Commercial Grease Trap Requirements: Does Your Restaurant Need One?

If you're opening a restaurant, taking over an existing food service location, or renovating a commercial kitchen, one of the first regulatory questions you'll face is whether you need a grease trap — and if so, what kind, what size, and how to get the required permits.

The answer for most restaurants is straightforward: yes, you almost certainly need a grease trap. But the specific requirements — the type of trap, the sizing calculations, the permit process, and the ongoing maintenance obligations — vary significantly depending on where you're located.

This guide covers who needs a grease trap, what the requirements look like across different jurisdictions, how sizing is determined, exemptions that may apply, and how to navigate the permit and installation process.

Who Is Required to Have a Grease Trap?

In the United States, grease trap requirements are set at the local level — typically by your city or county's water and sewer authority, in conjunction with plumbing codes adopted from either the Uniform Plumbing Code (UPC) or the International Plumbing Code (IPC).

While specific language varies, the general rule is the same virtually everywhere: any food service establishment (FSE) that discharges wastewater containing fats, oils, and grease (FOG) into a public sewer system must have a grease trap or grease interceptor.

This typically includes:

The common thread is food preparation involving fats, oils, or grease that could enter the sewer system through dishwashing, pot washing, or floor drains.

Types of Grease Traps: What's Required?

Jurisdictions generally recognize two types of grease control devices, and the one you need depends on your operation's size and flow rate.

Grease Traps (Passive, Indoor)

These are smaller units, typically ranging from 20 to 100 gallons, installed inside the building — usually under a sink or in the floor near kitchen fixtures. They work by slowing down the flow of wastewater, allowing grease to float to the top and solids to settle to the bottom while relatively clean water passes through.

Best for: Small restaurants, cafes, food trucks, and low-to-moderate volume kitchens.

Pros: Lower installation cost ($200-$1,500), easier to clean, no excavation required.

Cons: Limited capacity, requires more frequent cleaning (weekly to monthly for some), not suitable for high-volume operations.

Grease Interceptors (Large, In-Ground)

These are large buried tanks, typically ranging from 500 to 3,000+ gallons, installed outside the building in the ground. They handle much higher flow rates and provide greater separation capacity.

Best for: Full-service restaurants, high-volume kitchens, hotels, institutional food service.

Pros: Higher capacity, less frequent pumping needed (monthly to quarterly), handles high flow rates.

Cons: Higher installation cost ($3,000-$15,000+), requires excavation, requires professional pumping with a vacuum truck.

Many jurisdictions specify a threshold — often based on flow rate — above which an in-ground interceptor is required instead of an indoor trap. For example, some cities require an interceptor for any fixture with a flow rate above 50 gallons per minute.

How Grease Trap Sizing Is Determined

Getting the right size is critical. An undersized grease trap won't meet code requirements and will overflow. An oversized one costs more to install and maintain than necessary.

Most jurisdictions use one of two sizing methods:

Method 1: Flow Rate Calculation (Most Common)

This method, used in most UPC and IPC jurisdictions, calculates the required trap size based on the flow rates of the kitchen fixtures connected to it. The basic formula is:

Trap size (GPM rating) = Total fixture flow rate (GPM) x Drainage load factor

Each fixture type has a standardized flow rate. For example:

FixtureTypical Flow Rate (GPM)
Three-compartment sink15-25 GPM
Pre-rinse spray valve6-12 GPM
Dishwasher (commercial)15-25 GPM
Hand sink3-5 GPM
Floor drain6-10 GPM
Mop sink8-12 GPM

Your licensed plumber adds up the flow rates of all connected fixtures and applies any local adjustment factors to determine the minimum required trap or interceptor size.

Method 2: Seating Capacity / Meals Served

Some jurisdictions use a simpler method based on restaurant seating capacity or estimated daily meals served. This is less precise but faster. A typical formula might require 1 gallon of interceptor capacity per meal served per day, with minimum sizes based on seat count.

What Gets Connected?

Generally, the following fixtures must be connected to the grease trap:

The following are typically not connected to the grease trap:

Permit Requirements: What to Expect

Installing a grease trap or interceptor is not a do-it-yourself project. It involves permits, licensed contractors, and inspections. Here's the typical process:

1. Contact Your Local Authority

Before doing anything else, contact your city or county's water and sewer authority (sometimes called the wastewater division, FOG program, or pretreatment department). They will tell you:

2. Hire a Licensed Plumber

A licensed commercial plumber will assess your kitchen layout, calculate the required trap size, and prepare installation plans. For in-ground interceptors, you may also need an excavation contractor.

3. Submit Permit Applications

You'll typically need:

The permit application usually requires a site plan showing the trap location, plumbing diagrams, and the trap specifications (manufacturer, model, capacity, flow rate).

4. Installation and Inspection

After your permits are approved, the plumber installs the trap. An inspector from the building department and/or water authority will then inspect the installation to verify it meets code requirements before you're cleared to operate.

5. Ongoing Compliance

Once installed, your permit will include ongoing maintenance requirements, typically:

Exemptions: Who Might Not Need a Grease Trap?

While most food service establishments need a grease trap, some jurisdictions offer limited exemptions. These vary widely, but common exemptions include:

Important: Do not assume you qualify for an exemption. Contact your local authority to confirm. Operating without a required grease trap because you assumed you were exempt is not a valid defense against a violation.

What Happens If You Don't Comply?

The consequences of not having a required grease trap — or not maintaining one properly — are serious and escalating:

The EPA estimates that FOG causes approximately 47% of all sanitary sewer overflows in the United States. Municipalities take this seriously, and enforcement has been increasing steadily.

Requirements by Jurisdiction: Key Differences

While the basics are consistent (you need a trap, it must be properly sized, and you must maintain it), specific requirements vary. Here are some notable differences across major jurisdictions:

RequirementCommon Variations
Trap vs. interceptor thresholdSome cities require interceptors for all restaurants; others allow indoor traps for small operations
Minimum trap sizeRanges from 20 GPM (small indoor) to mandatory 1,000+ gallon interceptors
Cleaning frequency mandateMonthly to quarterly, depending on jurisdiction and trap type
Self-cleaning allowed?Some jurisdictions allow it for small traps; others require licensed haulers for all sizes
Record retention periodTypically 3-5 years, but some require permanent records
Permit renewalAnnual in some cities, one-time in others, some require no separate permit beyond the plumbing permit
Enzyme/additive restrictionsSome cities ban emulsifying additives; others have no specific restrictions

See our state-by-state compliance guide for more specific information about requirements in your area.

How to Get Started

If you're opening a new restaurant or need to bring an existing one into compliance, here's your action plan:

  1. Contact your local water/sewer authority to confirm requirements for your establishment type.
  2. Hire a licensed commercial plumber experienced with grease trap installations in your jurisdiction.
  3. Get the right permits before any work begins.
  4. Install the correct type and size of grease trap or interceptor.
  5. Pass the required inspections.
  6. Set up a maintenance schedule with a licensed grease trap pumping company.
  7. Keep meticulous records of all cleanings, pumpings, and inspections.

The upfront cost and effort are real, but they pale in comparison to the fines, legal liability, and potential business disruption of non-compliance.

Need help finding a grease trap service provider or getting quotes for installation and maintenance? Request a free quote from companies in your area.

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