This study aims to understand the acid-leaching behavior of metals from 2 to 4 mm waste printed circuit boards (WPCBs) containing 22.0% +/- 1.1 Cu, 6.7% +/- 0.2 Ca, 0.68% +/- 0.02 Sn, 0.59 +/- 0.01 % Pb, 2.71% +/- 0.08 Al, 0.22% +/- 0.01 Fe, etc.. Copper leaching was increased for sulfuric acid concentrations up to 1.2 mol/L and hydrogen peroxide concentrations of 10.0 vol% for a pulp density of 100 g/L at 50 degrees C over 4 h, whereas for the same concentrations of sulfuric acid and hydrogen peroxide copper leaching was decreased from 75.7 to 56.7% with an increase in pulp density from 25 to 125 g/L. Under the same optimum conditions and a 100 g/L pulp density, the leached copper concentration was 16.66 g/L (75.7%) and the concentrations of Pb, Al, Fe, and Ca were 0.1 g/L, 0.64 g/L, 0.13 g/L, 0.79g/L, respectively. Above 50 degrees C and 500 rpm, the amount of leached copper decreased. With nitric acid, 98.3% copper leaching was obtained under the optimum conditions of 3 mol/L nitric acid and an agitation speed of 800 rpm at 60 degrees C for 5 h at 25 g/L pulp density. Under optimum conditions and 100 g/L pulp density, the concentration of Cu in the leachate was 21.12 g/L (96%), and the concentrations of Pb, Al, Fe and Ca were 0.52 g/L, 0.91 g/L, 0.13 g/L, 1.70 g/L, respectively. At the same pulp density, nitric acid enabled better leaching of copper and other metals than sulfuric acid with 10.0 vol% hydrogen peroxide. The solid precipitates obtained in the leach liquors of PCBs included stannic oxide and calcium aluminum oxide in nitric acid and gypsum in sulfuric acid.