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  1. Home
  2. Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) Program

Basics of TRI Reporting

Each year, Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) data are submitted by certain industrial facilities and made available to the public.

On this page:
  • TRI reporting criteria
  • Overview of the TRI reporting process
  • Data reported by facilities
  • Annual TRI data cycle

TRI Reporting Criteria

If a facility meets the employee, industry sector, and chemical threshold criteria, it must report to the TRI Program. For more details about the reporting criteria, refer to the TRI Reporting Forms and Instructions.

Diagram explaining process of determining TRI reporting eligibility
*Effective for RY 2022, 29 facilities are required to submit TRI reporting forms for ethylene oxide (and in some cases, ethylene glycol) regardless of industry sector or number of full-time employee equivalents. See the TRI Discretionary Authority webpage for details.

Facilities that meet all TRI reporting criteria must:

  • Submit a TRI Form R for each TRI-listed chemical it manufactures, processes, or otherwise uses in quantities above the reporting threshold. (Note: Facilities may be eligible to submit the shorter Form A if they meet certain criteria. See the TRI Reporting Forms and Instructions for details.)
  • Submit each TRI form to both EPA and the state in which the facility is located (or to the appropriate tribe, if located in Indian country).
  • Submit each reporting form using TRI-MEweb, EPA's online TRI reporting application.

Overview of the TRI Reporting Process

The image below summarizes the TRI reporting process.

The basic steps in the TRI reporting process are determine and collect; prepare forms; certify and submit forms, and use data.

Data Reported by Facilities

 Industrial facilities report data about how they are managing chemical waste through:

  • Environmental releases (into the air, water, and land)
  • Recycling
  • Energy recovery
  • Treatment
  • Disposal

Additionally, facilities tell EPA about how they are reducing the amount of chemical waste that enters the environment and/or how they are preventing waste from being created in the first place. For explanations of these terms, see the Common TRI Terms webpage.

Annual TRI Data Cycle

A diagram identifying some key points in the annual TRI data cycle. In January, facilities begin submitting TRI reporting forms covering the previous calendar year. These forms are due to EPA and the relevant state or tribe by July 1. In mid-July, EPA pub
The TRI Program collects, processes and analyzes TRI data on an annual cycle. In addition to activities that occur at specific times of the year, the TRI Program continually conducts data quality checks and provides analytical support for enforcement efforts led by EPA’s Office of Enforcement and Compliance Assurance (OECA).

January-June: Facilities Prepare and Submit Forms

  • TRI Program publishes reporting instructions, updates training materials, and releases a new version of the TRI-MEweb reporting software. 
  • Facilities prepare and submit TRI forms covering chemical waste management and pollution prevention activities that occurred during the previous calendar year.

July 1: TRI Forms Due to EPA

  • Deadline for facilities that meet TRI reporting requirements to submit reporting forms to EPA and the relevant state or tribe.

Mid-July: TRI Preliminary Dataset Available

  • Preliminary, facility-level data for the previous calendar year are available in downloadable files on the TRI website and in the Envirofacts TRI searches.

Mid-July-October: Ongoing Data Processing and Analysis

  • The preliminary dataset is updated as additional reporting forms are processed.
  • EPA conducts data quality checks.

October: Complete National Analysis Dataset Available

  • EPA publishes the complete dataset and begins analyzing it to build the TRI National Analysis.

January: TRI National Analysis Available

  • EPA publishes the TRI National Analysis, an in-depth look at the previous calendar year's TRI data.

Toxics Release Inventory (TRI) Program

  • What is TRI?
    • Covered Chemicals
    • Covered Industry Sectors
    • Data Quality
  • Reporting for Facilities
    • Guidance (GuideME)
    • Reporting Software (TRI-MEweb)
    • Laws & Regulatory Activities
    • Enforcement
  • TRI Data & Tools
  • Pollution Prevention
    • Guide to Using TRI Data to Reduce Pollution in Your Community
    • P2 Analyses
    • P2 Resources
  • TRI Data in Action
    • Data Uses Catalog
    • TRI for Communities
    • TRI for Advocacy Organizations
    • TRI for Researchers
    • TRI for the Press
    • TRI for Industry
    • TRI for Government
    • TRI for Tribes
    • What You Can Do
  • TRI Site Map
TRI Program Contacts
Contact Us to ask a question, provide feedback, or report a problem.
Last updated on May 19, 2025
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