This disclosure asks an organisation to report how much recycled material it uses as an input to make its products or deliver its services. In practice, the focus is on the amount of recycled content actually used during the reporting period, rather than on intentions, targets, or general recycling activity.
The practical question is how broadly this is measured across the organisation’s operations. A complete response should cover the relevant activities and sites included in the reporting boundary, so the figure reflects the organisation’s overall use of recycled inputs rather than only a flagship site or a limited product line.
This LRA educational guidance supports disclosure preparation. For the exact requirements, always refer to the official GRI source.
A quick mental checklist before you prepare this disclosure — tick each as you settle it.
Key datapoints to prepare
How to prepare it
Request recycled-content input data from Operations
Translate the disclosure into an internal business question — then adapt it to your organisation's own language.
Use your organisation’s own terms first, then map them to the reporting question. For example, if your teams talk about feedstock, raw materials, purchased components, or recycled content, keep that language in the request and only translate it afterwards for reporting. Adapt this to how your business tracks production, purchasing, and material flows, and check the source guidance before sign-off.
Can you send the GRI 301-2 recycled input materials data for the year?
Why it fails: It uses framework language only, does not say which internal teams or material groups are in scope, and gives no clue about the basis, source system, or how the figures should be returned. That makes it harder for the owner to respond quickly and consistently.
Can you send the material input figures for [reporting period] for [sites/product lines in scope]? Please include the total amount used, the amount from recycled sources, the basis used, any estimates or exclusions, and the source extract. Please use your normal internal category names and I’ll map them for reporting.
Notes that turn data into a disclosure
LRA training templates — adapt them to your organisation, and check the official source before sign-off.
State how you defined recycled material, what you counted as the production input base, and whether the figure covers all main products and services or only the parts for which data were available.
Explain what the percentage says about how much recovered material is being built into the organisation’s core offerings, and note whether the figure reflects a broad shift in sourcing or only a limited part of the business.
If the share moved materially, link the change to practical drivers such as supplier changes, product redesign, availability of recovered feedstock, or changes in what was included in the calculation.
Preparation tools & forms
Professional preparation tools for GRI 301-2 — free with an LRA Community membership. Register once (it's free) and every download unlocks, together with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.
For each claim, check the evidence
Evidence pack to prepare
Common reporting gaps
Mistakes to avoid when collecting the data
Where judgement is often needed
Illustrative examples
Synthetic, written by LRA — not from a company report, not text from any standard.
*Synthetic illustration only.* We calculated the share of recycled material going into the products and services we make, using the total input mass for the period as the base. - In this example, our primary output used 2,400 tonnes of input material in total, of which 900 tonnes came from recycled sources. - That means recycled content made up **38%** of the material we used to produce our main goods and services.
This example shows how a reporter can present the recycled-content share for its main output in plain language, with a simple total-and-part calculation that rounds to a whole percentage.
*Synthetic illustration only.* We measured the recycled material used in making our core products and services against the full amount of material we put into that production. - For the period shown here, our main output required 1,250 kilograms of input material overall, including 500 kilograms from recycled sources. - On that basis, recycled material represented **40%** of the inputs used for our primary products and services.
This example uses a different sector and a different scale, but the same idea: report the recycled portion of the materials used to make the organisation’s main products and services, with the percentage derived from the part divided by the total.
How companies report GRI 301-2
Real reports where this topic is disclosed. These are report practice, not exact disclosure templates to copy.

Scenarios to work through
A manufacturer uses 40 tonnes of recycled feedstock and 60 tonnes of virgin feedstock to make a batch of primary products. The reporting team also has recycled material in packaging, but that packaging is not part of the main products being sold.
A service business uses recycled paper in its office supplies and recycled plastic in staff uniforms, but its reported service output is delivered digitally. The preparer is unsure whether those recycled materials should affect the figure.
A producer buys a component that contains both recycled and non-recycled content. The supplier states that 30% of the component is recycled, and the producer uses 200 kg of the component in its main product line.
A company has two product lines. Product A uses 80 kg of recycled material and 120 kg of non-recycled material; Product B uses 20 kg of recycled material and 80 kg of non-recycled material. The preparer is deciding whether to report each line separately or combine them.
Related framework references
How this disclosure maps across the major reporting frameworks.
Questions this page answers
The page says to prepare the recycled input share datapoint. Use the plain-language explainer and the step-by-step preparation section to work out what your organisation needs to gather before drafting.
Use it as a working checklist to move from understanding the disclosure to collecting the right information and shaping a draft. The page is designed to help you prepare the disclosure rather than just describe it.
The page does not assign roles, but it is written for sustainability/ESG managers, HR or data owners, and assurance reviewers. In practice, use it to coordinate ownership around the recycled input share datapoint and the evidence pack.
The page includes an evidence pack with five items for assurance readiness, plus five assurance claims to verify. Use those sections together to build a file that supports the claim, the risk, and the evidence behind the number.
The page says there are five assurance claims to verify, each with a claim, risk, and evidence angle. It does not list them in the page summary, so use the assurance section and evidence pack to check what needs support.
The page includes common reporting gaps and mistakes to help you spot weak points before you finalise the disclosure. Use those notes alongside the preparation and assurance sections to catch missing data, unclear scope, or weak evidence.
The page has a draft-output section with visualisation ideas, narrative starters, and a GRI content-index line. Use those to turn the recycled input share data into a clear first draft for review.
Yes. The page includes synthetic illustrative example disclosures, including a quantitative data table, which you can use as a drafting aid rather than as a real-company benchmark.
Yes. The Download Centre includes a Prep & Assurance workbook in .xlsx format and a printable Library Card in .pdf, both intended to support preparation and assurance readiness.
The table links to real published reports where the topic is disclosed, so you can see how others have presented it in practice. Use it as a reference point, not as a template to copy.
The page says the closest ESRS correspondence is ESRS E5 (Resource Use and Circular Economy). You can treat the data as reusable across reporting work, but the page does not say the requirements are identical.
Get your GRI 301-2 tools — free
Your preparation tools are free for LRA Community members and students. Register once (it's free) and your download starts right away — plus the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant.
You're in — your download is starting
Your file is downloading now. Your Community Cabinet — with the Disclosure Library, templates and the LRA AI-assistant — is ready too.
Open your Cabinet →