Technical 12 min read Updated January 2026

Understanding Modulation Factors

Deep dive into how recyclability classifications affect your EPR fees and how to optimize packaging for lower costs.

20 min read

What Are Modulation Factors?

Your EPR fees aren't just about how much packaging you use — they're about what that packaging is made of and whether it can actually be recycled. Modulation factors can swing your bill by 80% in either direction. A business using black plastic pays dramatically more than one that switched to clear PET with exactly the same weight. Here's how the system works and what to do about it.

Understanding modulation is essential because it can change your EPR costs by 20-80% per packaging item. The difference between "easily recyclable" and "not recyclable" packaging of the same weight can mean hundreds or thousands of pounds in annual fees.

The Core Principle

Modulation makes polluters pay more and rewards sustainable design. If your packaging is designed for recyclability, you pay less. If it creates problems for recycling systems, you pay significantly more.

The Five Modulation Categories

All packaging in the UK EPR system falls into one of five recyclability classifications:

Category Code Fee Adjustment Description
Easily Recyclable A -20% Designed for recycling with high collection and sorting rates
Recyclable B -10% Recyclable with good infrastructure support
Standard C 0% Baseline recyclability (no adjustment)
Hard to Recycle D +30% Recyclable but with significant challenges
Not Recyclable E +80% Cannot be effectively recycled in UK systems

How Modulation Affects Costs

Calculation Example

Let's examine how modulation impacts the cost of 10 tonnes of plastic film:

Base EPR fee for plastic film: £600 per tonne

Scenario 1: Mono-PE film (Code A - Easily Recyclable)

Scenario 2: Standard mixed film (Code C - Standard)

Scenario 3: Multi-layer laminated film (Code E - Not Recyclable)

The Savings Potential

Switching from multi-layer film (Code E) to mono-PE film (Code A) saves £6,000 annually on just 10 tonnes—a 55% cost reduction through packaging design alone.

What Determines Your Modulation Category?

The Environment Agency assesses packaging against specific criteria to assign modulation codes:

Key Assessment Factors

  1. Material composition: Single material (mono-material) vs. multiple materials
  2. Contamination risk: Does packaging contaminate recycling streams?
  3. Separation ease: Can components be easily separated for recycling?
  4. Collection infrastructure: Is collection widely available for this packaging type?
  5. Sorting technology compatibility: Can automated sorting systems handle it?
  6. Recycling market demand: Is there demand for the recycled material?
  7. Material quality after recycling: Does it produce high-quality recyclate?

Material-Specific Modulation Guidance

Plastic Packaging

Code A (Easily Recyclable - 20% discount):

Code B (Recyclable - 10% discount):

Code C (Standard - no adjustment):

Code D (Hard to Recycle - 30% surcharge):

Code E (Not Recyclable - 80% surcharge):

Black Plastic Penalty

Black plastic automatically receives Code D (30% surcharge) regardless of polymer type because UK optical sorting systems cannot detect it. Switching to colored alternatives saves 30% immediately on those components.

Paper and Cardboard

Code A (Easily Recyclable - 20% discount):

Code B (Recyclable - 10% discount):

Code C (Standard - no adjustment):

Code D (Hard to Recycle - 30% surcharge):

Code E (Not Recyclable - 80% surcharge):

Glass Packaging

Glass modulation is straightforward:

Code A (20% discount):

Code C (Standard):

Glass rarely receives D or E codes due to its inherent recyclability.

Metal Packaging

Aluminum:

Steel:

Metal rarely receives D or E codes due to strong recycling infrastructure and magnetic/eddy current separation technology.

Proving Your Modulation Classification

You must provide evidence to support modulation claims. The Environment Agency may request documentation during routine reviews or audits.

Required Evidence Types

  1. Material specifications from suppliers: Technical data sheets showing exact composition
  2. Recycling facility acceptance letters: Confirmation that UK facilities accept this packaging type
  3. Industry certifications:
    • On-Pack Recycling Label (OPRL) certification
    • RecyClass certification for plastics
    • FSC certification for paper/cardboard
  4. Test reports: For innovative materials, laboratory testing results
  5. Design specifications: Engineering drawings showing material layers and composition

Documentation Best Practice

Create a "modulation evidence folder" with documentation for every packaging SKU. When EA requests proof, you should be able to provide it within 24 hours to avoid classification downgrades.

Optimizing Packaging for Better Modulation

Quick Wins (Minimal Redesign)

  1. Eliminate black plastic: Switch to clear, white, or light colors → Saves 30%
  2. Remove unnecessary layers: Can you achieve protection with fewer materials? → Potential upgrade from C to B
  3. Use water-based inks: Replace solvent-based printing → Improves paper/cardboard classification
  4. Simplify label materials: Use paper labels instead of plastic → Easier separation improves code
  5. Avoid metallic finishes: Metalization downgrades plastic from B to D → Remove for immediate savings

Medium-Term Improvements (Some Redesign)

  1. Switch to mono-materials:
    • Replace PET/PE film with mono-PE → Move from D to A
    • Use single polymer types throughout packaging
  2. Design for easy separation:
    • Use perforations to separate different materials
    • Avoid permanent adhesives where possible
  3. Minimize coatings:
    • Use barrier films only where necessary
    • Choose recyclable coating alternatives (e.g., water-based vs. solvent-based)

Long-Term Strategy (New Tooling/Materials)

  1. Invest in mono-material solutions: New tooling for single-polymer packaging
  2. Explore fiber-based alternatives: Molded fiber instead of plastic clamshells
  3. Implement reusable packaging systems: Eliminates EPR fees entirely for reusable units

Common Modulation Mistakes

  1. Claiming Code A without evidence: Automatic downgrade to C or D during audits
  2. Assuming all PET is easily recyclable: Black PET receives Code D despite being PET
  3. Not accounting for labels and adhesives: Problematic labels downgrade container recyclability
  4. Overlooking small material components: A small metal clip on plastic packaging changes classification
  5. Using generic classifications: Each packaging SKU may have different modulation based on exact specifications

Modulation and Material Switching

Sometimes switching materials entirely offers better modulation outcomes:

Current Packaging Alternative Modulation Impact Fee Savings
Black plastic tray (Code D) Clear PET tray (Code A) D → A (50% improvement) ~£250/tonne
Multi-layer film (Code E) Mono-PE film (Code A) E → A (100% improvement) ~£600/tonne
Plastic clamshell (Code C) Molded fiber (Code A) C → A + material switch ~£550/tonne
Laminated paper (Code D) Uncoated cardboard (Code A) D → A ~£40/tonne

Staying Updated on Modulation Changes

Modulation criteria may be reviewed and updated as the EPR system evolves. To stay informed:

Current modulation criteria are published in the Environment Agency's annual EPR guidance.

Working with Suppliers on Modulation

Questions to Ask Packaging Suppliers

  1. What is the exact material composition of this packaging?
  2. What modulation code does this packaging receive under UK EPR?
  3. Can you provide OPRL or RecyClass certification?
  4. Do you offer alternatives that would achieve a better modulation code?
  5. What documentation can you provide to support the modulation classification?
  6. Are there lighter-weight versions that maintain the same code?

Supplier Selection Criteria

Prioritize suppliers who:

Modulation Audits

The Environment Agency conducts random modulation audits on a percentage of submissions annually. During an audit:

  1. You'll receive 14 days' notice
  2. EA will request evidence for all modulation claims
  3. You must provide:
    • Material specifications
    • Supplier certifications
    • Recyclability testing results (if applicable)
    • Design documentation
  4. EA will verify classifications against criteria
  5. If evidence is insufficient:
    • Packaging is reclassified to lower code (higher fees)
    • You'll receive a bill for the difference
    • Retroactive fees may apply (past 12 months)

Audit Penalties

If audits reveal intentional misclassification, penalties include the fee difference plus a 50-200% surcharge. Always classify conservatively if uncertain—it's better to pay slightly more than face audit penalties.

Key Takeaways

Start with High-Impact Changes

Audit your top 10 packaging items by volume. Identify any receiving Code D or E classifications. These are your highest-priority optimization targets—switching just a few high-volume items from D to A can save tens of thousands annually.

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