Why quarterly, and why fixed
Houston Code of Ordinances Sec. 47-512(b) requires every grease interceptor inside city limits to be fully evacuated at least once every 90 days. Not roughly. Every 90 days. Restaurants that run their own schedule tend to slip a week here, two weeks there, and that's exactly the gap an inspector's visit lands in. We run your account on a fixed calendar instead of a call-when-you-remember system.
A fixed schedule also protects you from the other trigger in the ordinance: if 25% or more of the wetted height of the trap fills with grease, sediment, or floating material before the 90-day mark, it has to be pumped early regardless of the calendar. Busy kitchens near Cinco Ranch Blvd and LaCenterra fill traps faster during the holiday banquet season. We check wetted height on every visit and move your next date up when the trap earns it, not when it's convenient for us.
Stated limit
We don't do a single one-time pump-out without checking your trap's condition first. If we've never serviced your location, the first visit always includes a wetted-height check, even if you only want one pump.
How the service works
- Site check. We measure your interceptor's size and confirm its wetted height so the first quote is real, not a guess.
- Cadence set. Most standard 1,000 to 1,500 gallon traps land on a straight 90-day cycle. Higher-volume kitchens (fry-heavy menus, banquet halls) often need a 60-day cycle instead.
- Evacuation. Full pump-down to bare walls and floor, not a skim off the top. We scrape solids off the baffle and walls, not just vacuum liquid.
- Manifest completed on-site. Your copy goes to your manager before the truck leaves the lot.
- Disposal at a TCEQ-authorized facility. The transporter, not you, is on the hook for getting waste to an approved site and closing the loop on the manifest.
- Next date confirmed. You get a written date for the next visit, not a "we'll call you."
What makes a trap harder to service
Some accounts take twice as long for reasons that have nothing to do with trap size. Traps buried under a walk-in cooler platform or wedged behind a dish pit add real time to every visit. Undersized lids that were never meant for a vacuum hose slow the crew down and sometimes need a second truck trip for a proper lid replacement. Grease that's been left to cool and harden between visits sets up like concrete near the outlet baffle and has to be broken up by hand before it'll pump. And any trap with a cracked or missing baffle needs a call to your landlord or property manager before we can sign off that the unit is even functioning as designed.
Price and duration
A standard quarterly visit on a 1,000 to 1,500 gallon interior trap runs $225 to $325 per visit under a contract rate, and $275 to $375 as a one-off. Exterior in-ground interceptors run higher because of hose length and traffic control around a parking lot lid: $350 to $500 per visit under contract for the 1,500 to 2,500 gallon range, and $500 to $700 for 2,500 gallons and up. One-off rates on those same two exterior tiers run $425 to $600 and $600 to $850. Most single-trap visits take 30 to 60 minutes on site. Multi-trap kitchens or anything with poor access can run past 90 minutes. See the full pricing table for contract versus per-visit rates by trap size.
The one thing that makes this simple
A single crew services the same accounts week over week. Your trap's history, its trouble spots, and its real cadence live with the person doing the pump, not in a call center that's never seen your kitchen.
90-day baseline cadence
Manifest every visit
Contract or per-visit
Serving restaurants in Katy, Cinco Ranch, Fulshear, Brookshire, and Richmond. If your kitchen sits outside that radius, call first, we'll tell you straight whether it's a fit.