Last Updated on July 10, 2025 by Brian Beck

Using municipal waste (often referred to as biosolids) for lawn fertilizer comes with some serious risks and trade-offs—despite being marketed as “recycled” or “sustainable.” Here’s a breakdown of the potential hazards:

⚠️ Top Risks of Using Municipal Waste as Lawn Fertilizer

1. Heavy Metal Contamination

  • Biosolids can contain lead, cadmium, mercury, arsenic, and chromium.

  • These metals accumulate in soil over time and cannot be broken down biologically.

  • They may leach into groundwater or be absorbed by plants, posing a health risk to pets, children, and local wildlife.

2. Persistent Organic Pollutants (POPs)

  • These include pharmaceuticals, hormones, flame retardants, and industrial chemicals.

  • Many of these compounds survive the wastewater treatment process and are highly resistant to decomposition.

  • POPs can interfere with soil microbiology, plant health, and even make their way into food chains.

3. Microplastics

  • Municipal waste is a huge source of microplastic pollution.

  • Plastics degrade into microscopic fragments that persist in the soil, altering soil structure and water-holding capacity.

  • Microplastics may also be ingested by microbes and worms, disrupting soil food web integrity.

4. Pathogen Survival

  • While treated to reduce pathogens, not all bacteria, viruses, and parasites are eliminated.

  • Some biosolids may still harbor E. coli, salmonella, or helminth eggs, especially in lower-grade composts.

  • This is a concern particularly on lawns where children or pets play.

5. High Salinity and pH Imbalances

  • Municipal waste-based fertilizers can contribute to salt build-up, making soils hydrophobic and stressing plants.

  • Some products also alter the pH, leading to nutrient lockout or biological dormancy in the soil.

6. Disruption of Soil Microbial Balance

  • The biological system in your soil relies on symbiotic microbes and fungi.

  • The addition of toxic residues from biosolids can suppress beneficial microbes, impairing nutrient cycling, disease resistance, and carbon storage.

7. Unknown Inputs

  • Municipal waste is a “mystery soup”—a catch-all for anything that goes down the drain.

  • This includes cleaning chemicals, industrial runoff, pharmaceuticals, and human waste.

  • There is little public transparency or consistency in what you’re actually putting on your lawn.


âś… Safe Alternatives

If you’re trying to improve soil fertility without the risks, consider:

  • Compost from clean organic sources

  • Vermicompost (worm castings)

  • Compost teas and biological inoculants

  • Mineral balancing based on a soil test

  • Carbon-based biological fertilizers (e.g., molasses, humates, kelp, fish hydrolysates)


đź§  Final Thought

Municipal waste may seem like a “free” or “green” option—but free often comes with invisible costs. In the pursuit of healthy, living soil, biosolids are a shortcut that undermines long-term fertility, biological integrity, and safety.