Ferrero Rocher has been named and shamed as the Christmas chocolate box with the least recyclable packaging.

The vast majority (89 per cent) of the packaging in a 359g Ferrero Rocher Collection box may be destined for landfill as it is made from non-recyclable plastic and foil, a study by consumer group Which? found.

The only parts of the popular hazelnut treats' packaging which can be recycled are the paper cases and the gold plastic tray in which they sit, which make up the remaining 11 per cent.

By contrast the most recyclable chocolate boxes were Waitrose Christmas Chocolate Favourites 240g which is 96.3 per cent recyclable) Cadbury's Milk Tray, which is 92.5 per cent easily recyclable. The second least recyclable packaging was for Marks & Spencer's The Big One Selection 600g, which is 71.4 per cent recyclable.

In addition Which? analysed chocolate boxes for their packaging to chocolate weight ratio, and found boxes of Ferrero Rocher Collections had by far the highest.

Nearly half of the weight of a 359g Ferrero Rocher Collection box is made up of packaging (42.4 per cent), with the rest constituting (67.6 per cent) the chocolates themselves, it found.

The boxes with the highest proportion of chocolate weight were Marks & Spencer's The Big One Selection 600g (just 8.5 per cent packaging), and Lindt Lindor Assorted Mix 384g (just 11.5 per cent packaging), the study showed.