From Start to Success: The Refill & Reuse Systems Handbook - Plastic Reboot
From Start to Success: The Refill & Reuse Systems Handbook
The Refill and Reuse Systems Handbook is a practical resource for anyone exploring or implementing refill and reuse systems. It provides the knowledge, tools, and guidance needed to move from early exploration to real-world implementation and includes three complementary components:
5-Part Primer
Step-by-Step Guide & Training Modules
Refill & Reuse System Dictionary
The 5-Part Primer introduces foundational concepts, system components, and enabling conditions needed to design effective refill and reuse systems. The 5 five parts can be downloaded separately and each part covers the following:
Part 1: Why Refill & Reuse Systems – Frames the opportunity and core principles for reuse and refill.
Part 2: How Reuse & Refill Work – Explains system models, components, and operational dynamics
Part 3: The Reuse & Refill Landscape – Maps the ecosystem of actors and initiatives across the globe
Part 4: Design Criteria & Considerations – Outlines key design decisions
Part 5: Enabling Conditions – Highlights the policy, infrastructure, and market conditions needed to create effective solutions
Not sure where to begin? For an overall introduction to the Refill & Reuse Systems Handbook and how to use it, start here.
The Step-by-Step Guide provides structured guidance for designing and implementing reuse interventions, from concept through launch. While the Refill & Reuse System Dictionary defines key terminology and system elements to support consistent language across interest holders. Both are coming soon!
The Refill & Reuse Systems Handbook was developed through a collaborative process bringing together global expertise and local insights. This work was led by Perpetual, in close partnership with WWF, as part of the Plastic Reboot Programme.
Learn more about each Part of the handbook below.
Part 1: Why Refill & Reuse
While recycling, composting, and material innovation all have important roles to play, growing evidence demonstrates downstream solutions alone will not be sufficient to address the scale of plastic pollution. By preventing waste before it is created, refill and reuse systems offer a fundamentally different approach, one that addresses the root causes of the problem rather than its symptoms.
Part 1 of the Primer explores why refill and reuse matter, beginning with a shared understanding of what these systems are and how they differ from other circular economy strategies. It then examines the environmental, human health, social, and economic impacts associated with single-use packaging, while highlighting the benefits and opportunities that refill and reuse systems can provide.
Whether you are a civil society organization, policymaker, business, or program implementer, this section is designed to help build the case for action and provide the foundational knowledge needed to engage others in the transition to refill and reuse solutions..
In this section, you will learn:
What refill and reuse systems are and what they are not
The environmental, human health, social, and economic impacts of single-use packaging
The benefits and opportunities associated with reuse and refill systems
Why existing solutions alone will not be enough to address plastic pollution
Why reuse is increasingly recognized as one of the most effective strategies for reducing waste and pollution at scale
Part 2: How Refill & Reuse Systems Work
Part 1 explored why refill and reuse systems are increasingly recognized as essential solutions for addressing plastic pollution and reducing our reliance on single-use products and packaging. While the benefits of reuse are compelling, refill and reuse are not singular solutions. Rather, they consist of a diverse set of models that vary based on who manages the container, how products are delivered, what infrastructure is required, and the roles different actors play across the system.
This section introduces the landscape of refill interventions and reuse systems, providing a practical overview of how they function in real-world settings. It explores the key distinctions between refill and reuse, the different models that exist today, and the operational components that enable these systems to work. By establishing a shared understanding of how containers, products, and stakeholders move through different system types, readers will be better equipped to evaluate which approaches may be most appropriate for their specific context.
Whether you are a policymaker, business, civil society organization, or program implementer, this section is designed to build a foundational understanding of refill and reuse systems before moving into system design, implementation, and enabling conditions in later sections.
In this section, you will learn:
The key differences between refill interventions and reuse systems
The different types of refill and reuse models operating today
How responsibility, infrastructure, and coordination vary across system types
The key elements that enable refill and reuse systems to function effectively
The behavior change, infrastructure, and operational requirements associated with different system types
Part 3: The Reuse & Refill Landscape
Part 1 explored why refill and reuse systems are increasingly recognized as essential solutions for addressing plastic pollution, while Part 2 introduced the different models and system types that make reuse possible. Building on that foundation, Part 3 examines how these concepts are being applied in practice around the world.
This section maps the current refill and reuse landscape, highlighting real-world programs, initiatives, and enabling tools across diverse geographies, sectors, and implementation contexts. From refill programs and reusable food serviceware systems to returnable beverage packaging and business-to-business transport packaging, these examples demonstrate the many ways refill and reuse are already being implemented today.
By showcasing existing initiatives and case studies, this section helps make refill and reuse more tangible, providing inspiration, reference points, and practical examples that can inform future planning and decision-making. Understanding what already exists can help identify models, partners, and approaches that may be relevant to your context.
In this section, you will learn:
How refill and reuse systems are being implemented across different regions and sectors
The range of refill and reuse models currently operating around the world
How different actors, partnerships, and enabling conditions support implementation
Lessons and insights from real-world case studies and pilot programs
Resources, databases, and directories for identifying additional examples and solution providers
Part 4: Design Criteria & Considerations
Parts 1–3 introduced the case for reuse and refill, explored how different systems operate, and highlighted examples from around the world. Part 4 builds on that foundation by examining the critical design considerations that determine whether these systems succeed in practice.
Effective refill and reuse systems require more than durable packaging or return infrastructure. They must be designed to be economically viable, environmentally beneficial, safe, accessible, and integrated into the communities and markets they serve. This section translates reuse and refill concepts into practical design guidance, helping practitioners understand the technical, operational, behavioral, financial, and social factors that influence system performance and long-term success.
In this section, you will learn:
The key design considerations that influence refill and reuse system performance
How to design for economic viability, environmental impact, health and safety, accessibility, and integration
How interoperability can strengthen and expand refill and reuse systems
The role of infrastructure, partnerships, municipalities, and local ecosystems in system design
How to incorporate equity, inclusion, and just transition principles into reuse systems
Why data collection, monitoring, and measurement are critical for system improvement and scaling
Practical tools, frameworks, and resources that can support effective system design and evaluation
Part 5: Enabling Conditions
The success of refill and reuse systems depends on more than strong design and implementation. Even the most well-designed systems operate within a broader ecosystem of policies, infrastructure, institutions, funding mechanisms, market dynamics, and cultural norms that can either accelerate or hinder their success. Part 5 explores these enabling conditions and the critical role they play in creating environments where refill and reuse can thrive at scale.
This section examines the foundational conditions that support successful refill and reuse systems — from regulatory frameworks and financing mechanisms to infrastructure, governance models, and interest holder alignment.
Rather than focusing on individual models, this section takes a systems-level perspective, examining the conditions that support long-term viability. From policy and regulatory frameworks to public sector leadership, infrastructure, standards, private sector collaboration, consumer behavior, and financing, these factors help determine whether refill and reuse initiatives can move beyond pilots and become embedded within everyday markets and communities.
Importantly, enabling conditions should not be viewed as prerequisites that must be fully in place before action can begin. Instead, they serve as leverage points that help practitioners assess ecosystem readiness, identify gaps, prioritize investments and partnerships, and determine where targeted interventions can unlock progress. Understanding these conditions allows organizations to design not only successful reuse systems, but also the supportive environments needed for those systems to endure and scale over time.
In this section, you will learn:
What enabling conditions are and why they matter for refill and reuse success
How policy and regulatory frameworks can support or hinder system development
The role of public sector leadership, procurement, pilots, and integrated planning in accelerating reuse adoption
Why standards, definitions, and labeling systems are important for interoperability, safety, and market alignment
How infrastructure, logistics, washing facilities, reverse logistics networks, and shared assets enable system operation and growth
The importance of private sector leadership, collaboration, and cross-value-chain partnerships
How consumer norms, education, awareness, and convenient return infrastructure influence participation and behavior change
The types of funding, investment, data, and measurement capabilities needed to support implementation and scaling