FOG = Fats, Oils, and Grease — three substances, three different behaviors
Grease solidifies at pipe temperature — 60–70 °F underground
The 25% rule: clean before grease and solids reach 25% of trap capacity
California requires a state manifest documenting every service
A grease line backup during service hours can cost $5,000–$15,000 in lost revenue

FOG Doesn't Stay Liquid. That's the Entire Issue.

In a commercial kitchen, fats, oils, and grease leave the sink at 130–160 °F — fully liquid, mixed with dishwater, invisible. They flow through the drain line the same as any other wastewater. Nothing looks wrong.

The problem starts the moment that water cools. Fats and greases are hydrophobic — they don't dissolve in water. As temperature drops, they separate, congeal, and coat the interior walls of whatever pipe they're traveling through. By the time wastewater reaches underground sewer temperatures (60–70 °F in Southern California), FOG has solidified into a wax-like layer that narrows pipe diameter with every additional discharge.

This is why commercial kitchens can't discharge FOG directly into the sewer. It accumulates, hardens, and eventually blocks the line. The grease trap exists to catch it before it gets there.

Not All FOG Is the Same.

Fats — solid or semi-solid at room temperature. Butter, lard, shortening, and animal fat. These congeal fastest and form the hardest deposits inside drain lines. A 20-quart stockpot of beef tallow dumped down a sink can coat 30 feet of pipe in a single pour.

Oils — liquid at room temperature but still hydrophobic. Vegetable oil, canola, olive oil, and fryer oil. They float on wastewater and accumulate as a slick layer on the trap's surface. Fryer oil is the highest-volume FOG contributor in most commercial kitchens.

Grease — the byproduct of cooking with fat and oil. Rendered pan drippings, sauces, emulsified dressings, and the residue that coats dishes during pre-rinse. Grease carries food solids with it, forming the sludge layer at the bottom of the trap.

How a Grease Trap Actually Separates Waste.

A grease trap is a holding tank with internal baffles that slows wastewater flow long enough for physics to do the work. There are no filters. No chemicals. No moving parts. It's pure density separation — FOG floats because it's lighter than water, and food solids sink because they're heavier.

Here's what the inside looks like at any given moment:

FOG Cap

Fats, oils, and grease float to the surface and form a solid or semi-solid cap. This is the layer that gets measured to determine when cleaning is required. As the kitchen continues discharging, this layer grows downward.

Effluent Zone

The middle layer — relatively clear water that has shed its FOG upward and its solids downward. This is what exits the trap through the outlet pipe and flows into the sewer. When the trap is functioning correctly, this water meets discharge limits.

Sludge Layer

Food particles, sediment, and heavy organic material settle to the bottom. Over time, this layer builds upward — reducing the effective volume of the effluent zone and compressing the separation space.

Inlet Wastewater enters from the kitchen drain line
Outlet Separated effluent exits to the sewer line

Every Part of the Trap Serves the Separation Process.

A grease trap has no moving parts and no consumable media. Every component exists to control flow — slowing wastewater down, directing it through the right path, and keeping FOG from reaching the outlet.

Inlet Baffle

Flow Control

Directs incoming wastewater downward into the middle of the tank, below the FOG layer. Without the inlet baffle, fast-moving dishwater would push floating grease straight toward the outlet — defeating the trap entirely. The baffle forces water to enter low, giving FOG time to separate and rise.

Outlet Baffle

Containment

Blocks floating FOG from exiting the trap. The outlet pipe draws water from below the surface — well beneath the grease cap. If the outlet baffle is damaged or missing, grease passes straight through and enters the sewer line. This is the single most critical component during inspection.

Flow Diffuser

Velocity Reduction

Present in larger interceptors, the diffuser spreads incoming flow across the full width of the tank. High-velocity water from a busy pre-rinse station creates turbulence that remixes separated FOG. The diffuser breaks that energy, keeping the separation layers intact.

Why 25% Is the Line — and What Happens When You Cross It.

25%

Maximum FOG + solids
before cleaning required

The 25% rule is the standard used by sewer authorities across Southern California — including OCSD, LA County Sanitation, and LASAN. It means: the combined depth of the floating grease cap and the settled sludge layer must not exceed 25% of the trap's total liquid depth.

This isn't a suggestion. It's the enforceable threshold in most FOG pretreatment programs. Your sewer authority can measure it during an inspection, and if the combined FOG and solids exceed 25%, you're in violation — regardless of when you last had service.

Why 25%? Because that's the point where the effluent zone — the clean-water layer in the middle — no longer has enough volume to separate incoming FOG effectively. Above 25%, grease begins passing through the outlet with the discharge water. The trap stops working as designed, and FOG enters the sewer line.

Cleaning frequency depends on kitchen volume, menu type, and trap size. High-volume restaurants with fried food programs may hit 25% in 30 days. A low-volume café might take 90 days. The only way to know is to measure — or to set a program based on your kitchen's historical output.

Do

  • Pump the trap before FOG + solids exceed 25% of liquid depth
  • Keep every hauler manifest on file — inspectors check the paper trail
  • Scrape plates and use strainer baskets before rinsing to reduce load
  • Schedule service based on your kitchen's actual output, not just the 90-day maximum

Don't

  • Wait until drains back up to schedule a pump-out
  • Pour chemical degreasers into the trap — they liquefy grease and push it downstream
  • Run hot water to "flush" FOG through the trap — it re-solidifies in the lateral
  • Rely on kitchen staff maintenance as a substitute for licensed hauler service

Maintained vs. Neglected — The Difference Is Visible.

Before — Neglected Trap

  • FOG layer exceeding 25% of trap capacity
  • Outlet baffle partially or fully blocked
  • Compressed effluent zone — no effective separation
  • Odor, slow drains, and health code violation risk
  • Missing or expired service manifests

After — Properly Maintained

  • FOG layer well below 25% threshold
  • All baffles clear and functioning correctly
  • Clean separation: FOG cap, clear effluent, settled solids
  • Zero violations on last health or sewer district inspection
  • Current manifests and service log on file

The Escalation Happens Fast.

A grease trap that exceeds capacity doesn't send a warning. It sends grease into the sewer line — and the consequences stack up faster than most operators expect.

Stage 01

Slow Drains

The first sign. Sinks back up, dishwashers drain slowly, floor drains hold standing water. The effluent zone is compressed — the trap isn't separating effectively. FOG is starting to coat the outlet pipe.

Stage 02

Sewer Line Buildup

FOG that passes through the trap solidifies in the lateral sewer line. It accumulates over weeks, narrowing the pipe diameter. Flow slows. Other fixtures in the building begin backing up. The blockage is no longer in the trap — it's in the line.

Stage 03

Backup into the Kitchen

When the line blocks completely, wastewater has nowhere to go. It backs up through floor drains, into prep areas, and across the kitchen floor. Health department closure is immediate. The kitchen does not reopen until the line is cleared and the space is sanitized.

Stage 04

Fines, Closures, Claims

Sewer authority fines for FOG discharge violations. Health department violations for operating conditions. Business interruption losses from the closure. Tenant liability claims from the landlord. A single missed cleaning cycle can generate $10,000–$25,000 in total exposure.

Three Types of Traps. Same Physics. Different Scale.

The type of grease trap installed depends on kitchen volume, available space, and local code requirements. All three use density separation. The difference is capacity, location, and how they're serviced.

Grease trap pumping service
California Coast Plumbers technician preparing to clean and restore proper drainage in a commercial property

Under-Sink

Passive Grease Trap

Small-capacity units (typically 20–50 gallons) installed directly below the sink or dishwasher. Common in low-volume operations — cafés, small delis, food courts. The kitchen staff is usually responsible for daily or weekly maintenance. Professional cleaning is required on a schedule determined by the local sewer authority.

Capacity: 20–100 gallons. Location: Under sink or in the floor, inside the kitchen. Service: Manual cleaning weekly; professional pump-out monthly to quarterly.

In-Ground

Gravity Grease Interceptor

Large buried tanks (500–2,000+ gallons) installed outside the building, typically in the parking lot or service area. These handle the combined discharge of an entire kitchen and are the standard for full-service restaurants, hotels, and institutional kitchens. Serviced by a licensed hauler with a vacuum truck — the same service that requires a state manifest.

Capacity: 500–2,000+ gallons. Location: Buried outside, accessed via manhole cover. Service: Professional pump-out on 30–90 day cycles depending on volume.

Automatic

Grease Removal Device (GRD)

Mechanical units that skim or reheat collected grease and deposit it into a separate container for disposal. These are the only trap type with moving parts. They reduce the volume of FOG that reaches the main interceptor but do not eliminate the need for periodic professional service. Some jurisdictions accept GRDs as a supplement — not a replacement — for a gravity interceptor.

Capacity: Varies. Location: Under or adjacent to the sink. Service: Operator maintenance daily; professional service per manufacturer schedule and local code.

Pouring Grease Down the Drain Is a $10,000 Decision.

A properly maintained grease trap, serviced on schedule, costs $300–$600 per visit. A grease line backup that closes your kitchen for a day costs $5,000–$15,000 in lost revenue alone — before the emergency service call, the sewer authority fine, the health department re-inspection, and the remediation. The trap isn't an expense. It's the cheapest insurance in the building.

Keep the Trap Clean. Keep the Kitchen Open.

California Coast Plumbers provides scheduled grease trap pumping, cleaning, inspection, and state manifest documentation for commercial kitchens across Orange County, Los Angeles County, and Riverside County. Licensed hauler. Full documentation on every visit. C-36 Licensed — Lic. #736992.

See the Grease Trap Service (714) 632-0170
Licensed Hauler

Licensed grease waste hauler with state manifest documentation on every service visit. Your records are always audit-ready.

Scheduled Programs

We track your cleaning cycle and contact you before the 25% threshold — you don't manage the calendar.

Full Inspection

Every visit includes baffle condition, grease depth measurement, structural inspection, and written documentation of findings.

Emergency Response

Grease line backup during service hours? Same-day dispatch. Pump-out, line clearing, and manifest documentation included.

On-Site in 2 Hours. That Is Our Standard.

Commercial emergencies do not wait for business hours. Our Priority 1 (P1) SLA targets a 2-hour response during business hours and a 2-hour dispatch for after-hours crises — across Orange County, LA, Riverside, San Bernardino, and San Diego. One call. We handle the rest.

2-Hour Response — (714) 632-0170