There has been a huge increase in the number of flytipping reports
05:00, 19 Mar 2026Updated 08:17, 19 Mar 2026

Flytipping found at Avery Lane, Epping(Image: Facebook: Amy Mitchell (@amy.m.moule))
An Essex area is set to increase fines for flytipping after it was named the worst area for the offence. Epping Forest Council is set to increase fixed penalty notices to £1,000 from April, while the government’s plans to increase power to allow driving licences to be taken away in a bid to tackle the number of illegal flytipping cases.
Epping saw 3,542 cases in 24/25 – up 15 per cent from the year before. Epping saw the highest number of flytipping cases in Essex- about 40 per cent more than Harlow in second place, with 2,546. Brentwood ranked third with 1,249 incidents.
Nationally, the number of flytipping cases has increased by nine per cent. The increase has helped spark a potential new intervention from the Government, in which fly-tippers could face points on their licence. The Government is also urging councils to seize and crush vehicles of flytippers in new action to tackle the problem.
The maximum fines that can be imposed on fly-tippers are set to increase in April to £1,000. However, the council has admitted it needs to act differently to clamp down on flytipping.
Brian Ellick, community manager for community resilience at Epping District Council, said: “We need to be more strategic over how we approach flytipping. A lot of the time, we are very traditional. The waste is dumped. We go there, we examine it to see what evidence there is. We might put a camera in. But we need to take a step back, look at the data, and look at what’s happening there.
“For example, some of the flytipping might not be the traditional flytipping; there might be side waste where there is rubbish next to the bin. It’s still flytipping in terms of reporting, just not flytipping, just not in the traditional sense.
“Its about stepping back, looking at the data and formulating specific plans to look at what’s happening and to see what needs addressing.”