How to Prevent Grease and Kitchen Drain Clogs

You finish cooking bacon and pour the warm grease down the sink. It looks harmless, like any other liquid. But grease does not stay liquid. As it cools, it hardens and sticks to the inside of your pipes.

Fats, oils, and grease are called FOG, and they do not wash away like water. They cling to the pipe walls and trap food scraps. Over time, the buildup narrows the pipe until the drain backs up. The clog often forms deep in the line, far from the sink.

The good news is that a few simple habits answer how to prevent grease and kitchen drain clogs, and none of them need harsh chemicals. Below, we explain why grease clogs form, the daily and weekly habits that stop them, what you should never put down the drain, and when it is time to call a pro.

Kitchen Drain Clogs - Berkeys Frisco TX

Why Grease Clogs Your Kitchen Drain

Grease is liquid when it is hot, but it does not stay that way. As it cools inside your pipe, it turns solid. That solid layer sticks to the pipe walls and stays there.

Fats, oils, and grease are known as FOG. Unlike water, FOG does not dissolve and flow away. The EPA notes that fats, oils, and grease cause sewer backups when poured down drains. It coats the inside of the pipe a little more with each use.

Over time, that coating builds up and narrows the pipe. The smaller opening then catches food scraps and other debris. What started as a thin film becomes a full clog.

Here is the part that surprises most people. The clog often forms deep in the line, not right under the sink. By the time your drain backs up, grease has been building for weeks. When we run a camera down a grease-clogged line, we often see the walls coated thick like candle wax.



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The One Habit That Prevents Most Grease Clogs

The single best habit is simple: never pour grease, fats, or oil down the drain. This one rule prevents most kitchen clogs before they start.

Instead, collect your used grease and throw it away. Here is the easy method:

  • Let the grease cool until it is safe to handle.
  • Pour it into an old jar, can, or container.
  • Keep the container handy and add to it as you cook.
  • When it is full, seal it and toss it in the trash.

Some people think hot water makes grease safe to rinse away. It does not. The hot water only carries the grease farther down the pipe, where it cools and hardens out of sight.

Keep grease out of the drain, and you remove the main cause of kitchen clogs. It is the easiest habit with the biggest payoff.

Simple Daily Habits to Keep Your Drain Clear

Beyond keeping grease out, a few daily habits go a long way. They take seconds and stop buildup before it starts.

  • Wipe pots and pans first. Use a paper towel to wipe off grease and food before washing them.
  • Use a sink strainer. It catches food scraps so they never reach the pipe.
  • Scrape plates into the trash. Clear off leftovers before rinsing in the sink.
  • Go easy on the disposal. Skip fibrous and starchy foods that swell or wrap around the blades.

The strainer is one of the cheapest tools you can buy. Empty it into the trash after each use, and rinse it clean.

Weekly Kitchen Drain Maintenance

A short weekly routine clears light buildup before it grows. It takes only a minute and keeps your drain flowing.

Once a week, do this simple flush:

  • Boil a kettle or pot of water.
  • Squirt some dish soap into the drain.
  • Pour the hot water down slowly to avoid splashing.

The hot water and soap help loosen and move any light grease. This works best as upkeep, not as a fix for a real clog.

You may have heard about baking soda and vinegar. It can help with minor buildup, but it will not clear a true blockage. Save it for light maintenance only.

We also suggest you skip chemical degreasers. The harsh ingredients can wear down your pipes over time and lead to leaks. When buildup is heavy, professional drain cleaning clears the line safely without them.

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What You Should Never Put Down a Kitchen Drain

Some foods cause clogs no matter how much water you run. Keep these out of your kitchen drain and disposal:

  • Grease, oil, and fat. The top cause of clogs, as they harden in the pipe.
  • Coffee grounds. They clump together and settle into a thick sludge.
  • Eggshells. The membranes wrap around other debris and the disposal blades.
  • Fibrous foods. Celery, onion skins, and corn husks tangle in the pipe.
  • Starchy foods. Pasta, rice, and potato peels swell with water and block flow.

When in doubt, throw it in the trash instead of the sink. The trash can handles these foods far better than your pipes.

A strainer adds a second layer of protection. It catches what a busy cook might forget. For grease that has hardened deep in the line, hydro jetting scrubs the pipe walls fully clean.

When to Call a Pro for Kitchen Drain Clogs in Frisco

Good habits prevent most clogs, but some buildup is already too deep to fix at home. Watch for these warning signs:

  • Your drain clogs again soon after you clear it.
  • Water drains slowly even after a hot water flush.
  • A bad odor rises from the sink.

These signs often mean grease has coated the line deep inside. Hot water and home remedies cannot reach it. At that point, a drain and sewer inspection finds the cause, and the pipe gets the cleaning it needs.

We answer calls 24/7, so help is ready when your kitchen drain backs up in Frisco. For a sink that has stopped draining completely, we also offer emergency drain cleaning.

Call (214) 216-1727 for drain and sewer service in Frisco.

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Berkeys Plumbing, A/C & Electrical in Frisco • 4645 Avon Ln Suite 260, Frisco, TX 75033 • 214-216-1727

We're There When You Need Us!

877-746-6855