How Much Does an Aluminum Can Recycling Center Owner Make? $176M Model

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Description

An aluminum can recycling center owner can model strong pre-tax income, but it’s not automatic owner pay In the researched base case, the center processes 10,000 finished units in the first year, generates $238M in revenue, and produces about $176M in EBITDA before taxes, debt service, depreciation, capex reserves, and distributions By the fifth year, the model reaches 27,500 finished units, $714M in revenue, and about $549M in EBITDA The real take-home depends on how much cash the owner keeps back for equipment, working capital, scrap price swings, and compliance



Owner income iconOwner income$17.5M to $59.1M
Net margin iconNet margin74% to 83%
Revenue for target pay iconRevenue for target pay$23.8M
Business difficulty iconBusiness difficultyMedium

Want to test your owner pay?

Owner income calculator

Estimate owner take-home and target-pay gap from monthly revenue, gross margin, costs, reserves, and target pay.

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Planning note: This is a researched planning estimate, not guaranteed salary, tax advice, or owner distribution advice. It excludes taxes and debt schedules unless you add them separately.



Want to check owner income in the Aluminum Can Recycling Center model?

Open the Aluminum Can Recycling Center Financial Model Template to see revenue, EBITDA, margin, reserves, break-even, and owner take-home assumptions.

Owner-income model highlights

  • Dashboard shows owner income
  • Charts track first and fifth year
  • Tables split cash flow
Aluminum Can Recycling Center Financial Model dashboard summarizes key KPIs, runway/cash and performance with a dynamic dashboard, highlighting cash-flow blind spots and investor-ready charts.

How many pounds of aluminum cans to make money recycling?


There isn’t a reliable pounds answer from the data you gave. This model is built in finished units, not pounds, so don’t convert it unless you have a pounds-per-bale assumption. At the current math, first-year break-even before owner pay is about 39 finished units per month, using $72,283 in monthly payroll plus fixed overhead divided by $1,848 contribution per finished unit.

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Break-even math

  • 39 units monthly before owner pay
  • $1,848 contribution per unit
  • $72,283 payroll plus fixed overhead
  • Volume alone does not create profit
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What changes the need

  • Use pounds only with a bale assumption
  • Add owner pay to fixed costs first
  • Contamination raises needed volume fast
  • Freight and payout rates matter a lot

What is the aluminum can recycling profit margin?


The Aluminum Can Recycling Center model shows a first-year gross margin of about 826% and an EBITDA margin of about 740%, based on $19,666M gross profit and $17,609M EBITDA against $238M revenue. For the full plan, see How To Write An Aluminum Can Recycling Center Business Plan? Margin is not the same as owner distributions, so cash paid out can be lower.

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Margin Drivers

  • Buy-sell spread drives gross profit.
  • 80% revenue-based COGS matters most.
  • Unit COGS can swing EBITDA fast.
  • Outbound freight runs at 40% in year one.
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Cost Watchlist

  • Labor can compress margin quickly.
  • Fixed overhead changes break-even.
  • Year-five EBITDA margin is about 769%.
  • Cash flow still differs from margin.

How much can an aluminum can recycling center owner make?


An Aluminum Can Recycling Center owner can make $176M in first-year EBITDA in this model, before taxes, debt, depreciation, capex reserves, and owner distributions. By year 5, EBITDA reaches $549M on $714M revenue, or a 76.9% EBITDA margin; for setup context, see How To Start Aluminum Can Recycling Center Business?. Owner take-home is not the same as EBITDA because cash depends on equipment funding, working capital, reserves, and whether the owner takes salary or distributions.

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Model Earnings

  • $176M first-year EBITDA
  • $549M fifth-year EBITDA
  • $714M fifth-year revenue
  • 76.9% year-5 EBITDA margin
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Owner Cash

  • Hold reserves for capex
  • Fund working capital first
  • Separate salary from distributions
  • Treat owner labor as savings



Want to see the six income drivers?

1

Scrap Spread

74%

The gap between inbound can cost and resale price drives most of the $17.5M year-1 EBITDA on $23.8M revenue, so small price moves hit owner take-home fast.

2

Processed Volume

10K units

Year 1 already models 10,000 units, and more throughput turns the fixed plant into profit instead of idle cost.

3

Acquisition Payouts

$140-$170

Raw material sourcing runs about $140 to $170 per unit, so tighter buy prices protect the spread before processing starts.

4

Yield Loss

$205-$310

Better yield and less contamination keep total per-unit processing cost from rising as high as $205 to $310, which preserves margin.

5

Freight Costs

3.5%-4.0%

Outbound freight takes 3.5% to 4.0% of revenue, so every rate cut drops straight to EBITDA.

6

Overhead Load

$3.62M

Fixed overhead of $3.62M a year plus staffing and owner role decisions set the floor under pre-tax profit.


Aluminum Can Recycling Center Core Six Income Drivers



Scrap price and resale spread


Scrap-to-sale spread

Income here comes from the gap between inbound can cost and finished aluminum sale price. In year 1, modeled sale prices run $2,100 to $3,000 per finished unit; by year 5, $2,300 to $3,200. When that spread widens, gross profit rises without the same jump in fixed costs, so owner pay has more room.

Here’s the quick math: if acquisition cost runs near $140 to $170 per finished unit, small resale moves can change margin fast. The risk is simple: the owner does not control market resale prices, so weak sell prices can squeeze cash flow even when volume stays steady.

Track the spread weekly

Measure average sell price, buy price, and margin per unit every week. That shows whether the business is building true gross profit or just moving material. One clean metric: spread per finished unit.

Keep pricing tied to quality and timing. If output purity slips, resale value can fall fast; if the center holds higher-grade bales, the spread stays healthier and more cash is left for rent, freight, payroll, and owner draw.

  • Track weekly average sale price
  • Track inbound buy price
  • Watch margin per unit
  • Flag low-purity lots fast
1


Processed aluminum can volume


Processed Can Volume

Processed volume is how many finished aluminum units the center can sort, compact, and ship. More steady output spreads lease, insurance, software, compliance, security, and management payroll over more units. At 10,000 finished units in year one, or 833 a month, the monthly overhead load is about $362 per unit before variable costs.

  • Finished units shipped
  • Inbound can supply
  • Baler and shredder uptime
  • Storage days on hand
  • Buyer pickup schedule

By year five, 27,500 units, or 2,292 a month, cuts that overhead load to about $132 per unit. That only helps if contribution, meaning cash left after variable costs, stays positive; missed pickups, weak supplier flow, or downtime can turn higher volume into more cash tied up, not more owner pay.

Keep Throughput Stable

Track weekly throughput against machine uptime and booked buyer loads. If supplier flow is thin, set pickup days and minimum lot sizes so the baler and shredder stay fed without filling storage. Use one simple report: units in, units processed, units shipped, and days of inventory on hand.

Watch the break point where more volume stops improving profit. If storage limits, buyer scheduling, or equipment downtime push unit cost up, slow intake before margins slip. One clean rule: volume should lower unit cost, not just raise activity.

2


Can acquisition payouts and supplier mix


Acquisition Payout Mix

Payouts are not just a cost line. If you buy cans at $140 to $170 per finished unit, the real question is whether that payout keeps enough spread after sorting, hauling, and selling the bale. Against first-year resale prices of $2,100 to $3,000, that sourcing cost is roughly 4.7% to 8.1% of resale value, so even small payout changes can move owner profit fast.

Supplier mix matters too. Walk-in sellers usually want simple pricing and fast payment, while businesses and community groups may accept a lower payout in exchange for reliable pickup. Pay too little and volume dries up; pay too much and the margin disappears. One line says it all: acquisition price sets both supply and spread.

Track Payout vs Resale

Measure acquisition cost as a share of resale value every week, not just total spend. Here’s the quick math: acquisition cost ÷ resale value. Use that ratio by supplier type, since walk-in, pickup, and contract sources won’t behave the same. The owner’s job is to keep supply steady without letting payout drift past the margin the plant needs.

  • Track payout by supplier type.
  • Compare cost to resale weekly.
  • Test fast pay vs lower pay.
  • Protect volume before raising rates.

What this hides: a higher payout can still help if it locks in cleaner, more reliable inbound flow. But if the mix shifts toward high-cost walk-ins and away from dependable bulk suppliers, gross margin gets thin fast and cash available for owner pay drops with it.

3


Processing yield and contamination loss


Processing Yield and Contamination Loss

Yield is the share of inbound cans that becomes saleable output. If trash, moisture, mixed metals, or sorting mistakes rise, the center ships fewer finished pounds from the same inbound volume, so revenue falls and disposal cost rises. In this model, quality testing at 05% of revenue and $8 to $20 of waste disposal per finished unit both hit margin.

Here’s the quick math: cleaner sorting protects high-purity bales priced at $2,800 in year one, while poor yield pushes material into lower-value output. That cuts gross profit twice—less sellable product and more scrap to dump. One bad load can also delay cash, because you still pay handling and testing before you get paid on the bale.

Track Contamination Before It Hits Margin

Measure inbound contamination rate, moisture, mixed-metal share, reject pounds, and finished-bale grade each day. Tie those checks to supplier, shift, and route so you can spot where loss starts. If a source keeps missing spec, tighten sorting rules or lower the payout. The goal is simple: keep more cans in the $2,800 high-purity bucket and less in disposal.

Watch three numbers in your weekly margin review: sellable pounds per inbound ton, disposal cost per finished unit, and testing cost as a share of revenue. If reject rate rises, model lower cash for payroll and owner draw right away. Better yield does not just lift revenue; it protects the spread on every unit shipped.

4


Hauling and transportation cost


Hauling and freight cost

Hauling is the cash leak in this model. It covers pickup routes, outbound freight, load size, buyer distance, fuel, driver time, and backhauls. In year one, outbound freight is 40% of revenue, or about $952k on $238M revenue. By year five, it is still 35% of revenue, so long miles and thin loads can shrink the owner’s draw fast.

Here’s the quick math: every empty mile and half-full truck cuts cash before fixed overhead. Route pickups can build supply, but only when stops are dense enough to keep trucks full. Half-empty loads can make gross margin look fine on paper while cash flow turns tight in the bank account.

Measure route density first

To estimate this cost, track buyer distance, pickup miles, load size, fuel per mile, driver hours, and backhaul sha re. Dense routes and planned return loads matter more than cheap fuel alone. If the average route leaves half-empty, freight can erase the spread that should fund profit and owner pay.

Set pickup windows by zone, then test whether closer suppliers beat far-away volume. Route pickups should raise supply only when stop density stays high. If routes stretch out or backhauls drop, freight becomes a margin problem first and a cash flow problem right after.

5


Fixed overhead, staffing, and owner role


Fixed Overhead and Owner Labor

This driver includes lease, insurance, software, marketing, compliance, security, and payroll. At $302k per month, fixed overhead is about $3.624M a year before variable costs. That means the plant has to keep enough processed volume and margin to cover the cash floor even in weak months. If cash drops below that floor, owner pay is usually the first thing squeezed.

Payroll rises from $505k in year 1 to $987k in year 5, so staffing grows with operations. Owner labor can improve early cash flow, but it is not the same as scalable management. Replacing paid managers with the owner helps only if permits, insurance, and maintenance still get funded during slow months.

Keep the Cash Floor Visible

Here’s the quick math: $302k x 12 = $3.624M in fixed overhead, before direct operating costs. Track monthly fixed burn against contribution from processed output, because fewer saleable units spread the same overhead over a smaller base. What this hides is simple: low volume does not cut lease, insurance, or compliance bills.

  • Track lease, insurance, and compliance monthly.
  • Separate owner tasks from paid manager work.
  • Hold cash for slow-month permits and upkeep.

Measure owner hours against the payroll you avoid, but do not treat that as permanent margin. If the owner is doing manager work just to keep the doors open, the business may look lean while still carrying the same fixed-cost risk. The real test is whether the overhead stays covered without starving operations.

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Compare low, base, and high owner-income cases

Owner income scenarios

Owner income here moves with can volume, resale spread, hauling cost, and payroll. The low case tests a slow ramp; the high case tests fifth-year scale and reserve pressure.

Compare downside, modeled, and upside owner income outcomes.
Scenario Low CaseDownside pressure Base CaseModeled base High CaseScale-up upside
Launch model This low case assumes a slower earnings path with weaker volume, tighter resale pricing, and more cost pressure. This base case mirrors the modeled first-year run rate with 10,000 units, $23.8M revenue, and $17.5M EBITDA before reserves. This high case assumes the plant reaches fifth-year scale at 27,500 units and $71.4M revenue.
Typical setup The plant processes less material than planned, hauling costs bite harder, and reserves build slowly. The operation runs at Year 1 volume with 4.0% freight, 1.0% commissions, and $867.4k fixed overhead plus payroll. The mature plant runs with 12 FTE, $1.349M fixed overhead plus payroll, and $59.1M EBITDA before reserves.
Cost drivers
  • Lower can volume
  • tighter resale spread
  • higher hauling
  • delayed reserves
  • fixed payroll drag
  • 10,000 first-year units
  • $23.8M revenue
  • 4.0% freight
  • 1.0% commissions
  • $867.4k fixed overhead plus payroll
  • 27,500 fifth-year units
  • $71.4M revenue
  • 12 FTE
  • $1.349M fixed overhead plus payroll
  • $59.1M EBITDA
Owner income rangeBefore owner reserves Below $17.5M EBITDAReserve stress $17.5M EBITDAModeled run rate $59.1M EBITDAScale-up upside
Best fit Use this to stress slow ramp, weak pricing, and reserve pressure. Use this as the core planning case for day-one operations and budgeting. Use this to test mature-scale throughput, staffing, and reserve needs.

Planning note: These scenario ranges are researched planning assumptions, not guaranteed earnings, salary promises, tax advice, or distributions.

Frequently Asked Questions

Tax is not included in the owner-income figures here The model shows $176M first-year EBITDA and $549M fifth-year EBITDA before taxes, interest, depreciation, debt service, and distributions Actual tax depends on entity type, depreciation, state rules, financing, and owner compensation Treat tax as a separate model tab with a CPA