If your kitchen sink won’t drain, grease buildup is the most likely culprit. Cooking oils, fats, and food particles combine to coat your pipes over time, gradually restricting water flow until you’re stuck with standing water in your sink.
This guide from Staggs Plumbing covers the 5 most common causes of kitchen sink clogs and what you can do about each one.
5 Most Common Causes of Kitchen Sink Clogs
| Cause | How It Clogs | DIY Fix? |
|---|---|---|
| Grease and cooking oils | Solidifies in pipes, traps debris | Sometimes |
| Food particles | Accumulates in P-trap and beyond | Yes |
| Soap residue buildup | Combines with grease, narrows pipes | Sometimes |
| Coffee grounds and eggshells | Settles in trap, creates blockage | Yes |
| Garbage disposal issues | Jam or incomplete grinding | Sometimes |
Grease and Cooking Oils
Grease is the number one cause of kitchen drain clogs. Hot cooking oil flows down the drain easily, but as it cools in your pipes, it solidifies and sticks to pipe walls. Each time you rinse greasy pans, you add another layer.
Over months, this buildup narrows the pipe opening and traps other debris. Even “small amounts” add up. Across thousands of service calls, our technicians consistently find grease as the primary issue in slow kitchen drains.
Prevention tip: Wipe greasy pans with a paper towel before washing. Pour cooled cooking oil into a container and throw it in the trash.
Food Particles
Food scraps that slip past your strainer accumulate in the P-trap (the curved pipe section under your sink). Rice, pasta, and starchy foods are particularly problematic because they expand when wet and form a dense plug.
Even with a garbage disposal, fibrous vegetables like celery, potato peels, and onion skins can wrap around the blades or pass through only partially ground.
Prevention tip: Use a mesh strainer over your drain. Scrape plates into the trash before rinsing.
Soap Residue Buildup
Dish soap doesn’t rinse away completely. Residue builds up on pipe walls and combines with grease and food particles to form a stubborn coating. North Texas homes with hard water see this problem more often because minerals in the water react with soap to create soap scum buildup faster.
Prevention tip: Run hot water for 30 seconds after washing dishes to help flush soap residue.
Coffee Grounds and Eggshells
Coffee grounds seem harmless because they’re small, but they don’t break down in water. Instead, they settle in your P-trap and pack together like wet sand. Eggshells create a similar problem, and the thin membrane inside can wrap around other debris.
Prevention tip: Coffee grounds go in the trash or compost, not the drain. Same with eggshells.
Garbage Disposal Issues
When your disposal jams or doesn’t grind food completely, partially processed food enters the drain. If the disposal runs while too little water flows, food doesn’t flush through the pipes properly.
Prevention tip: Run cold water before, during, and after using the disposal. Feed food in slowly rather than all at once.
What You Can Try Before Calling a Plumber
These DIY steps work for minor clogs near the drain opening:
- Boiling water flush: Slowly pour a pot of boiling water down the drain. This can melt fresh grease buildup. Don’t use boiling water if you have PVC pipes (warm water is safer).
- Clean the P-trap: Place a bucket under the curved pipe section below your sink. Unscrew the connections, remove the trap, and clear any debris.
- Plunger: Use a flat-bottomed plunger (not a toilet plunger). Fill the sink with a few inches of water for better suction.
- Baking soda and vinegar: Pour half a cup of baking soda followed by half a cup of white vinegar. Wait 15 minutes, then flush with hot water. This helps with minor buildup but won’t clear a solid clog.
What to avoid: Chemical drain cleaners can damage pipes with repeated use and rarely clear established clogs. They’re also hazardous if they don’t work and a plumber needs to work on standing chemical water.
When to Call a Professional
Call a licensed plumber if:
- Water backs up into the other side of a double sink
- Multiple drains in your home are slow (this may indicate a main line issue)
- The clog keeps returning within weeks
- You’ve tried DIY methods without success
- You notice a sewage smell coming from the drain
Clogs past the P-trap require professional equipment. A plumber can use a drain snake or hydro jetting to clear blockages deeper in your system and identify any underlying issues like root intrusion or pipe damage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I use Drano or chemical drain cleaners?
Can I use Drano or chemical drain cleaners?
Most plumbers recommend against chemical drain cleaners for kitchen sinks. These products rarely dissolve grease clogs effectively and can damage pipes over time. If the chemical doesn’t clear the clog, you’re left with standing caustic water that makes professional repair more difficult and hazardous.
How often should I have my kitchen drain cleaned professionally?
How often should I have my kitchen drain cleaned professionally?
For most households, professional drain cleaning every 18-24 months helps prevent buildup from becoming a clog. Homes that cook frequently with oil or have older pipes may benefit from annual cleaning. If you’ve had multiple clogs in the past year, ask about a camera inspection to check pipe condition.
Is a slow drain the same as a clogged drain?
Is a slow drain the same as a clogged drain?
A slow drain is an early warning sign. It means buildup is narrowing your pipes but water can still pass through. A complete clog stops all drainage. Addressing slow drains early is easier and less expensive than waiting for a full blockage.
Staggs Plumbing has served DFW homeowners for over 35 years with licensed, insured plumbing services. Our technicians carry professional drain cleaning equipment on every truck for same-day resolution of kitchen sink clogs.
For drain cleaning or a second opinion on a recurring clog, call [business_phone_ahref_link].