There's a version of grease trap service that leaves the trap technically empty but functionally compromised. That's not cleaning. That's pumping with paperwork.
True grease trap cleaning goes past extraction. It addresses the interior surfaces β walls, baffles, inlet zone, outlet pipe β where grease scale, biological film, and hardened FOG accumulate between service visits. It inspects the components that determine how well the trap actually performs. It restores the system to working condition, not just empty condition.
Grease Trap Portable provides deep grease trap cleaning for commercial kitchens across Buffalo, MO. Every visit is a complete service β not a pump-out with a hose rinse.
Ask most operators in Buffalo when their trap was last "cleaned" and they'll tell you the date of the last service visit. But what happened at that visit? Was the trap pumped? Almost certainly. Were the interior surfaces degreased? Probably not. Were the baffles inspected and cleaned? Depends on the provider. Was the lid gasket assessed? Rarely.
The gap between pumped and clean is where odor originates. It's where performance degrades. It's where the baffle that's been slowly corroding for six months finally fails β and nobody knows because no one looked at it during the last three service visits.
Grease Trap Portable closes that gap on every cleaning visit.
The physical interior of the trap β walls, floor, ceiling, baffles β accumulates a layer of grease scale and biological film that doesn't come out with a pump. We wash it out with high-pressure equipment and degrease all surfaces before completing the service.
Every cleaning includes a systematic inspection of the components that determine trap performance and containment β baffles, lid, gasket, inlet screen. What needs cleaning gets cleaned. What needs replacement gets flagged and discussed.
Grease doesn't only accumulate in the trap. We extend cleaning to the drain lines upstream when needed β particularly for under-sink traps where the connection between kitchen fixtures and trap inlet is short and accumulates quickly.
Every cleaning visit produces a service record formatted for compliance purposes, plus a condition assessment that tells you what the trap looks like and what β if anything β it needs before the next visit.
The trap with persistent odor after recent service. If your kitchen in Buffalo smells like sewage three days after a pump-out, the trap wasn't cleaned β it was emptied. The fix is a deep clean, not another pump-out.
The under-sink trap in a high-output kitchen. Small traps in high-volume kitchens hit capacity faster than any calendar can anticipate. Regular, complete cleaning prevents removal problems.
The trap that's been serviced by the same provider for years with no condition reports. If you don't have documentation showing baffle condition, you're flying blind. A proper cleaning visit changes that.
The end-of-busy-season outdoor trap. Outdoor grease traps in Buffalo, MO often accumulate significant hardened buildup. End-of-season deep cleaning prevents massive future costs.
Separate your cleaning interval from your pumping interval. These are not the same service. Pumping removes waste. Cleaning restores the system. Most operations benefit from a deep clean every three to four pump-outs.
Treat odor as a diagnostic signal, not a nuisance. Odor is telling you something specific β degraded gasket, unbrushed surfaces, or drain line buildup. Don't mask it; trace it.
Stop using biological additives as a cleaning substitute. Enzyme treatments break down surface grease but do not degrease interior surfaces or clear drain lines. Use them between cleaning visits, never instead of them.
Get documentation that matches the work being done. A record that says "serviced" tells a regulator nothing. Our cleaning records document condition on arrival, work performed, and system status.
It's one of the most common calls Grease Trap Portable gets from kitchens in Buffalo, MO: the trap was just serviced, but the kitchen smells like a sewer. Usually, the trap isn't the issue β or at least, not in the way the operator assumes.
The most common cause is a degraded lid gasket. Hydrogen sulfide β the compound that creates the sewage smell β is a natural byproduct of organic decomposition. A gasket that's cracked lets it escape continuously. The smell has nothing to do with how full the trap is; it's a containment failure.
The second common cause is residual biological activity on the trap's interior surfaces. A pump-out removes the bulk waste. It doesn't remove the grease film on the walls that continue generating gas. Only physical degreasing addresses this.
The third possibility is that the odor source isn't the trap at all. Grease accumulation in the kitchen drain lines upstream can generate its own odor. The fix in every case is a proper deep clean β not another pump-out.
A pump-out extracts the liquid and solid waste. Cleaning goes further β degreasing interior surfaces, washing baffles, clearing inlet/outlet pipes, and inspecting gaskets. Grease Trap Portable includes both.
Typically every three to four pump-outs. High-grease kitchens may need it more frequently. We assess your trap at each visit and adjust the schedule accordingly.
Yes. Grease Trap Portable cleans all trap types β under-sink units, above-ground outdoor traps, and in-ground concrete or plastic systems.
We document it and tell you immediately on-site. Minor components like gaskets or baffles can often be addressed during the same visit.
Yes, it's more detailed. It documents interior condition, specific cleaning work, component status, and flow check results for health inspectors.
A grease trap that's been properly cleaned β surfaces degreased, baffles checked, gasket sealed, flow verified β performs better, lasts longer, and generates fewer problems between visits. That's what Grease Trap Portable delivers to commercial kitchens across Buffalo, MO, every single time.
Schedule a deep cleaning visit or set up a full maintenance program β contact Grease Trap Portable for your Buffalo kitchen today.