Grease trap cleaning in Cape Coral is commercial work on a schedule your fryers and covers set.
Why the schedule is the whole job
An interceptor gives wastewater time to sit still. Fats and oils float, solids sink, and the cleaner water between them leaves through the outlet. As the cap thickens and solids build, that middle layer shrinks and the unit passes grease into the building drain while still looking serviceable from above.
What a grease trap cleaning visit covers
The unit is pumped out completely: grease cap, water column, and the settled solids a rushed crew leaves behind. Walls and baffles get scraped, the tees are checked, and the accumulation depth is recorded so the next interval comes off your kitchen, not a default.
What to have ready when you call
- The unit size and whether it is indoors, under a sink or in the ground.
- The last service date and whether drains are already slowing or backing up.
- Your service window, gate access and the route a vacuum truck can use.
- Whether this is recurring service or an urgent overflow.
The permit rule behind who can haul grease trap waste
Florida Rule 62-6.010(1), F.A.C., sweeps grease interceptors into the same requirement as septic tanks: a company hauling grease trap waste needs an annual septage disposal operating permit for the county it operates in.
Florida Rule 62-6.010(3) requires a septage pumper to display its operating permit number, company name, phone number, and waste tank capacity permanently painted on the service truck in letters at least three inches tall. Removable magnetic signs expressly do not satisfy the rule. If a truck turns up with a magnet on the door, ask questions.
Florida’s onsite sewage program transferred from the Department of Health to the Department of Environmental Protection on July 1, 2021 under the Clean Waterways Act. DEP now sets the statewide rules in Chapter 62-6, F.A.C. (formerly 64E-6), but permitting and inspections are still handled county by county as the transition phases in. In Lee County, which has not transitioned, septic permits and inspections still come from the Florida Department of Health in Lee County rather than DEP.
Where the waste ends up
Grease trap contents are regulated waste. They do not go in a dumpster, on a field, or down a manhole. Land application of septage has been prohibited in Florida since January 1, 2016 under Fla. Stat. 381.0065(6). Septage pumped from your tank must be hauled to a receiving facility approved by the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. Ask where the material is hauled and what the service record will include.
Grease trap service across Cape Coral, Fort Myers, and Lee County
Cape Coral and Fort Myers, plus the rest of Lee County. See areas we serve. Fort Myers proper is substantially sewered, so there is little septic work there, but the kitchens are dense and every one has an interceptor.
Related work on the same trip
If your site has a lift station moving waste to the main, handle both on one visit: see lift station and pump service. A trap already backed up is emergency service. On a tank, septic pumping applies too.