Maximum Spills
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This comparison is written from our point of view. Prices, stock, and specifications change — verify current terms with each supplier. Send us your spec and we will help you confirm equivalence.

Comparison

Oil Spill Kit vs Universal Spill Kit

Fast decision tool for spill kit selection

Both absorb oil, but they work differently. Here is when to choose oil-only versus universal — and why using the wrong one can cause problems.

At a glance

Oil-only
White, hydrocarbon-only
Universal
Grey, mixed maintenance
Best fit
Match the kit to the zone

If you need the short answer, use oil-only where oil, fuel, or hydraulic leaks are the main risk and water may be present, use universal for indoor maintenance with mixed fluids, and split the site by zone if both situations apply. The guide linked from the menu goes deeper on chemistry; this page is about the quicker buying decision.

30-Second Answer

What should I buy?

Use this page as the shortcut. If the answer is obvious, move on. If it is not, the matrix below will usually settle it.

Oil-only

Use this where oil, diesel, or hydraulic fluid is the main risk and water may be present. It is the better call near drains, bays, bunds, and outdoor storage.

Universal

Use this for indoor maintenance where you need one kit to handle mixed day-to-day fluids. It is the simpler choice when the spill is not water-adjacent.

Both

Use both when the site has separate zones. That is usually the lowest-friction answer for factories, estates, and multi-area operations.

Scenario Matrix

Where each kit belongs

The fastest way to choose is to match the kit to the space, not to the whole site.

Environment Best fit Why
Fuel store or bund with standing water Oil-only Selective on hydrocarbons and less waste when water is present.
Loading bay or yard Oil-only Handles fuel or hydraulic leaks without soaking up rainwater.
Workshop or plant room Universal A practical default for mixed maintenance fluids indoors.
Warehouse aisle Universal Covers general leaks, drips, and handling spills in one kit.
Drain-side spill point Oil-only Better where contamination could reach drains or surface water.
Mixed site with indoor and outdoor areas Both Different zones usually justify different kit types.

Practical Guidance

How to avoid the wrong purchase

These are the mistakes and trade-offs that usually decide the order.

Buying one type for the whole site

That works only if the whole site has the same liquid risks. Most sites do not.

Choosing universal for wet areas

Universal absorbs water too, so it can be the wrong call when the spill is outside or near drains.

Overspecifying chemical-grade kits

Chemical kits have a place, but they are not the best buy if your main risks are diesel, oil, and routine maintenance fluids.

If you only buy one

Buy oil-only if the biggest risk is outside or around drains. Buy universal if the biggest risk is indoor maintenance with mixed fluids. Then add the other type once the first zone is covered.

Refill compatibility

Keep refill packs matched to the kit colour and use case. Swapping grey refills into a white kit, or vice versa, muddies the response plan and makes restocking harder.

Cost logic

The cheapest kit is not always the cheapest response. A better question is: which kit reduces waste, restocking, and confusion in the area where it will actually be used?

Side By Side

Quick comparison

Short version: oil-only is selective, universal is broader, and the right answer often depends on the zone.

Feature Oil-Only Universal
Main jobHydrocarbons onlyMixed maintenance fluids
Water present?Better choiceNot ideal near standing water
Typical locationYards, drains, fuel areasWorkshops, plant rooms, warehouses
ColourWhiteGrey
RefillsKeep white refills with white kitsKeep grey refills with grey kits
Cost logicBest value where oil risk is concentratedBest value where one kit must cover mixed indoor spills

Need a site-specific answer?

If you are deciding between a single order or a mixed kit setup, we can map the areas for you and recommend the right split. That is usually faster than forcing one kit type across the whole site.

Get a Quote

UK supply, real support

  • UK stock
  • Matched refills for both types
  • Zone-based kit guidance
  • Colour-coded kit signage
  • No minimum order

Not sure which kit type your site needs?

Tell us about your site and the substances you handle. We will recommend the right combination of kit types and placements.

Kit type FAQs

Common questions

Can't find it?

Our team will help you scope the right kit for your site.

Contact us
Which kit should I buy first?
If the main risk is outdoors or around drains, start with oil-only. If the main risk is indoor maintenance with mixed fluids, start with universal.
Can universal replace oil-only?
Only if the spill point is dry and water is not part of the problem. On wet ground or near drains, universal loses its advantage because it absorbs water as well as oil.
Can oil-only replace universal?
Not well. Oil-only is the specialist choice for hydrocarbons, but it is the wrong tool for coolants, water-based fluids, and most day-to-day maintenance spills.
Do I need both?
Many sites do. A common setup is oil-only outside and universal inside, so each area gets the kit that actually matches the risk.
Are refills interchangeable?
No. Keep white oil-only refills with white kits and grey universal refills with grey kits so the response behaviour stays predictable.