What Is a Lube Room? | Lubripedia

A lube room is a dedicated, controlled area used for the storage, handling, and management of lubricants within an industrial facility.
Its purpose is to maintain lubricant cleanliness, organisation, and quality, ensuring that only clean and properly identified oils and greases are applied to machinery.


What is a Lube Room used for?

A lube room acts as the central hub for lubrication activities in a plant.
It is designed to:

  • Store lubricants safely in a clean, temperature-controlled environment
  • Prevent cross-contamination and misapplication
  • Allow technicians to filter, label, and dispense lubricants correctly
  • Support condition monitoring, oil analysis, and top-up procedures


Typical features include:

  • Sealed storage drums or bulk tanks
  • Colour-coded or labelled containers
  • Filtration and dispensing equipment
  • Workbenches, safety signage, and spill-control systems


Why is a Lube Room important?

A well-designed lube room is a key element of reliability-centred maintenance (RCM).
It helps organisations:

  • Reduce contamination, which is a leading cause of machine wear
  • Extend lubricant and component life
  • Improve workplace safety and environmental compliance
  • Increase efficiency through better organisation and inventory control

In essence, the lube room is where lubrication excellence begins.


Best Practices for a Lube Room:

  • Keep it clean, dry, and well-ventilated
  • Use colour-coding systems to prevent mix-ups
  • Label all containers with product names and application areas
  • Regularly filter and test lubricants
  • Train staff on proper storage and handling procedures