Guide

Why coffee grounds don’t belong in the drain

Martin Rupf
8.2.2023
Translation: Veronica Bielawski

I’m too lazy to dispose of coffee grounds in the compost. I almost always flush them down the drain. My wife says I shouldn’t do that. Is she right?

Every couple’s sure to be familiar with those daily household debates. What belongs in the dishwasher and what doesn’t? Is it necessary to clean the bathroom as soon as the first hard water stains appear? Does it matter how I hang up the laundry? For a few weeks now, my wife and I have had a new question on our minds: is it OK to flush coffee grounds down the drain? Admittedly, I’m the one who’s usually too lazy to dispose of the coffee grounds in the compost.

I usually dump the coffee grounds down the drain, which has been earning me increasingly frequent reprimands from my wife. «You’re not supposed to do that,» she tells me.

Says who? I want to investigate this – and, ideally, refute my wife’s claim. Who’ll be the referee? Christian Abegglen, head of the wastewater department of the Werdhölzi sewage treatment plant.

The expert says: «In general, solids don’t belong in wastewater»

If you want to get an idea of what it takes for wastewater to be returned to the water circuit, check out this explanatory video by the Werdhölzi wastewater treatment plant (in German).

Do coffee grounds clean the drain?

If you want to fight such a blockage, you don’t necessarily have to reach for chemical cleaning agents. As my colleague Livia Gamper wrote in an article, you can also use baking soda to clean your drain. Or you can fight the blockage with compressed air.

Coffee grounds as a pesticide and fertiliser

OK, OK. My wife was right (yet again). Coffee grounds really do belong in the compost, where they even accelerate decomposition.

From now on, I’ll collect the coffee grounds and dry them (this is important to do or mould will form quickly).

Come spring, I’ll be using my coffee grounds as fertiliser. And who knows – maybe my never-ending Project Lawn will finally get into gear. But that’s another topic for another article.

Header image: Martin Rupf

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Half-Danish dad of two and third child of the family, mushroom picker, angler, dedicated public viewer and world champion of putting my foot in it.


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