• out of stock

[Prime] Glad Wavetop Tie Rubbish Bags XL 50L Pack of 20 $2.39 (S&S $2.15) Delivered @ Amazon AU

410
This post contains affiliate links. OzBargain might earn commissions when you click through and make purchases. Please see this page for more information.

20 Bags
Item volume: 50 Litres
A strong bag to avoid messy trash disaster
Offer unique 4-way tie system for easy tie up
Waves enable the bag to be closed securely and carried easily
Contain fresh scent formula that neutralises bad bin odors

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.
This is part of Amazon Prime Big Deal Days sale for 2023

Related Stores

Amazon AU
Amazon AU
Marketplace

closed Comments

  • +9

    just letting everyone know these are rubbish! so thin and break easily

    • whats your go to then?

        • +1

          Ok price if you pick it up but delivery PLUS gst? Kils it
          $20 delivery (100km from) and $5 gst
          Total $60

          • +1

            @Timetraveler: yeah works for me as i go pick it up when im in the area

        • Yeah, these Glad rubbish bags suck. Too thin, the short four way tie offers zero advantage over the usual dual handle design and are just a bit more faff.

          I use Glitz bags.

          • @rumblytangara: the glad rubbish bags XL were really good before covid then every company including glad wanted to save on space as shipping was expensive. So they did 2 things
            1. make them thinner
            2. wrapp them in the buddle tighter and box smaller.

            They did both of these things to fit more in the container and try to save on shipping costs, but now the price has gone back to pre covid and they kept the thinner bag so making more money as people are used to it.

            • @Mario g: Oh, I forgot. The "wave top" feature that they advertise makes it an extra faff just to tear a new bag off the roll.

              Outside of some crazy thin no-brand bags I've gotten from Aliexpress, these Glad bags are the worst ones I've ever bought.

              Do not buy.

      • Aldi

  • +3

    I use the S and M ones. I find the wavetop really convenient to tie off.

    These are nowhere as thin as the home brand ones I've also tried. I find them sufficiently thick for ordinary household and kitchen rubbish. I have never thought they were too thin; they're what I expect from a standard rubbish bag.

    I also have thicker large bags but they cost way more. I only need them when I'm throwing away heavier or sharper things.

  • +1

    How do they compare with the Aldi equivalent?

  • -8

    If you order this from amazon, you are what is wrong with the world today.
    Forcing a truck, pumping diesel to deliver you a single roll of bags, wrapped up in a cardboard box… I'll be you are the same people complaining about climate change, but doing absolute nothing about it.

    • +11

      There are at least 2 active wars going on at present, each day, countless amounts of buildings, wildlife, people, environment are totally destroyed. The devastation is enormous, the money spent is billions. Not to mention the machinery behind constructing all the tanks, bullets, camo gear etc… And you chose a 20 pack of rubbish bags delivered by some guy , in a suzuki swift who is probably delivering 30 other items in the same journey to pick your environmental fight platform? Seriously?

      • If A list celebs like Leonardo can travel in their private jets to give environment speeches I think we allowed to get deliveries

      • -1

        Yep, great attitude. That will save the environment.
        Why not blame the "boomers" whilst you are at it, so you don't have to do a single thing.

        • -1

          Ok. Screw you boomers. You are wats wrong with the world today

    • +3

      RCars being the parcels usually. And cars are used to drive to the shop to buy these conventionally. It’s cars and trucks all the way down. Amazon is more efficient, their drivers carry multiple items, your car carries just one when you drive to the shop. Save the planet and start ordering from Amazon. Stop being selfish and driving your car to the shops.

      • -1

        Dumb ass logic - you are going to the shops anyway, it's not an extra trip.
        That truck/car was never going to stop buy your place to drop off a single roll of bags.
        … again I reiterate - you are the problem with the world today. You think this is all fine.

        • 100% going to buy a bag now lol

    • I ordered a RM750X power supply for $155. the 2x XL 50L bags i also ordered will come with it… Amazon are not idiots.. they group items as much as they can… ALSO .. the delivery driver is not making one trip to your house.. he is making a extra trip on-top of the other 101 items he is delivering that day.

      ALL of Australia contributes only 1.4% of the global CO2 emissions .. if we went 100% green everything it would do less then nothing to help the world reduce global warming. :) Rant over

      • ALL of Australia contributes only 1.4% of the global CO2 emissions .. if we went 100% green everything it would do less then nothing to help the world reduce global warming. :) Rant over

        By that logic, Australia produces 4x the world average by population. And of course, we already outsource a huge amount of our emissions to countries with manufacturing capacity and lax environmental controls (i.e. China).

        (That said, the earlier from @arkdog that buying a box of bags from Amazon instead of driving to the shops is evil is pretty poorly thought out.)

    • -2

      Jog on mate nobody cares

    • +1

      Looks like Greta has started using ozbargain… how dare you?

    • -1

      actually it is no different to you driving to the supermarket and picking it up .. your cutting out the supermarket bit when ordering online. so i dont see your point.
      And about climate change - whoever insisted with banning plastics single use is a f&%King moron!. So now we are using thicker reusable bags which end up in the bin as previously and paying for it…cough cough BS climate change. Also everything has switched from plastic to cardboard/kraft…were do you think the pulp comes from…LOL Trees!

      And sugarcane/bamboo - natural my ass - when you take a natural product you have to treat it with chemicals so it doesnt mould! … so all those companies like "who gives a crap and biopak are full of shit and its all marketing… just go read there bs websites.
      America banned sugar cane over a year ago because of the harmful chemicals in it. Now its being replaced with pfas free sugarcane….Australia so behind so backwards!

      Our gov are a bunch of (profanity)! and yes plastic can be recycled. now we just use thicker/more plastic then before…climate change what a laugh!

      if you want to neg me at least tell me why id like to know

  • +1

    Damn. I hate wave top bin bags. Handles are far superior but never seem to be readily available from Amazon

  • +1

    These are absolute rubbish. I put all of mine in the bin.
    Each bag filled with household waste of course.

    • I'm "Glad" you were joking

  • Some councils have asked residents to put food scraps into the green bin along with garden waste, would this type of plastic bag be suitable?

    • No.. its not plant based and also not biodegradable

      Those are the bags you need to get.

      • Thanks, will look out for those when the time comes. Can't stand the idea of dumping food scraps directly into the green bin and having filthy and smelly bins all the time.

      • which one…?

        • bio degradable
        • home composable
        • commercially composable

        None of these bags even the plants based ones that i know of are even suitable unless they have certification. Councils are mis-informed and pretty much have no idea.

        • When it becomes a more common practice, wouldn't be surprised the packaging will indicate if the bags are suitable for green bin.

    • I think councils will think they are normal plastic… i dont think you can use any BAG

Login or Join to leave a comment