FOG Compliance for Northwest Arkansas Restaurants — Grease Trap Requirements Explained

Federal, state, and NWA municipal grease trap regulations — what they require, what documentation proves compliance, and how Ozark Grease Pros keeps your records current at every service cycle.

WHAT IS FOG COMPLIANCE

What Is FOG Compliance — and Why Every NWA Restaurant Is Subject to It

FOG stands for Fats, Oils, and Grease — the collective term for the organic material that commercial kitchens generate and that, when mismanaged, causes significant damage to municipal sewer systems, waterways, and public health infrastructure. FOG compliance refers to the body of federal, state, and local requirements that mandate how food service operators must manage that waste.

For a restaurant in Northwest Arkansas, FOG compliance is not optional. It is a condition of your food service permit. Inspectors check for it. Municipalities enforce it. And the cost of non-compliance — fines, permit suspension, kitchen closure, and sewer damage liability — is substantially higher than the cost of maintaining a compliant grease trap service program.

FOG compliance requirements operate at three levels — federal, state, and local — and each level adds specificity to the obligation:

  • Level

  • Governing Body

  • What It Requires

  • Federal

  • U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)

  • EPA Pre-Treatment Program (40 CFR Part 403) — requires commercial food service operators to control FOG discharge into publicly owned treatment works (POTWs). Grease traps are the mandated control device.

  • State

  • Arkansas ADEQ (Arkansas Dept. of Energy & Environment)

  • State-level pre-treatment standards and discharge regulations. ADEQ oversees permits for grease processing facilities. ADEQ rules may supplement or exceed federal minimums

  • Local

  • NWA Municipal FOG Ordinances (Fayetteville, Springdale, Bentonville, Rogers, etc.)

  • City-specific FOG management programs. Typically require grease trap installation, sizing, maintenance frequency, documentation, and annual permit compliance. Most specific and most directly enforced.

  • What NWA Municipalities Typically Require for Grease Trap Compliance

    Municipal FOG programs in Northwest Arkansas vary by city, but most share a common core of requirements derived from the EPA pre-treatment framework and ADEQ standards. The following represents the typical compliance framework across the primary NWA markets — always confirm specific requirements with your city’s utility or health department:

  • Compliance Requirement

  • What It Means for Your Restaurant

  • Grease trap installation

  • Any food service establishment that discharges to the municipal sewer system is typically required to install and maintain an appropriately sized grease trap or interceptor as a condition of their food service permit.

  • Trap sizing requirements

  • Most NWA municipalities specify minimum trap sizing based on the number of fixtures, seating capacity, or kitchen volume. Under-sized traps that fill too quickly are a common compliance violation.
  • Regular maintenance and pumping

  • FOG ordinances in most NWA cities require regular documented grease trap service — typically every 30–90 days depending on trap size and kitchen output. The service schedule must produce documentation.
  • Manifest documentation

  • Every service call must produce a signed waste manifest documenting the date, gallons removed, hauler identity, and disposal destination at a licensed facility. Manifests are the primary compliance document.
  • Licensed disposal destination

  • Waste must be transported to and disposed of at a licensed receiving facility. A manifest naming an unlicensed disposal site does not satisfy the compliance requirement.
  • Records available on demand

  • Most FOG ordinances require that service manifests be maintained on-site and made available to health inspectors or utility representatives on request — typically covering the previous 12 months of service.
  • Annual FOG permit renewal

  • Some NWA municipalities require annual renewal of a FOG management permit, which may include a facility inspection and review of service records. Non-renewal can affect food service permit status.

  • City-specific FOG compliance resources:

    FOG ordinance requirements vary by municipality. Contact your city’s public works department or wastewater utility for the specific requirements that apply to your facility. The following NWA cities have active FOG management programs:

    Fayetteville, AR — City of Fayetteville Water & Sewer Department

    Springdale, AR — City of Springdale Water Utilities

    Bentonville, AR — City of Bentonville Public Works

    Rogers, AR — City of Rogers Water Utilities

    Siloam Springs, AR — City of Siloam Springs Water Department

    Note: Ozark Grease Pros can advise on general FOG documentation requirements but is not a regulatory body. Always confirm specific municipal requirements with your city authority or a qualified compliance consultant.

    THE COMPLIANCE MANIFEST

    What a FOG-Compliant Service Manifest Must Document

    The waste manifest is the cornerstone of FOG compliance documentation. When a health inspector or FOG program administrator asks for proof of compliance, the manifest is what you show them. Here is exactly what a compliant manifest must contain — and what Ozark Grease Pros provides on every service call:

  • Manifest Field

  • What It Documents

  • Ozark Grease Pros Provides

  • Date of service

  • When the trap was serviced — establishes the interval since the prior service

  • Yes — date recorded on every manifest

  • Restaurant name & address

  • Which facility was serviced — matches the permit address

  • Yes — facility address on every manifest

  • Gallons removed

  • Volume of waste extracted — the billing basis and compliance volume record

  • Yes — measured and documented on every manifest

  • Hauler company name

  • Who performed the service — must be a licensed pumping company

  • Yes — Ozark Grease Pros listed as hauler

  • Disposal destination

  • Where the waste was taken — must name a licensed receiving facility

  • Yes — our Siloam Springs, AR facility listed

  • Technician signature

  • Authentication of the service record

  • Yes — signed on every service call

  • Waste type

  • Confirms FOG waste designation — required for regulatory tracking

  • Yes — waste type documented

  • What Happens When a Restaurant Fails FOG Compliance

    FOG non-compliance is an operational and financial risk that most restaurant operators significantly underestimate. The consequences escalate from minor compliance findings to kitchen closure depending on the severity and frequency of violations. Here is the typical enforcement escalation sequence:

  • Non-Compliance Scenario

  • Typical Consequence

  • Missing or incomplete service manifest

  • Compliance finding at health inspection. Corrective action required — typically immediate service and documentation before re-inspection.

  • Overdue pumping (trap at or near capacity)

  • Compliance finding. May trigger immediate pumping requirement as a condition of continued operation. Depending on severity, may affect food service permit status.

  • Grease entering the municipal sewer system

  • Active FOG violation. City FOG program notification. Fines possible — amounts vary by municipality. May trigger increased inspection frequency.

  • Repeated FOG violations at the same facility

  • Progressive enforcement: increased inspection frequency, higher fines, and in some municipalities, requirement to install a larger interceptor at owner expense.

  • Grease causing a sewer blockage or overflow

  • Most serious outcome. Sewer overflow remediation is expensive and the responsible party (the upstream food service operator) may be held liable for remediation costs.

  • Operating without a current food service permit

  • Immediate closure risk. FOG compliance issues that are not resolved before permit renewal can result in permit denial.

  • Disposal at unlicensed site (by hauler or operator)

  • Environmental violation. ADEQ enforcement possible. Liability extends to the food service operator if their waste is traced to an unlicensed disposal event.

  • The simplest way to avoid every one of these outcomes:

    A scheduled grease trap maintenance program with manifest documentation at every cycle eliminates the documentation gap, keeps the trap below capacity, ensures licensed disposal, and maintains a continuous compliance record. Every risk in the table above disappears when the trap is on a proper maintenance program.

    Set up a scheduled maintenance program →

    HOW WE SATISFY REQUIREMENTS

    How Ozark Grease Pros Satisfies FOG Compliance Requirements on Every Service Call

    Ozark Grease Pros does not just pump grease traps — it produces the compliance documentation that NWA restaurant operators need. Here’s how every element of our service maps to a specific FOG compliance requirement:

  • What We Provide

  • Compliance Requirement It Satisfies

  • Signed waste manifest on every call

  • Primary FOG documentation record — satisfies municipal demand for proof of service at health inspections

  • Gallons removed documented per cycle

  • Volume-based compliance verification — proves service was at adequate frequency relative to trap capacity

  • Disposal at licensed Siloam Springs facility

  • Licensed destination requirement — manifest names an ADEQ-regulated receiving facility, not an informal site

  • Interior cleaning on maintenance program cycles

  • Condition-based compliance — demonstrates active maintenance beyond minimum pump-only standard

  • Baffle & pipe condition check every visit

  • Equipment maintenance requirement — demonstrates trap is in proper working order, not just emptied

  • Manifest archive available on request

  • Record retention requirement — service history accessible for health dept. review or FOG audit

  • ADEQ-compliant disposal at Siloam Springs

  • State-level pre-treatment compliance — waste processed at a facility operating under ADEQ permit

  • Grease Trap Compliance at a Health Inspection — What Inspectors Look For

    Health inspectors in NWA municipalities who conduct FOG compliance checks typically examine a combination of physical trap condition and documentation. Understanding what they look for allows restaurant operators to ensure they’re always inspection-ready:
  • What the Inspector Checks

  • What 'Passing' Looks Like

  • Service manifest on file

  • Most recent manifest dated within the required service interval. All fields complete. Licensed disposal destination named.

  • Manifest history

  • Multiple manifests showing consistent service frequency — not just one recent pump after a long gap.

  • Physical trap condition

  • Trap is not at or near capacity. No overflow evidence. Baffles intact. No visible blockage at inlet/outlet.

  • Absence of kitchen odor

  • Persistent grease odor may indicate the trap is at capacity or bacteria accumulation — either can prompt closer inspection.

  • Trap size adequacy

  • The inspector may assess whether the installed trap is appropriately sized for the kitchen volume. Under-sized traps are a common finding.

  • Hauler licensing

  • Some municipalities verify that the listed service provider is a licensed pumping company. Ozark Grease Pros is licensed.

  • Disposal destination

  • The manifest destination must name a licensed facility. Our Siloam Springs facility is licensed under Arkansas ADEQ.

  • If you have an inspection scheduled and your grease trap is overdue or undocumented, see our emergency service page for priority service before an inspection.

    FOG Compliance Context by City — Northwest Arkansas

    While the core compliance framework is consistent across NWA, each city administers its FOG program through its own utility or public works department. The following provides the general compliance context for the primary NWA markets Ozark Grease Pros serves:

  • City

  • FOG Compliance Context

  • Fayetteville, AR

  • Fayetteville Water & Sewer has an active FOG management program. The city's restaurant density — driven by the University of Arkansas and a dense urban dining district — creates significant FOG compliance enforcement activity. Manifests requested at routine health inspections.

  • Springdale, AR

  • Springdale Water Utilities administers the city's FOG program. High food service density along the I-49 corridor and significant food manufacturing presence make FOG management a priority. Restaurant operators should confirm current service interval requirements.

  • Bentonville, AR

  • Bentonville Public Works oversees FOG compliance in the city's growing restaurant market. The Walmart HQ ecosystem and rapid dining scene development have driven increased FOG program enforcement activity. New restaurant operators should confirm grease trap sizing requirements before opening.

  • Rogers, AR

  • Rogers Water Utilities administers the city's FOG program. Rogers has a high density of chain and fast-casual restaurants — a segment with high FOG output and correspondingly strict compliance monitoring. QSR operators should plan for monthly service.

  • Siloam Springs, AR

  • Our facility home. Siloam Springs Water Department administers local FOG compliance. Primarily serves as the disposal and processing site for our own direct service accounts and B2B haulers.

  • Bella Vista & Centerton

  • Benton County communities with growing food service density. FOG programs vary — confirm specific requirements with Bella Vista Utility Corporation and the City of Centerton.

  • Surrounding communities

  • FOG programs for smaller NWA communities vary. Contact Ozark Grease Pros for guidance on documentation requirements in specific communities within our service area.

  • Why FOG Compliance Matters Beyond the Fine — Environmental Impact

    FOG regulations exist because unmanaged grease waste causes serious, measurable harm. Sanitary sewer overflows (SSOs) caused by FOG accumulation in municipal lines are among the most common sewer system failures in the United States — and they result in raw sewage discharges to streets, storm drains, and waterways.

    In a growing region like Northwest Arkansas — where population growth and food service expansion have accelerated the volume of commercial kitchen FOG entering the sewer system — the infrastructure implications of poor FOG management are significant. The municipalities that enforce FOG ordinances are not engaged in regulatory theatre; they are managing a real infrastructure and environmental problem that has measurable consequences when ignored.

    For restaurant operators, this context is worth understanding. FOG compliance is not an arbitrary bureaucratic requirement — it is a direct connection between your kitchen’s grease management practices and the condition of the public sewer infrastructure and waterways that serve your community. Compliance is both a legal obligation and a straightforward environmental responsibility.

    Ozark Grease Pros’ recycling facility addresses this at the processing level. Read more about the environmental significance of grease recycling →

    Ozark Grease Pros team cleans a restaurant’s grease trap, helping keep the area safe and working well.
    Common Questions

    FOG Compliance — Frequently Asked Questions

    What is FOG compliance for restaurants?

    FOG compliance refers to the set of federal (EPA pre-treatment), state (ADEQ), and local (municipal FOG ordinance) requirements that mandate how commercial food service operators manage fats, oils, and grease. For a restaurant in Northwest Arkansas, FOG compliance is a condition of the food service permit — it requires a properly sized grease trap, regular documented service, and waste disposal at a licensed facility.

    Pump frequency requirements vary by municipality and trap size. Most NWA FOG ordinances require service often enough to prevent the trap from exceeding 25% capacity — in practice, this means monthly service for high-volume QSR operations, bi-monthly for most full-service restaurants, and quarterly for lower-volume or larger-interceptor operations. Confirm specific requirements with your city’s FOG program administrator.

    The primary compliance document is the waste manifest — issued by your service provider on every pump. It must include: service date, facility address, gallons removed, licensed hauler name, disposal destination (a licensed facility), and technician signature. Manifests should be kept on file for at least 12 months and made available to inspectors on demand.

    Consequences range from a compliance finding requiring corrective action (most common for documentation gaps) to fines, permit review, and in severe cases, operational impact. Repeated violations can trigger escalating enforcement. The simplest prevention is maintaining a continuous service record with manifests from every pump cycle.

    Yes. Every Ozark Grease Pros service call produces a fully compliant signed manifest documenting date, gallons removed, and disposal at our ADEQ-regulated Siloam Springs facility. Our service satisfies the primary documentation requirement at all three regulatory levels — federal, state, and municipal.

    A health inspection covers a broad range of food safety requirements. FOG compliance is a subset of that — specifically the grease trap maintenance records and trap physical condition. Some NWA municipalities conduct dedicated FOG inspections separate from routine health inspections; in others, FOG checks are part of the standard inspection. Either way, the required documentation is the same: signed manifests from licensed service.

    Using a recycling facility — like our Siloam Springs plant — satisfies the licensed disposal destination requirement at least as well as a disposal-only facility, and provides additional environmental compliance value. For restaurants with sustainability commitments or environmental permit conditions, documented recycling disposal can provide additional compliance benefit beyond the standard FOG record.

    Related Pages

    A worker cleans a kitchen drain for safe, expert results you can get with Ozark Grease Pros in Northwest Arkansas.

    Grease Trap Pumping

    The core compliance service — per-gallon pumping with signed manifest documentation on every call. What keeps your FOG compliance records current.
    Ozark Grease Pros worker cleans a grease trap in Fayetteville, showing safe and professional recycling services.

    Scheduled Maintenance Programs

    Recurring programs that keep your compliance record continuous — no gaps, no missed cycles, manifest archive maintained on your account.
    An Ozark Grease Pros worker helps a business with grease trap service during an emergency outside the building.

    Grease Recycling Hub

    How Ozark Grease Pros processes waste at our licensed Siloam Springs facility — the ADEQ-regulated destination named on every manifest.
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    Keep Your NWA Restaurant FOG-Compliant at Every Inspection

    Every Ozark Grease Pros service call produces a fully compliant signed manifest — dated, signed, and naming our ADEQ-licensed Siloam Springs facility as the disposal destination. Get on a maintenance program and your compliance record stays current automatically.