R410A (HFC blend) disposal: complete guide
Reviewed by the eCycling Central editorial team on April 2026
R410A (HFC blend) has a Global Warming Potential (GWP) of 2088, ozone depletion potential of none, and is classified as A1 non-flammable. It is typically used in common residential AC 2005-2020, being phased out.
Why R410A (HFC blend) disposal is regulated
A refrigerant's GWP is the single most important factor in how strictly its disposal is regulated. R410A (HFC blend) releases the same warming impact per kilogram as 2088 kg of CO2 when vented to atmosphere.
The phase-down regulatory status: EU and US restricting new equipment from 2025.
Where R410A (HFC blend) is found
R410A (HFC blend) is the standard refrigerant for common residential AC 2005-2020, being phased out. If you have an appliance manufactured during this period and the data plate shows R410A, this guide applies.
How to legally dispose of equipment containing R410A (HFC blend)
The refrigerant must be recovered (captured into a sealed cylinder) before the equipment is broken down. This requires a person holding an F-Gas Category I certificate (EU, UK), Section 608 certification (US EPA), or country-equivalent.
The route for typical owners:
- Do not attempt to remove or vent the refrigerant yourself - this is illegal and dangerous (the A1 non-flammable classification means the gas may be flammable or asphyxiating)
- Use one of: manufacturer take-back programme, retailer take-back when buying replacement, local-authority bulky-waste collection, or commercial F-Gas certified disposal contractor
- Keep the receipt or recovery certificate if available - useful for end-of-life evidence in commercial contexts
Penalty for venting R410A (HFC blend)
- EU: up to €100,000 per violation under F-Gas Regulation 517/2014, plus member-state criminal penalties
- UK: up to £200,000 fine (Environmental Protection Act) plus prosecution by the Environment Agency
- US: up to $25,000 per day per violation under EPA Section 608
Sources
- IPCC Sixth Assessment Report (AR6) - GWP coefficients
- EU F-Gas Regulation 517/2014, Annex I
- UK F-Gas Regulations 2015 (SI 2015/310)
- US AIM Act 2020 and EPA SNAP database
- ASHRAE Refrigerant Designation and Safety Classification (Standard 34)