F-Gas Certified Disposal in Switzerland (2026)

Last updated: 30 April 2026

F-Gas certified disposal in Switzerland

Reviewed by the eCycling Central editorial team on April 2026

In Switzerland, fluorinated greenhouse gases (HFCs and HCFCs) used in fridges, freezers, air conditioners, and heat pumps are regulated under: ChemRRV ordinance equivalent to EU F-Gas.

This means the refrigerant inside any of these appliances must be recovered by a certified handler before the unit is disposed of. Owners cannot legally vent the gas or place the unit in regular waste.

How to find a certified handler in Switzerland

  • Manufacturer take-back: most major brands (Samsung, LG, Bosch, Daikin, Mitsubishi Electric) operate manufacturer take-back across Switzerland. The simplest route is to use this when buying a replacement.
  • Retailer old-for-new: when ordering a new unit, ask the retailer if they collect the old one. Many large retailers in Switzerland offer this as standard.
  • Local-authority collection: in Switzerland, the local council, waste authority, or municipal recycling centre will typically accept appliances containing refrigerant. Some require pre-booking. Some charge a small fee.
  • Commercial F-Gas certified contractor: for commercial installations (split-AC, multi-split VRF, walk-in cold rooms, heat pumps with charge above 5 tonnes CO2-equivalent), use a certified contractor directly.

What it costs in Switzerland

Domestic appliance disposal:

  • Refrigerator / freezer: typically free with replacement purchase, £0-£50 / equivalent for council standalone collection
  • Window air conditioner: free with replacement, £30-£80 / equivalent standalone
  • Split-system air conditioner: £150-£400 / equivalent for certified decommissioning
  • Heat pump (air or ground source): £300-£800 / equivalent for decommissioning

Commercial disposal scales with refrigerant charge - expect £500-£3,500 / equivalent for large multi-split AC, walk-in cold rooms, or commercial heat pumps.

What to bring when arranging disposal

  • The unit's make, model, and approximate year of manufacture (helps the handler estimate the refrigerant type and charge)
  • For commercial installations, the commissioning records showing original refrigerant fill weight
  • Access details for collection (parking, lift, stairs - large units cannot be moved single-handedly)
  • For domestic use, proof of replacement purchase if going through retailer take-back

Penalty for non-compliance in Switzerland

Depends on the specific regulation but typically ranges from a fixed-penalty fine for first-time domestic offences (£200-€500) to substantial commercial penalties (€100,000+ for repeat or wilful venting under EU F-Gas Regulation).

Sources

  • ChemRRV ordinance equivalent to EU F-Gas
  • EU F-Gas Regulation 517/2014 (where applicable)
  • ASHRAE Standard 34 (refrigerant classification)
  • IPCC Sixth Assessment Report (AR6)

Frequently Asked Questions

Who can legally dispose of an air conditioner in Switzerland?

Only a person holding the relevant F-Gas certification (or country-equivalent) may recover the refrigerant. The refrigerant must be captured before the cabinet is broken down.

Is there a free disposal option in Switzerland?

Often yes. The manufacturer take-back programme and retailer old-for-new collection are typically free at point of replacement purchase. Standalone council collection ranges from free to a small fee.

What is the penalty for venting refrigerant in Switzerland?

Under ChemRRV ordinance equivalent to EU F-Gas, penalties for venting fluorinated gases to atmosphere range from fixed-penalty fines for first offences to substantial commercial fines (€100,000+ in EU jurisdictions for repeat or wilful violation).