AfterTech Computer Recycling is a certified electronics recycler that accepts used computers, monitors, printers, and peripherals, refurbishes salvageable equipment for resale, and processes non-functional devices for responsible material recovery. It operates as one of a small number of R2 (Responsible Recycling) certified facilities in the Oklahoma City metro, meaning it meets federal data-security and environmental standards for handling electronics that contain hazardous materials and recoverable metals.
The business accepts both drop-off and bulk donations from households and organizations. Technicians evaluate each device: some items are cleaned, tested, and resold at reduced prices through an on-site retail section or online marketplace; others are disassembled and sorted into metal, plastic, and glass streams for processing. Data-bearing devices (hard drives, solid-state drives, servers) are wiped to Department of Defense standards before processing or resale, a step critical for any business or individual concerned with privacy compliance.
AfterTech distinguishes itself from general donation centers by offering a documented chain of custody, meaning a customer receives paperwork confirming how their equipment was handled, valuable for organizations that need audit trails for compliance or sustainability reporting.
Individual household drop-offs are free; monitors and televisions may incur a small fee (typically $10 to $25 each) to offset the cost of safe cathode-ray tube or LED panel processing, though the facility's current fee structure should be confirmed directly. Bulk business pickups and corporate decommissioning projects are quoted per lot, with pricing dependent on volume, device condition, and whether data destruction with certificate of destruction is required. A small business disposing of 20 end-of-life laptops, for example, would expect a quote in the low hundreds rather than thousands if no data security processing is needed; a server farm decommissioning or a fleet of devices requiring certified erasure commands a higher fee.
Refurbished computers sold from the on-site retail section range from $150 to $400 depending on processor generation, RAM, and storage; these come with basic warranties and a tested operating system installation. Pricing is considerably lower than retail but higher than piecemeal online marketplaces, reflecting local convenience and support.
Most donation centers in Oklahoma City (Goodwill, local nonprofits) accept electronics but do not certify data destruction or control the downstream processing; devices are often bundled into mixed-material shipments sent to national recyclers, meaning a donor has no visibility into what happens to their equipment. Best Buy's in-store e-waste program charges recycling fees ($25 to $45 per item for monitors and TVs) and offers no documented resale, making it useful mainly for consumers unwilling to drive to a dedicated facility.
Choose AfterTech if you are a small business needing a certificate of destruction, a household wanting to know your device was refurbished and resold locally, or a nonprofit seeking a documented disposal for annual reporting. Choose a donation center if you have no privacy concerns and want the simplest drop-off. Choose Best Buy if you are already shopping there and need same-location convenience.
The facility is ideal for IT managers overseeing office equipment cycles, households with old computers or peripherals, and nonprofits managing donated or decommissioned tech. It is not suited for people seeking top dollar for used devices (online marketplaces like eBay attract higher bids for functional equipment) or for those unwilling to transport items themselves to the facility's location.
Call or visit the website to ask whether your specific devices are accepted and whether a drop-off fee applies. For a first visit, bring items in their original boxes or protective packaging if available; staff will inspect condition and completeness, check for data sensitivity, and either accept items on the spot or provide a quote for bulk disposal. A simple household drop-off takes 10 to 15 minutes. For businesses requiring a certificate of destruction, plan to discuss data-handling requirements before drop-off; turnaround for certified wiping is typically 5 to 10 business days.
The facility operates Monday through Friday, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., with limited Saturday hours; verify current hours before driving, as staffing can affect access. Street and lot parking are available on-site. The facility is not served by public transit; a personal vehicle or arranged pickup is necessary.
AfterTech fills a gap in Oklahoma City's e-waste landscape by combining convenience, transparency, and local resale in a single location, making it the most practical option for households and small organizations that value knowing where their old technology ends up.
