Cyanide and heavy metals pose significant risks as contaminants in certain industrial effluents. This study aims to concurrently eliminate cyanide and specific heavy metals from synthetic wastewater resembling gold processing effluent, employing an improved electrocoagulation method incorporating ozone and UV-LED. The investigation delves into the effects of pH, electrode type, current density, reaction time, and ozonation. The findings revealed notable removal efficiencies: 98% for cyanide, 76% for nickel, 85% for copper, and 84% for zinc when utilizing a stainless steel electrode as the cathode. Optimal removal rates were achieved at 94% for cyanide, 93% for copper, 92% for zinc, and 83% for nickel, employing the UV-LED-ozone technique with an ozonation flow rate of 4 mg/s at pH = 10. Notably, when Al-Gr-SS-Fe electrodes and a current of 15 mA/cm2 were applied, these removal efficiencies were observed. Therefore, the most favorable conditions for the concurrent removal of pollutants from synthetic wastewater involved maintaining a pH of 10, utilizing SS-Fe as anode and Al-Gr as cathode electrodes, and employing a current density of 15 mA/cm2. The addition of ozonation with a flow rate of 4 mg/s, along with UV-LED, further enhanced the removal process. In summary, it can be inferred that the enhanced electrocoagulation method outperformed conventional electrocoagulation, leading to increased elimination of cyanide and selected heavy metals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]