Grease Trap Maintenance Log (Free Printable)

By the GreaseTrapFinder Editorial Team · Updated June 11, 2026

When the FOG inspector shows up, this one sheet of paper is the difference between a five-minute visit and a citation. Print this log, keep it with your manifests, and fill in a row at every service.

Grease Trap Maintenance Log

Business: ____________________   Trap location: ____________________   Trap size: ________ gal   Year: ________

DateService type
(full pump-out / repair / self-inspection)
Company & technicianHauler license #Volume removed (gal)Manifest #Disposal facilityInitials

Retain this log and all manifests for at least 3 years (5 in some jurisdictions). The duty to keep records sits with the food service establishment, not the hauler.

What Inspectors Look For in Your Records

Make the Log Effortless

Frequently Asked Questions

How long do I need to keep grease trap maintenance records?

Three years is the most common minimum, but several jurisdictions require five. Keep manifests, logs, and invoices together — see the state compliance guide for your state's retention rule and regulator.

What counts as an acceptable record for inspectors?

The gold standard is the signed hauler manifest plus a maintenance log entry for each service. Invoices alone are weaker — they prove payment, not lawful disposal. The manifest names the disposal facility; that's what closes the loop.

Do I need a log if my hauler keeps records?

Yes. The legal duty to demonstrate compliance is on the food service establishment, not the hauler. If your hauler goes out of business or won't return calls, their records won't save your inspection.

What should I do if I'm missing manifests for past cleanings?

Contact the service company and request copies — licensed haulers must retain them. Going forward, make manifest-on-delivery a condition of payment (our service agreement template includes that clause).

Need Grease Trap Cleaning?

Find screened companies near you and compare free quotes.

Get My Free Quote