A working laptop gathering dust can change someone's school year. Donating electronics is a great instinct, but it only works when the device is genuinely useful and your data is genuinely gone. Here are seven good homes for old electronics in the Houston area, and an honest look at when recycling is the kinder choice.
First: One Rule Before You Donate Anything
Wipe your data before the device leaves your hands. A donated computer with your tax returns still on it is a gift with a liability attached. At minimum, sign out of all accounts and do a full factory reset. For business machines, a reset is not enough; see our guide to preparing a work computer for disposal before donating company equipment anywhere.
1. Comp-U-Dopt
Houston's own Comp-U-Dopt refurbishes donated computers and provides them to local students who do not have one at home, along with technical training programs. If your device is a working laptop or desktop from roughly the last five to seven years, this is one of the highest-impact donations you can make in the city. Check their current intake guidelines before dropping off, as accepted models change over time.
2. Goodwill Houston
Goodwill accepts working electronics at donation centers across the metro area and resells them to fund job training programs. It is convenient and the mission is real. Two caveats: donations are resold rather than placed with people in need directly, and data handling is your responsibility, not theirs. Wipe first, always. We break down the differences in EverTrade vs Goodwill for electronics.
3. The Salvation Army
Similar model to Goodwill: family stores across Houston accept working electronics, and proceeds fund adult rehabilitation programs. Call your nearest location first, as some stores limit which electronics they take, and older TVs are commonly refused.
4. Local Schools, Churches, and Nonprofits
Some of the best donations never touch a donation center. Title I schools, after-school programs, churches, and shelters often need working laptops, tablets, and monitors. Ask directly: a quick email to a school's front office or a nonprofit's volunteer coordinator will tell you whether they can actually use what you have. The match is better and nothing sits in a warehouse.
5. Manufacturer and Carrier Trade-In Programs
Not a donation in the classic sense, but worth knowing: Apple, Samsung, Best Buy, and the major phone carriers run trade-in and take-back programs. Newer devices earn credit; older ones are recycled through their programs at no charge. If your device still has market value, trade-in beats letting it depreciate in a drawer for two more years.
6. Neighborhood Giving Groups
Buy Nothing groups on Facebook and Nextdoor's free listings move working electronics to neighbors who want them, fast. A working monitor posted in a Houston Buy Nothing group is usually claimed within hours. This is the most direct person-to-person option, and it keeps devices in use with zero shipping or overhead. The data rule applies double here since you are handing the device to a stranger.
7. When Donation Does Not Fit: Recycle It
Here is the honest part most donation guides skip. A device is a good donation only if someone would choose to use it. Charities spend real money disposing of broken and obsolete donations, so give recycling the job when:
- The device is broken, very slow, or more than 8-10 years old
- The battery is swollen or the screen is damaged
- It no longer receives security updates
- It stored sensitive personal or business data and you cannot reliably wipe it yourself
Recycling is not a consolation prize. Materials are recovered, nothing goes to a landfill, and data-bearing devices get NIST SP 800-88 aligned data destruction instead of a hope and a factory reset. Drop-off at EverTrade in Sugar Land is free for most items, and there is an outside drop-off bin available anytime. See what we accept.
The Quick Decision Guide
| Your Device | Best Home |
|---|---|
| Working laptop/desktop, under ~7 years old | Comp-U-Dopt or a local school |
| Working household electronics | Goodwill, Salvation Army, or Buy Nothing |
| Recent phone or tablet | Trade-in program |
| Broken, obsolete, or held sensitive data | Recycle with data destruction |
| Business equipment of any kind | Recycle with documentation (Certificates of Destruction) |