Map shows London’s filthiest streets – do you live on it?
The filthiest streets in London have been revealed – and the figures don’t make for pleasant reading.
Ewell Road in Kingston Upon Thames has been named the dirtiest street in the capital after there were 308 missed bin collections there in 2023.
Metro sent Freedom of Information (FOI) requests to all of London’s boroughs as well as the City of London to find out how many reports they received about bins not being collected in 2023.
We also asked them which individual streets had the most missed bin reports, and if they keep records of reasons why bin collections were missed, what the most common reason was.
Despite Ewell Road in Kingston Upon Thames being the dirtiest street overall, the filthiest borough in London was Croydon, which received 31,895 reports of bin collections being missed.
That’s the equivalent of 88 bins being missed every single day, or more than 2,600 missed each month.
In second place was Bromley, which had 31,026 missed bin reports last year, and Bexley was in third place, with 22,487 missed bins.
Only four London boroughs keep records of the reasons crews gave for bins not being collected – and three out of four of them said the most common reason was that the bin simply hadn’t been out in the first place, so bin crews weren’t able to collect it.
The fourth council, Kensington and Chelsea, said the most common response they had for complaints about missed bins was that they had, in fact, collected the rubbish being complained about.
Unfortunately Metro doesn’t have data for the entirety of London because Richmond Upon Thames council are still significantly overdue responding to our FOI.
But from the figures we do have, we found that across London there were 303,873 missed bin collections during 2023, which is the equivalent of 833 bins missed every single day.
The total number of missed bin collections in every London borough last year
- Barking and Dagenham – 437
- Barnet – 8,376
- Bexley – 22,487
- Brent (April-December only) – 9,514
- Bromley – 31,026
- Camden – 11,557
- Croydon – 31,895
- Ealing – 4,222
- Enfield – 10,948
- Greenwich – 5,070
- Hackney – 5,106
- Hammersmith and Fulham – 6,734
- Haringey – 12,260
- Harrow – 5,070
- Havering (January-October 21 only) – 5,123
- Hillingdon – 19,262
- Hounslow – 6,534
- Islington – 1,763
- Kensington and Chelsea – 2,548
- Kingston Upon Thames – 16,840
- Lambeth – 5,610
- Lewisham – 10,410
- Merton – 18,319
- Newham – 3,767
- Redbridge – 5,294
- Richmond Upon Thames – did not respond to the FOI in time
- Southwark – 5,807
- Sutton – 10,009
- Tower Hamlets – 9,473
- Waltham Forest – 6,982
- Wandsworth – 10,429
- Westminster – 848
- City of London – 153
Grand total: 303,873
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What about the cleanest boroughs?
Considering its small size, it’s not surprising that the City of London is the area of London with the lowest reports of missed bin collections.
There were only 153 missed bin reports made in the City of London in 2023.
The second cleanest borough was Barking and Dagenham, with 437 missed bin collections last year, and Westminster was in third place with 848 reports.
It’s worth making clear that these figures are based purely on the number of reports each borough received, and aren’t weighted in any way relating to the number of homes or population size of each borough.
Over in Haringey, for example, the council said it missed 12,260 bins out of a total of more than 23.9million collections last year, meaning it only actually missed 0.0515% of collections.
And in Southwark, the council says it missed 5,807 collections out of a total of about 19.4million – another tiny percentage.
The dirtiest streets in London per borough revealed
- Barking and Dagenham: Lodge Avenue – 11 missed bin reports
- Barnet: Watford Way – 57 missed bin reports
- Bexley: Brooke Street – 180 missed bin reports
- Brent: Harrow Road – 132 missed bin reports
- Bromley: data not recorded
- Camden: West End Lane – 167 missed bin reports
- Croydon: Courtwood Lane – 281 missed bin reports
- Ealing: Greenford Road – 66 missed bin reports
- Enfield: data not recorded
- Greenwich: data not recorded
- Hackney: Evering Road – 55 missed bin reports
- Hammersmith and Fulham: Fulham Palace Road – 84 missed bin reports
- Haringey: White Hart Lane – 118missed bin reports
- Harrow data not recorded
- Havering: data not recorded
- Hillingdon: data not recorded
- Hounslow: London Road – 77 missed bin reports
- Islington: Mitchison Road – 29 missed bin reports
- Kensington and Chelsea: Pembroke Villas – 46 missed bin reports
- Kingston upon Thames: Ewell Road – 308 missed bin reports
- Lambeth: Rodenhurst Road – 62 missed bin reports
- Lewisham: data not recorded
- Merton: Kingston Road – 216 missed bin reports
- Newham: Romford Road – 89 missed bin reports
- Redbridge: Eastern Avenue – 62 missed bin reports
- Richmond Upon Thames: did not respond to the FOI
- Southwark: data not recorded
- Sutton: Wrythe Lane – 110 missed bin reports
- Tower Hamlets: Thomas Road – 249 missed bin reports
- Waltham Forest: data not recorded
- Wandsworth: data not recorded
- Westminster: Saltram Crescent – 14 missed bin reports
- City of London: data not recorded
Of course it makes sense that the City of London and Westminster would have low numbers of missed bin reports, because their populations are much smaller than other boroughs, so there aren’t as many bins to empty in the first place.
City of London only has about 9,000 residents, for example, with about 250,000 living in Westminster and 210,000 people in Barking and Dagenham.
That’s compared to more than 385,000 people living in Croydon, 330,000 in Bromley, and almost 250,000 in Bexley.
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