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Generator status

SQG vs LQG: the 30+ requirements that change when you cross 1,000 kg/month

7 min read40 CFR §262.13

Generator status isn't a label — it's the master switch that determines almost every RCRA obligation your facility has. Cross from Small Quantity Generator to Large Quantity Generator and dozens of requirements change at once: your accumulation window shortens, training becomes formal, a contingency plan becomes mandatory, and new reports come due. Here's what actually changes at the 1,000 kg/month line, and why the EPA treats getting it wrong so seriously.

The three categories

RCRA sorts generators by how much hazardous waste they produce in a calendar month:

Status is determined month to month. Generate 1,000 kg in a single month and you are an LQG for that month, with the obligations that come with it — even if you typically operate as an SQG.

Why the EPA cares so much: an LQG operating under SQG rules is treated essentially the same as a facility operating without proper authorization. Misclassification isn't a minor error — it's one of the fastest routes to an enforcement action.

What changes when you cross to LQG

Accumulation time

The single most consequential change: your on-site accumulation window drops from 180 days (SQG) to 90 days (LQG). Containers you could legally hold for six months you can now hold for three. The SQG's 270-day option for remote facilities disappears entirely.

Personnel training

SQGs must ensure employees are familiar with proper waste handling in a general sense. LQGs face formal RCRA personnel training requirements — documented initial and annual refresher training, with records on file. Missing or incomplete training records are among the most commonly cited LQG violations.

Contingency plan and emergency preparedness

LQGs must develop and maintain a full written contingency plan, designate an emergency coordinator, and make arrangements with local responders. SQGs have lighter, basic preparedness obligations and don't need the complete contingency plan.

Biennial reporting

LQGs must file a Biennial Report (EPA Form 8700-13 A/B) by March 1 of each even-numbered year, covering the prior year's activity. SQGs are not subject to biennial reporting. This is a recurring obligation that simply doesn't exist at the SQG level.

Exception reporting

Both file exception reports, but the LQG has the extra 45-day inquiry step before the 60-day filing deadline (see our guide on the 45/60-day rules). SQGs have only the single 60-day deadline.

The trap: episodic and accidental crossings

The danger isn't the facility that's always an LQG — it's the SQG that crosses the line for one busy month and doesn't realize its obligations changed for that period. A single large cleanout, a project, or a seasonal spike can push you over, triggering the 90-day clock and other LQG duties retroactively.

How to stay on the right side of the line

Track your monthly generation against the thresholds, and have a system that adjusts your obligations automatically when status changes — applying the right accumulation clock and surfacing the requirements that newly apply. Our free generator status classifier lets you check where your monthly quantity puts you and what changes at each threshold.

Bottom line

Generator status drives everything downstream. Know your number every month, understand that a single heavy month can reclassify you, and make sure your accumulation limits and obligations move with your status — not a month behind it.

This article is general information, not legal or regulatory advice. Requirements vary by state, and many states are authorized to run stricter programs than the federal baseline. Confirm the rules that apply to your facility with your state agency or a qualified professional.

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