At Triangle Ecycling, your old computers are refurbished or recycled as part of a free teaching program that prepares high school students for jobs in information technology.

NATIONWIDE BULK CORPORATE COMPUTER RECYCLING AND SECURE IT ASSET DISPOSAL — WHEREVER YOUR BUSINESS IS LOCATED

Whether you are searching for bulk corporate computer recycling near you, secure laptop recycling for your company, hard drive destruction near me, or a certified IT asset disposal partner for multiple office locations across the country, Triangle Ecycling provides the same documented, compliant service everywhere in the United States. Free or low-cost corporate pickup, NIST 800-88 certified data destruction, chain of custody documentation, serialized inventory, certificate of destruction, and a carbon reduction receipt — standard on every pickup, regardless of location.

We serve businesses across every industry that generates retired IT equipment -- biotech, pharma, life sciences, technology and SaaS, semiconductor and hardware, healthcare, financial services, contract research, data centers, engineering firms, law firms, and government contractors. Our clients include Fortune 100 companies, venture-backed growth companies, and mid-market businesses managing regular hardware refresh cycles, remote employee laptop returns, data center decommissions, and office closures. Corporate pickups can usually be scheduled within 3 days of your request.

BUSINESSES

We provide every aspect of professional IT Asset Disposition while also allowing clients to partner in supporting our educational mission and give back to their community.

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More than 5,000 Computers Donated

The E-Waste Regulatory Landscape Across the United States

Corporate computer recycling obligations vary significantly depending on where your business operates. Twenty-five states plus the District of Columbia have enacted comprehensive electronics recycling legislation -- but the requirements differ considerably in scope, enforcement, and what they actually demand of businesses rather than manufacturers. North Carolina bans the landfill disposal of computers, laptops, and monitors outright under General Statutes 130A-309.130 through 309.142, and added new electronic manifest requirements for hazardous e-waste effective December 1, 2025. Indiana, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Washington, and Connecticut all have Extended Producer Responsibility frameworks that impose manufacturer take-back requirements but leave businesses to self-manage compliant disposal. South Carolina, Texas, and several other states have no comprehensive statewide e-waste law at all -- meaning businesses in those states bear the full burden of choosing a responsible disposal path with no regulatory safety net.

For businesses operating in multiple states -- or those in regulated industries like pharma, biotech, healthcare, financial services, or defense contracting -- state e-waste law is only part of the picture. Federal frameworks including HIPAA, GLBA, NIST 800-88, DFARS, and ITAR impose data destruction and documentation obligations that apply regardless of what any state law requires. The practical implication: a company operating offices in Bridgewater NJ, King of Prussia PA, Wilmington DE, and Charleston SC is navigating four different state e-waste frameworks simultaneously, each with different requirements, while also satisfying federal compliance standards that override them all. A single certified national ITAD partner with consistent chain-of-custody documentation, NIST 800-88 certified data destruction, and a zero-landfill commitment across every location simplifies that complexity into a single auditable process.

National Service Areas

We have dedicated location pages with market-specific information for a growing number of cities where we serve a high concentration of compliance-driven businesses.

In the Carolinas, we serve Charlotte, NC -- the second largest banking center in the United States and a rapidly growing life sciences market -- Wilmington, NC, anchored by PPD Thermo Fisher Scientific and one of the most concentrated CRO and clinical research corridors in the country, Greenville, SC and the broader Upstate South Carolina advanced manufacturing and life sciences corridor, and Charleston, SC, home to Boeing South Carolina's 787 Dreamliner campus and a dense Lowcountry aerospace and advanced manufacturing corridor. Columbia, SC -- completing the South Carolina corridor with the University of South Carolina medical ecosystem and a significant public sector IT market -- is coming soon.

In the Mid-Atlantic and Virginia, we serve the I-270 Life Sciences Corridor across Gaithersburg, MD and Rockville, MD -- one of the densest biotech and pharmaceutical markets in the country, anchored by NIH and FDA proximity -- and the King of Prussia, PA Philadelphia suburban corridor anchored by GSK's US headquarters. Richmond, VA -- anchored by Dominion Energy and a growing regional enterprise technology market -- and Charlottesville, VA -- home to the University of Virginia research and spinout ecosystem -- are coming soon. Wilmington, DE -- home to AstraZeneca's US headquarters and a dense Mid-Atlantic pharma corridor connecting the DC and Philadelphia markets -- is also coming soon.

In the Northeast, we serve the NJ pharma belt in Bridgewater, NJ and the MetroWest life sciences corridor across Worcester, MA and Marlborough, MA. New Haven, CT -- anchored by Yale's biotech spinout ecosystem and Alexion Pharmaceuticals -- is coming soon as Triangle Ecycling's entry into Connecticut.

In the Southeast, we serve Atlanta, GA -- home to three R1 research universities, the CDC, and a rapidly expanding biotech and technology sector -- Nashville, TN, the healthcare capital of the United States, Knoxville, TN, the gateway to the Oak Ridge Innovation Valley and one of the most compliance-intensive federal research corridors in the country, and Louisville, KY, anchored by Humana's global headquarters and a $100 billion healthcare industry cluster. Huntsville, AL -- home to NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, Redstone Arsenal, Boeing, and Lockheed Martin, and one of the most ITAR and DFARS-intensive defense contractor markets in the country -- is coming soon as Triangle Ecycling's entry into Alabama.

In the Midwest, we serve Indianapolis, IN -- anchored by Eli Lilly's global headquarters and one of only eight US cities with specialized concentration in four of the five life sciences subsectors -- and Columbus, OH, home to Battelle Memorial Institute and a rapidly expanding gene therapy and biomanufacturing cluster. Ann Arbor, MI -- anchored by the University of Michigan research ecosystem and a growing mobility technology and life sciences corridor -- is coming soon as Triangle Ecycling's entry into Michigan.

In the Southwest, we serve Austin, TX and the Central Texas technology and semiconductor corridor. Houston, TX -- home to the Texas Medical Center, the largest medical complex in the world -- is coming soon.

In the Mountain West, we serve Boulder, CO and the US-36 life sciences and aerospace corridor.

In the Pacific Northwest, we serve the Canyon Park biotech corridor in Bothell, WA.

FAQs

Where can I find bulk corporate computer recycling near me? Triangle Ecycling provides free or low-cost bulk corporate computer pickup for businesses nationwide -- from single-location companies scheduling a one-time fleet refresh to multi-site enterprises coordinating IT asset disposal across dozens of offices simultaneously. We serve all 50 states. Every pickup includes NIST 800-88 certified data destruction, chain-of-custody documentation, a serialized inventory, a certificate of destruction, and a carbon reduction receipt. Corporate pickups can usually be scheduled within 3 days of your request. Call 919-414-3041 to arrange.

How do companies securely dispose of bulk corporate laptops and IT equipment? Secure bulk corporate laptop disposal requires three things: certified data destruction that meets a recognized standard such as NIST 800-88, a complete chain-of-custody record documenting where equipment went from the moment it left your facility, and a certificate of destruction identifying each asset by serial number. General e-waste recyclers and electronics drop-off programs typically do not provide this level of documentation. A certified IT asset disposition provider handles the entire process -- pickup, data destruction, serialized inventory, and documentation -- so your compliance team has audit-ready records without overhead on your IT staff.

Can you handle remote employee laptop returns and disposal? Yes. Remote workforce laptop return and disposal is one of the most common requests we handle for mid-market and enterprise clients. When employees are offboarded or hardware is refreshed across a distributed team, coordinating secure disposal across multiple locations is a significant operational challenge. We work directly with your IT team to coordinate pickup scheduling across any number of locations simultaneously, with the same chain-of-custody documentation and certificate of destruction provided for every device regardless of where it is located.

What is the difference between e-waste recycling and IT asset disposition? General e-waste recycling handles the environmental disposal of electronics -- keeping devices out of landfill and recovering materials. IT asset disposition, or ITAD, adds the compliance layer that regulated businesses require: certified data destruction to a documented standard, chain-of-custody tracking, serialized asset reporting, and a certificate of destruction that can withstand an audit. Many businesses use general e-waste recyclers and discover too late that the documentation provided does not satisfy their compliance team, legal counsel, or cyber insurance requirements. Triangle Ecycling provides both -- zero landfill e-waste processing and the full ITAD documentation package -- as standard on every bulk corporate computer pickup.

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Do e-waste recycling laws vary by state?

Yes -- significantly. Twenty-five states plus the District of Columbia have enacted comprehensive electronics recycling legislation but requirements differ considerably in scope and what they demand of businesses. North Carolina bans landfill disposal of computers and laptops outright under General Statutes 130A-309.130 through 309.142 and added new electronic manifest requirements effective December 1, 2025. Indiana, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Washington, and Connecticut have Extended Producer Responsibility frameworks that impose manufacturer take-back requirements. South Carolina, Texas, and several other states have no comprehensive statewide e-waste law at all -- meaning businesses in those states bear the full burden of choosing a responsible disposal path with no regulatory safety net.

For businesses in regulated industries -- pharma, biotech, healthcare, financial services, defense contracting -- federal frameworks including HIPAA, GLBA, NIST 800-88, DFARS, and ITAR impose data destruction and documentation obligations that apply regardless of what any state law requires. A single certified national ITAD partner with consistent chain-of-custody documentation and NIST 800-88 certified data destruction across every location simplifies that complexity into a single auditable process regardless of which states your offices are in.