How often you have to clean a grease trap in Brisbane is not a number you pick, it is set by your trade waste approval. In and around Brisbane, trade waste is administered by Urban Utilities, and your discharge approval sets how often the trap must be serviced. The interval on that agreement, often quarterly or monthly for a busy kitchen, is the one that counts at an inspection.
The trap does not care about the paperwork though. A grease trap fills at the rate your kitchen puts fats, oils and grease down the sink, so a high volume fryer heavy site fills faster than a small cafe. If you are seeing slow drains, odour or a fat cap near the outlet before your scheduled service is due, the trap is telling you the cycle is too long for how hard the kitchen runs.
Brisbane kitchens run from the CBD and Fortitude Valley through West End to the South Bank dining precinct. A kitchen trading seven days needs a servicing rhythm that keeps the trap well under capacity between visits, because a trap that overflows can fail a trade waste check, foul the kitchen, and in the worst case push grease into the sewer where it becomes the authority's problem and then your bill.
Keep the service records. Every pump out should come with a docket showing the date, the volume removed and the licensed disposal point. That record is what you show at your next Brisbane trade waste review, and it is the difference between a quick tick and an awkward conversation.
When the service is due, Grease Traps Australia routes your Brisbane job to one local operator, at their own fixed price, with the disposal docket included. Enter your postcode to get started.