FFA stands for Free Fatty Acid — the percentage of fatty acids in used cooking oil that are no longer bound as triglycerides. FFA below 15% classifies oil as valuable yellow grease. FFA above 15% drops it into brown grease territory, where it has fewer uses and lower value. Heat, moisture, and time all increase FFA.
The chemistry in plain language
Cooking oil is made of triglycerides — three fatty acid molecules attached to a glycerol backbone. Fresh oil has intact triglycerides. Each time oil is heated, especially in the presence of water from food, some of those fatty acids break free from the glycerol. Those unattached fatty acids are what FFA measures.
FFA is expressed as a percentage — "3% FFA" means 3% of the total fatty acids in the oil are in free form. Fresh oil typically starts around 0.05–0.1% FFA. As oil is used, the percentage rises steadily.
Why FFA is the key specification
FFA matters because it determines what the oil can be used for downstream:
- Under 15% FFA: Oil is classified as "yellow grease" and qualifies for the major end-use markets — renewable diesel, sustainable aviation fuel, biodiesel feedstock, animal feed, and oleochemicals.
- 15–40% FFA: Oil is in a transitional zone — sometimes processable, sometimes requiring pre-treatment to reduce FFA, sometimes rejected depending on the buyer.
- Above 40% FFA: Oil is in "brown grease" territory. Uses are limited to specialized biodiesel processing, anaerobic digestion, or disposal. Value drops significantly.
A refiner paying for yellow grease is paying based on the assumption that the oil is within specification. If your hauler tests and finds your oil above 15% FFA, they will typically either reject it or pay a discounted rate based on the brown grease market.
What drives FFA up
Heat
Every hour oil spends at frying temperature, FFA rises. This is unavoidable — frying is what fryer oil does — but it means running oil too long is the primary cause of high FFA.
Water
Water is the fastest FFA accelerator. Water in oil — from improperly dried food, from washing equipment without fully drying, from humidity — hydrolyzes triglycerides and releases fatty acids quickly. This is why draining food before frying matters and why wet spoons or ladles in fryers are an obvious mistake.
Food particles
Burnt breading, fried-off food bits, and charred particles at the bottom of the fryer catalyze FFA increase. This is why regular filtration matters — removing particulates slows the climb significantly.
Salt
Salting food near the fryer, or salt contamination in the oil, accelerates breakdown. Season fried food away from the fryer.
Certain metals
Copper and iron both catalyze the breakdown of oil. Damaged fryer baskets or rusty surfaces accelerate FFA.
Time
Even when oil is not being used, FFA rises slowly as long as the oil is warm. An oil that is held at 180°F overnight still degrades, just more slowly than at 350°F.
How FFA is measured
Haulers test FFA using one of three methods, in increasing order of precision:
- Test strips: Color-indicator strips that show approximate FFA ranges. Fast, cheap, directional.
- Titration kits: Chemical kits that measure FFA by acid-base titration. More precise, still field-usable.
- Lab analysis: For loads sold to refineries, samples are tested in analytical labs with precise FFA readings to the hundredth of a percent.
What you can do to keep FFA low
- Change oil before it goes fully degraded. A managed kitchen with 5–10 day oil cycles rarely produces oil above 8–10% FFA.
- Filter daily. Removing particulates extends oil life significantly and slows the FFA curve.
- Keep water out. Drain food thoroughly. Dry equipment before it contacts oil. Check fryer seals for moisture intrusion.
- Do not mix old, fully-degraded oil into fresh oil to "extend" it — the old oil's high FFA catalyzes faster breakdown in the fresh oil.
- Keep the fryer clean. Carbonized residue and burnt particles accelerate breakdown.
What happens when your FFA is high
If your hauler tests a load and finds FFA above 15%, the practical outcomes are that they may still accept the load but pay a reduced rate, they may reject the load and ask you to hold it for brown grease processing, or they may investigate whether a specific contamination event is responsible. Chronically high FFA is usually a sign of operational issues — oil held too long, water intrusion, or mixing — which are fixable with training and SOP adjustments.
Key takeaway
FFA is the single number that determines whether your oil is valuable yellow grease or lower-value brown grease. Managing oil cycles, filtering daily, and keeping water out of the fryer all keep FFA in the favorable range — below 15% — and preserve the value of every gallon your kitchen generates.