FOG / Grease Interceptor Service Records — Miami-Dade
Miami-Dade requires hydromechanical interceptors cleaned monthly and gravity interceptors on a 60-day baseline, with records kept.
What it is. Recurring cleaning of the grease interceptor with retained records, under Miami-Dade County Code §24-42.6.
Who issues/enforces it. Miami-Dade Water and Sewer Department (WASD) (County layer).
When you need it. Ongoing. Automatic/hydromechanical grease interceptors: cleaned monthly by a permitted liquid-waste transporter (strainers emptied daily by the operator). Gravity interceptors: 60-day baseline, extendable to 180 days with a functional interceptor monitoring device.
How to comply. Use a permitted hauler; keep dated service manifests on site.
Cadence. Hydromechanical: monthly. Gravity: 60 days (up to 180 with monitoring).
What SpoonSeal tracks. The document(s) you upload for this requirement, with automatic renewal/expiration tracking (Current, Due Soon, Expired). Where the city publishes health-inspection results (e.g., NYC and Chicago), SpoonSeal syncs them automatically; elsewhere they can be added manually.
References
- Miami-Dade County, FOG Discharge Control Operating Permit — https://www.miamidade.gov/global/permit.page?Mduid_permit=per1731510597042250 — Official source last checked: 2026-07-02
Stay ahead of this requirement
SpoonSeal stores your documents, tracks expirations, and reminds you before anything lapses — so you are always inspection-ready.
Get started free →This guide is informational and not legal advice. Always confirm current requirements with the official agency linked above.