Grease Trap Requirements
Tulsa, OK
FOG compliance regulations for food service establishments in Tulsa, Oklahoma. Serving 1,657 food service establishments.
FOG Compliance in Tulsa, OK
Food service establishments in Tulsa operate under a combination of federal EPA pretreatment standards, Oklahoma state plumbing code, and city-level FOG ordinances. Together these rules determine how grease traps must be sized, how often they must be pumped, and what happens when a restaurant falls out of compliance. The city has approximately 1,657 food service establishments — every one of them subject to the rules summarized below.
Pumping frequency is the compliance rule restaurant owners interact with most often. In Tulsa, the rule is: Must be pumped when grease and solids reach 25% of interceptor capacity. This aligns with the 90-day US median enforced by most major cities. The city follows the International Plumbing Code (IPC) for trap sizing and installation. Under Section 1003.3.4, which sizes traps by drainage fixture unit counts, grease interceptors installed in Tulsa must meet minimum capacity thresholds based on the fixtures connected to them — 3-compartment sinks, dishwashers, pre-rinse stations, wok stoves, and floor drains on the cook line. The local minimum trap size is: Minimum 750 gallons for gravity grease interceptors; sized per fixture count and flow rate.
Tulsa requires a dedicated FOG permit for any food service establishment generating fats, oils, and grease. The permit is separate from, and in addition to, the plumbing permit required at installation. Violations carry maximum penalties of Violations subject to penalties under Tulsa sewer use ordinance . Fines typically escalate with repeat violations, and severe discharges that cause sanitary sewer overflows can trigger federal Clean Water Act penalties layered on top of local fines.
Tulsa enforces the 25 percent rule: grease traps must be pumped before the combined FOG and settled solids reach 25 percent of the trap's total liquid depth. Inspectors measure the depth with a sludge judge or dipstick, typically at surprise visits. Exceeding the threshold at inspection triggers a notice of violation and mandatory emergency pump-out, regardless of the scheduled pumping cycle. Annual inspection by city; additional inspections as needed. Establishments must maintain pumping logs, hauler manifests, and inspection reports on-site — missing records is itself a violation in most enforcement actions. Enforcement authority rests with the Tulsa Metropolitan Utility Authority (TMUA), which handles permit issuance, inspections, and hauler licensing.
For a deeper explanation of the rules this city enforces, read our guides on how grease traps work and the 25/50 pumping rule.
Pumping Requirements
Permits & Enforcement
Complete FOG Regulations
| Minimum Trap Size | Minimum 750 gallons for gravity grease interceptors; sized per fixture count and flow rate |
|---|---|
| Pumping Frequency | Must be pumped when grease and solids reach 25% of interceptor capacity |
| 25% Rule | Yes — trap must be pumped when grease and solids reach 25% of capacity |
| Permit Required | Yes |
| Maximum Fine | Violations subject to penalties under Tulsa sewer use ordinance |
| Inspections | Annual inspection by city; additional inspections as needed |
| Record Keeping | Required — maintain pumping logs and manifests on-site |
| Plumbing Code | International Plumbing Code (IPC) |
| Authority | Tulsa Metropolitan Utility Authority (TMUA) |
Additional Notes
Grease interceptors required for all FSEs. Must be pumped when FOG reaches 25% of capacity. Manifests from licensed haulers retained on-site minimum 3 years. Haulers must be licensed.
Last verified: — Regulations change frequently. Always verify current requirements with your local wastewater authority or plumbing inspector before making compliance decisions.
Official Sources
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