The Mill food recycling bin is the easiest indoor composter alternative, and my all-time favorite appliance

It's technically not composting, but it's feeding chickens — ultimately still avoiding the landfill fate.
 By 
Leah Stodart
 on 
All products featured here are independently selected by our editors and writers. If you buy something through links on our site, Mashable may earn an affiliate commission.
Mill composter bin, cardboard box, and cat with hallway and table in background
As Mill says, "If you can't eat it, Mill it" — and then leave it to Mill to upcycle it. Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable
4.7/5
Mill food recycling bin
Mill proves that recycling food scraps only has to be overwhelming if you let it. By holding months' worth of food scraps, dehydrating them, then collecting the finished grounds to turn into chicken food, Mill is a totally closed-loop solution that transforms one of the most impactful personal sustainable steps one can take into an approachable one.
Mashable Score 4.7
Wow Factor 5
User Friendliness 4.5
Performance 5
Bang for the Buck 4.25
The Good
  • Trashcan-sized bin holds months of scraps
  • A year with Mill allegedly avoids a half-ton of greenhouse gas emissions
  • Great option if you don't have a garden
  • Can take meat and dairy products
  • App answers nearly any question you could possibly have
  • They weren't lying when they said it's odorless
  • Choice of renting or buying it
The Bad
  • Buying Mill costs double the price of Lomi or Reencle
  • Can't take plants or yard scraps
  • Mill pickup service is a steep extra charge

A Mashable Choice Award is a badge of honor, reserved for the absolute best stuff we’ve tested and loved.

Finding out how to recycle any given item is a shifty inquiry that even Google's AI Overview has trouble pinning down. And then, half the time, we're questioning where the stuff we toss in the recycling bin actually goes. (To a legitimate recycling plant? To the ocean? Hell?) Food waste has a much clearer — and much more dire — fate. We know for sure that's going to the landfill.

To be fair, there aren't a ton of feasible ways to "recycle" food. Composting is an option, of course, but true outdoor composting takes months, requires yard space, and involves worms. Over the past few years, composting has made a pretty revolutionary move indoors. Electric countertop composters like the Vitamix FoodCycler and Lomi consolidated the composting process to an appliance that doesn't hog much more counter space than a toaster oven.

Despite these advances in convenience and simplicity — two major factors necessary to make the average person consider taking the time to separating food scraps in their kitchen — this approach to countertop composting poses a recurring pickle: what to do with that material once it's made. Mill fills the gap.

Recommended deals for you

Apple AirPods Pro 3 Noise Cancelling Heart Rate Wireless Earbuds $219.99 (List Price $249.00)

Apple iPad 11" 128GB Wi-Fi Retina Tablet (Blue, 2025 Release) $274.00 (List Price $349.00)

Amazon Fire HD 10 32GB Tablet (2023 Release, Black) $69.99 (List Price $139.99)

Sony WH-1000XM5 Wireless Noise Canceling Headphones $248.00 (List Price $399.99)

Blink Outdoor 4 1080p Security Camera (5-Pack) $159.99 (List Price $399.99)

Fire TV Stick 4K Streaming Device With Remote (2023 Model) $24.99 (List Price $49.99)

Shark AV2511AE AI Robot Vacuum With XL Self-Empty Base $249.99 (List Price $599.00)

Apple Watch Series 11 (GPS, 42mm, S/M Black Sport Band) $339.00 (List Price $399.00)

WD 6TB My Passport USB 3.0 Portable External Hard Drive $138.65 (List Price $179.99)

Dell 14 Premium Intel Ultra 7 512GB SSD 16GB RAM 2K Laptop $999.99 (List Price $1549.99)

Mill food recycling bin sitting against wall
The new version of the Mill kitchen bin has legit buttons now, with the same wooden lid. Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

After two years with a Mill kitchen bin and many boxes of food grounds sent back, I was recently alerted about a big Mill milestone: I've officially diverted 500 pounds of food from landfills. Those tangible updates about the impact I'm making are such a big part of why Mill is easily my favorite appliance that I've tested for Mashable — and I've tested the Ninja Slushi, so that's saying something. I gush about Mill to people in my real life, and I'm about to put it all in writing here.

How does Mill work?

Mill is a large electric indoor food recycling bin that sits on the floor like a trash can instead of on the counter. Like an in-home composter, it's a less-smelly place than the trash to throw plate scrapings, forgotten fridge leftovers, old pet food, and the butt of the bread that everyone keeps bypassing. Unlike composting, Mill technically isn't conducting decomposition or creating a nutrient-rich substance that can be added to soil. Rather, Mill dries your scraps into dehydrated grounds that look and feel similar to dirt — literally your food without the moisture content — in just a few hours.

But with those basics covered, Mill really starts to pull away from the competition. The most obvious physical difference is that Mill sits on the floor rather than the countertop and is basically like having another full-sized trash can that makes compost in your kitchen. I love that opening the lid just involves a presser foot and doesn't require a free hand.

Instead of waiting on you to press a button when the bucket is full like its countertop competitors, Mill automatically starts dehydrating and churning at the same time every day. I chose 10 p.m. to try to ensure that everyone in my household was done eating and snacking for the night. A light on the lid appears when Mill is running.

Mill kitchen bin and cat on hardwood floor in dark room with cat in background
Oh, to be a cat basking in the faint glow of the Mill bin. Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable
Mill kitchen bin and cat on hardwood floor in light room with cat in background
Same cat, new Mill bin. Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

I actually don't know exactly how long Mill runs overnight, but it's always done by the time I'm up for work the next morning. It's also so much quieter than I expected (given the Lomi's haunted house-esque creaking), producing a low whir that you can barely hear even when standing right beside it.

Since writing my original review in 2023, I've received the latest generation of the Mill bin. The new version remedies every minuscule note I had about the first one, and other customers apparently had the same thoughts. It's even quieter than before, and if you need to put something in after the bin is locked, you don't have to press and hold a button anymore — you can literally just use the presser foot as you normally would. The exterior design and stirring paddles inside the bucket are also slightly different.

Mill takes almost any food scrap, including meat and dairy

Mill is super versatile in the variety of food you can put in it — it's not nearly as limited as a traditional compost pile. Almost any food product can be thrown into Mill, excluding common-sense stuff like large animal bones or excessive liquids. It's actually super easy to remember, but you can get a quick refresher by glancing at the magnet that Mill sends with your bin. Being forced to glance at the magnet every time we open the fridge really helps to normalize separating food scraps in my apartment's kitchen routine. Scraping our plates into Mill is a reflex, just like the automatic reflex to throw a metal can into the recycling bin instead of the trash.

A Mill bin with the lid up holding egg shells, rice, pasta salad, Goldfish crackers, and an apple core.
A typical day with Mill: Egg shells, old fridge leftovers, stale goldfish, and an apple core. Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

Mill has also made keeping the kitchen smelling fresh so much easier. We don't have a garbage disposal in the sink, so all of our soggy food remnants collect in a sink catcher, which I always dump directly into Mill instead of the trash. There, it doesn't start to stink. Same goes with cleaning out the fridge — any time I uncover old pizza or an old takeout box that's been pushed to the back, I can just toss it in Mill. To my surprise, pet food also gets the green light in Mill. My cats randomly turn their nose up at certain flavors and leave food in their bowls constantly, and I really needed an alternative to trashing it. Because if you think wet cat food reeks right out of the can, imagine how it smells after chilling in a trash can for two days.

Fridge door with several magnets including list of food that can be put in bin
Seeing the Mill magnet every time we open the fridge helps to internalize the general list of compostable items. Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable
Mill app screenshot showing various food items that can go in the bin
Being able to search super specific items in the app is way easier than Googling. Credit: Screenshot: Mill

I remember my days of saving food scraps in a bag in my freezer to drop off at my local food scrap collection location in Brooklyn. Having to follow so many rules was a pain in the ass. "No meat, no dairy or cheese, no fats or oils, no cooked foods." OK, so do you have to completely trash a salad if it has a few drops of dressing on it? Are roasted vegetables fine or not? Are you not even going to mention grains? Also, nobody knows what the hell carbon-rich or nitrogen-rich materials are. Explain it to me like I'm 5.

Mill's limitations are nothing like that. Most of the "no" section is composed of non-food items that seem like common sense. Some items are only OK on a case-by-case basis. If there's confusion about whether something specific can or can't go in, it's almost guaranteed to be listed in the Mill app, where you can type in just about anything and get a solid yes or no answer.

The two most surprising things that can't go in Mill are compostable plastics and plant clippings, such as fallen houseplant leaves and yard scraps.

At the end of the day, the fact that Mill's list of accepted food items is much heavier on the "yes" side than the "no" side makes it much easier to remember to use it over the trash can in the first place, especially for the people in the household who aren't the hardcore eco-friendly ones.

Shipping food grounds back is truly painless

Mill proves how much it really is consolidating your footprint by how infrequently you need to deal with the bin — it takes about a month to fill completely. Once the grounds weigh nine pounds and hit the green line inside, the app gives a heads up that it's time to empty.

From there, your only job is to pack your milled results into one of the pre-labeled packages that should have arrived in a separate delivery. You'll also receive plant-based box liners that look like giant Ziploc bags to stick in the box, which you'll want to open as wide as possible. Then, just use the handle to lift the metal bin out of the Mill and dump it into the liner. It is a little heavy sometimes, but it only takes a few seconds. I use a butter knife to scrape off any crusty stuff.

Mill bin bucket and cardboard box with plastic liner sitting on floor
The Mill bin is removable with handles for easy dumping into the box. Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable
Cat sniffing box with bag of Food Grounds inside
The bag zips, so any smell will be sealed while you wait to add a second batch. Credit: Leah Stodart / Mashable

The shipping box can technically hold a few full batches, and Mill encourages you not to send incomplete boxes back. I literally just keep half-full boxes in a closet until the next batch is ready — the grounds don't smell bad at all and are zipped safely inside the liner.

You can then drop your package off at the post office or schedule a USPS pickup — it's just as easy as mailing back a return or shipping a Depop package. After that, your scraps are Mill's problem, and you're free to start filling the bin all over again. You'll get an email when Mill receives your shipment, as well as some numbers calculating the environmental impacts of that singular pickup. It's always cool to get tangible intel about my Mill shipments after I ship them.

Screenshot of Mill app showing food grounds and box weight
Credit: Screenshot: Mill
Screenshot of Mill app showing environmental impacts of box
Credit: Screenshot: Mill

Traditional compost feeds soil. Mill Food Grounds feed chickens.

The way that Mill processes your scraps on demand is so cool and so much more convenient than any other at-home composting solution. But that's hardly Mill's sole unprecedented flex: If you do choose to go the Mill pickup route with your food grounds, Mill is so dedicated to recycling food that it puts your food waste directly back into the life cycle — into the belly of a chicken, actually.

The beef that any average Earth enjoyer has with the beef industry is spotlighted by countless documentaries and Impossible Whopper commercials. While cow farming is by far the biggest agricultural hazard for the climate, it's not the only livestock practice with a hefty carbon footprint. A study about chicken and salmon farming published by Current Biology in February 2023 asserts that much of the emission — as much as 55 percent — associated with poultry farming comes from feeding them.

Factory-farmed chicken feed largely comes from grain and soya. Growing either requires mass amounts of land (often gained through deforestation) and water. The boom of demand for soybean products (ironically, the main base ingredient in a lot of plant-based meat) from humans and now chickens, apparently, is an increasing area of concern on top of the demand for the meat itself.

The dried food dirt that Mill creates actually retains most of its nutritional value, and Mill founders realized that the milled results would actually work great as a base ingredient for chicken feed. As of February 2024, Mill even has a commercial feed license in Washington, where it can now distribute its upcycled chicken food to residents of the state.

So, by rerouting your Mill grounds into the hands of small farmers as an ingredient for their chicken feed, Mill's closed-loop service can be thought of as an added measure of sustainability on top of the food scraps it diverts from landfills.

How much does Mill cost?

There are two separate payment options for bringing Mill home: Buy it for a flat fee of $999.99 or try it temporarily first by renting it for $35 per month. If you'd like to send your finished food grounds back to Mill, the Mill pickup plan is an extra charge of $16 per month (or $192 billed annually plus tax, on top of your buying or renting charge). There's a buyout program if you do end up wanting to keep Mill.

A 12-month commitment is required with the rental plan. That comes with some perks, like an ongoing warranty and charcoal filter replacements throughout the year. I actually did have to replace my bin about a year ago, and it was a super seamless process. My original bin's scale sensor broke after (I think) I slammed the bucket back into the bin too hard. I just emailed customer service, got to talk to a real person (not a clanker), and we arranged for the latest generation of the Mill bin to be shipped to me while I ship the old one back. The new one arrived within days, and the hardest part was literally just getting these 50-pound bins to and from the lobby of my building.

Here's how the costs shake out: Renting Mill for $35 per month ends up costing $420 for a year, so paying the flat $999.99 to own your Mill is more cost-efficient after a little over two years. If you need Mill to deal with your food grounds for you (like I do), factoring in a Mill pickup subscription adds nearly $200 to your annual bill. Renting Mill for a year costs just over a dollar a day, while straight-up buying Mill costs almost $3 per day for the first year — that obviously tapers off eventually since it's not a recurring cost.

No, the loophole you're thinking of won't work, either. You can't simply stop paying for the service while keeping the bin for free. Rental cancellation is only effective once Mill has received your returned bin, which you'll have 30 days to send back after requesting to cancel.

Mill vs. Lomi and Reencle: Cost is the main disadvantage

Having Mill in my kitchen has been such a positive, hands-off experience that it hasn't really sparked any noteworthy complaints. But it's still the most expensive at-home food recycling machine and/or composter. The whole "dollar a day thing" adds up quickly, especially when you consider that a single year of using Mill is more expensive than the full one-time purchase of an indoor countertop composter.

So if you're interested in composting inside your home but aren't yet set on the specific machine, your main options aside from Mill are countertop composters like the Lomi, Reencle, or Vitamix FoodCycler. They operate similarly in that they still do the composting inside your home within a matter of hours — they just hold a much smaller capacity and take up counter space instead of floor space. These three go for around $400 to $600 at full price, maybe dropping by $100 or so when on sale. Most home composters do require the purchase of filter and pod replacements every few months.

This isn't to say that I don't understand why Mill costs a bit more. It's a much more elevated service than what competitors can provide, and you're paying for the experts to deal with your finished grounds rather than having to figure out what to do with it. But I'd be remiss not to put it into perspective, especially with steady inflation making us more closely consider what's a necessity and what's not.

Countertop composters are also kind of a miss if you don't have a garden. They otherwise suggest putting that finished compost in the green bin. You mean, the green bin and curbside composting system that a ton of towns don't have? Suggesting taking them to a local compost drop-off location kind of defeats the purpose of having a machine to do the composting at home.

Putting a number on Mill's environmental benefits

In a perfect world, a sleek, advanced system like Mill would be as standard in a home as curbside garbage collection is. Some places in the U.S. are kind of making strides: States like California and Vermont do have statewide mandatory compost laws in place. Cities like San Francisco, Portland, and New York City have similarly made composting mandatory for residents. But until composting is genuinely accessible to everyone, recycling food at home with something like Mill is still so impactful — even if you're the only person you know who has one.

In case you're blissfully unaware of just how detrimental our food waste habit really is, let's get into it quickly. It's estimated that the average American household wastes almost a third of the food it acquires each year, and that's obviously not counting the contributions of food waste from businesses like restaurants.

When food rots, it produces methane: a gas that’s 80 times more potent than CO2 over a 20-year period after reaching the atmosphere. The combination of households, restaurants, and more creates 170 million metric tons of carbon dioxide-equivalent emissions — equivalent to the exhaust 37 million cars would create.

This is a statistic that Mill is aiming to shrink. According to my app, it's estimated that the Mill community has collectively diverted 11 million pounds of food waste from landfills to date. (That's about a half-ton of greenhouse gas emissions at the single household level per year, on average.) Mill tells me that, over the past two-ish years, I've personally fed 64 chickens and kept over 425 kg of CO2e from being emitted into the atmosphere. Just think of the impact that could be had if Mill achieves its ultimate goal of expanding to the business level.

Is the Mill bin worth it?

Yes, Mill is absolutely worth it — considering I quite literally spent my own money to purchase the free test unit I was sent to keep using Mill after I was done testing it. It's truly in a league of its own in the way that it's currently the only at-home option on the market that offers to repurpose your food scraps for you, and is the only at-home food recycling option with a "no garden, no problem" solution.

Having Mill in my kitchen has made cleaning out my fridge so much less of a daunting task, though I'm not having to get rid of old food as often as I once was — because Mill just has an inherent way of making me more mindful about how I go through food in general. (A recent survey of other Mill users found that other people have had the same brain blast.)

And though the idea of it may sound like a big to-do, Mill is ridiculously straightforward and easy to use. It's like an extra 13-gallon trash can in your kitchen that takes itself out. As a dedicated compost girlie over the past five years, I've done my time with the humble stainless steel countertop food scrap bin. I was in the trenches with those stenches for way too long. You can imagine how thankful I am that Mill is the way I get to do this now.

Mill simultaneously stirs hope and frustration because it shows just how easy it could and should be to not send every unwanted crumb from your kitchen to the landfill. Seriously, imagine if having a sustainable waste system like this at home was as normalized and accessible as trashing everything is. To me, it posed the daydream situation of how quickly America could turn its food waste shit show around if composting (or a composting-adjacent approach, like Mill's) was funded on the micro level, rather than shifting the responsibility to the average person and whether or not they can figure out a convenient composting solution on their own dime.

How we tested

Mill had been used in my kitchen for around three months during the original writing of this review. Two years later, Mill is a permanent fixture in this household.

Our Mill holds daily food scraps from three roommates (two vegetarians and one ardent carnivore) plus leftover pet food from two cats who occasionally leave dinner behind in their bowls.

Factors taken into account during testing were:

  • Ease of adding Mill to your routine: As in, is using the bin intuitive enough that everyone in a household will remember to use it? Mill opens and closes with a foot pedal, starts the drying process by itself every day, and holds a lot before needing to be emptied, so it's almost completely hands-off for weeks at a time. The general gist of what items can and can't be put into Mill is so sensical that it almost feels like common knowledge, though the app and included fridge magnet are also extremely helpful. Shipping food grounds probably requires the biggest lifestyle adjustment if you don't mail packages often, though USPS pickups are usually pretty seamless.

  • Space required: Mill is about the size of a 13-gallon trash can, so it may not work in cramped living spaces that don't really have empty floor space against a wall in their kitchen. However, Mill might be an ideal alternative to countertop composters in kitchens where counter space is limited.

  • Trash downsizing potential: Since Mill is on the more expensive side in the world of indoor "composters", it needs to have a noticeable positive impact on your kitchen's freshness and overall routine to be worthwhile. The long list of both raw and cooked food scraps Mill takes care of and the sheer capacity it holds noticeably slows how much your trash stinks and how often you have to take it out.

  • Reusability of Food Grounds: The main plot hole in the blueprint of countertop composters is that the compost they produce is hard to put to use if you don't have a garden. Mill addresses this by offering an option to take each batch of dehydrated food scraps off of your hands via mail, then ensuring that it's being put directly back into the circle of life by becoming an ingredient in chicken feed.

  • Maintenance, recurring costs, and customer service: For how much it costs to keep Mill in your home, it should run smoothly and not need extra money thrown at it for maintenance. Despite one user error blip with my original Mill kitchen bin, they do seem to be high-quality and run like a well-oiled machine. When I did have an issue, it was super easy to resolve it with the support team of real people, not chatbots.

  • Price point: Mill is significantly more expensive than competing in-home composters because its flat price tag of $999.99 is double what most other countertop indoor composters cost. The monthly cost when renting Mill — $35 per month — is digestible when broken up, but steep when you potentially tack on the $192 per year pickup fee. Mill will be a hard no for some budgets, but I personally can't help but take its steep price with a grain of salt. This thing is pretty life-changing, and life-changing purchases are expensive sometimes.

Frequently Asked Questions


Yes, you can just buy and keep a Mill for a flat fee for $999.99 without any further recurring subscription costs. Instead of paying the $16 per month Mill pickup rate, Mill owners can also deal with their food grounds themselves — they can be added to a garden, dropped off with a local composter, or fed to your own personal chickens.

Leah Stodart
Leah Stodart
Senior Shopping Reporter

Leah Stodart is a Philadelphia-based Senior Shopping Reporter at Mashable where she covers and tests essential home tech like vacuums and TVs, plus eco-friendly hacks. Her ever-evolving experience in these categories comes in clutch when making recommendations on how to spend your money during shopping holidays like Black Friday, which Leah has been covering for Mashable since 2017.


Recommended For You
TerraCycle is a free recycling hack for K-cups, toothpaste tubes, and all your hard-to-recycle stuff: How it works
Collage featuring TerraCycle cardboard drop-off boxes, razors, coffee maker pods, and more plastic waste swirling around green arrows

Thanksgiving dinner sorted: The Ninja Foodi Smart XL indoor grill and air fryer is $100 off at Amazon
the Ninja Ninja Foodi Smart XL on a countertop with many cooked dishes around it

These future foods could help the planet, if we can stop being weird about them
Mashable UK Editor Shannon Connellan smiles at the camera as a pile of food scraps is seen in the background. Caption reads "garbage to palm oil"

DoorDash and Instacart announce emergency SNAP assistance
Two delivery drivers pass paper bags of groceries to each other on a city street.


More in Life
Dell 16 Premium review: The perfect blend of sleek and powerful at a steep price
dell 16 premium laptop on a desk

DJI Mic 3 review: Ease and versatility for semi-pro producers
The DJI Mic 3 and its accessories in its charging case.

The best laptops of 2025: Compare the M4 MacBook Air, Microsoft Surface Laptop 7, and more
the 15-inch m4 apple macbook air on a desk against a blue speckled wall

I found 5 Dyson Supersonic dupes that are almost as good as the real thing
Zuvi Halo hair dryer with gentle air attachment, round brush, and makeup bag

The 10 best Windows laptops of 2025
the microsoft surface laptop 7

Trending on Mashable
NYT Connections hints today: Clues, answers for November 29, 2025
Connections game on a smartphone

Streaming just got cheaper: Black Friday deals still live on Hulu, HBO Max, Apple TV, Disney+, and more
Disney+, Hulu, HBO Max, Peacock, and Prime Video logos with colorful background and black friday icon

Wordle today: Answer, hints for November 29, 2025
Wordle game on a smartphone

The 23 best Black Friday PlayStation game deals still live (updated)
helldivers II, clair obscur, and silent hill f on pink background

NYT Strands hints, answers for November 29, 2025
A game being played on a smartphone.
The biggest stories of the day delivered to your inbox.
These newsletters may contain advertising, deals, or affiliate links. By clicking Subscribe, you confirm you are 16+ and agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.
Thanks for signing up. See you at your inbox!