commercial) Composting
ScaleSmall-scale, household-levelLarge-scale, centralized facilities
TemperatureLow and inconsistentSustained high temperatures
Processing SpeedSlow, weeks to months or longerFaster, typically completed within weeks
Accepted MaterialsPlant-based food scraps and yard wasteAll food waste + certified compostable plastics
Compostable PlasticsGenerally not suitableDesigned to be accepted
User EffortHigh (manual management required)Low (handled by facility systems)
End UseHome gardensAgriculture, landscaping, soil restoration

Compostable Packaging: Where the Boundary Applies

A common misconception is that “compostable” automatically means suitable for home composting.

This is incorrect.

Key rule

Unless a product is explicitly certified for home composting, compostable packaging should never be placed in home compost systems.

Most compostable bags, films, and packaging materials are:

  • Industrial compostable
  • Tested under controlled, high-temperature conditions
  • Intended for municipal or commercial composting facilities

Placing industrial-compostable materials into home compost bins often results in incomplete breakdown, visible fragments, or rejection.

Certification Boundaries: Home vs Industrial Composting

Compostability is defined by certification standards, not marketing claims.

Common certification boundaries include:

  • OK Compost INDUSTRIAL — for professional composting facilities

  • OK Compost HOME — for backyard and household composting

  • EN 13432 — industrial composting standard in the EU

  • AS 4736 — industrial compostable plastics in Australia

  • AS 5810 — home compostable plastics in Australia

These certifications clearly define where a product can be composted and under what conditions.

Understanding these boundaries is essential for:

  • Waste acceptance decisions

  • Packaging compliance

  • Preventing contamination in composting systems

Why Home and Industrial Composting Are Not Interchangeable

Although both systems are called “composting,” they serve very different roles.

Home composting focuses on:

  • Small-scale organic recycling

  • Household waste reduction

  • Gardening and soil enrichment

Industrial composting focuses on:

  • Large-scale waste management

  • Processing complex organic waste streams

  • Accepting certified compostable packaging

Confusing these systems leads to:

  • Failed composting outcomes

  • Contaminated compost

  • Rejected waste loads

  • Loss of environmental benefit

Key Takeaways

  • Home composting and industrial composting are not the same system
  • Most compostable packaging is designed for industrial composting
  • Only home-certified products should enter home compost bins
  • Certification defines where compostable claims apply

Correctly matching materials to composting systems is essential for compliance, waste system performance, and real environmental outcomes.

Related Knowledge Pages

FAQ

No. Home composting and industrial composting operate under very different temperature, scale, and processing conditions and are not interchangeable.

Only if the product is explicitly certified for home composting. Most compostable plastics are designed for industrial composting facilities.

Because they need sustained high temperatures and controlled conditions that home compost systems cannot provide.

They often fail to break down completely and may contaminate the compost.

Certifications such as OK Compost HOME, OK Compost INDUSTRIAL, EN 13432, AS 5810, and AS 4736 define where compostable products can be processed.

Conclusion

Home composting and industrial composting serve different roles and operate under fundamentally different conditions.

Most compostable packaging and compostable bags are designed for controlled industrial composting environments, not backyard compost systems.

Only products explicitly certified for home composting should be placed in home compost bins.

Understanding composting system boundaries and certification requirements is essential for waste acceptance, regulatory compliance, and achieving real environmental outcomes.

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