White vs Colored Toilet: Which Holds Its Value?
ComparisonsA data-driven look at resale impact, long-term availability, and which color choice makes more sense for your bathroom and your budget.
Read the guideAn honest, specification-driven comparison of integrated smart toilets and bidet toilet seats, based on wash performance, flush power, MaP scores, EPA WaterSense data, energy use, installation requirements and aggregated owner ratings across top models from TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, Woodbridge and Swiss Madison.
Research updated June 2026.
For most bathrooms, a bidet seat added to a proven toilet like the TOTO Drake II delivers near-identical wash comfort at roughly half the cost of a full smart toilet, while preserving the Drake II's 1,000 gram MaP-certified flush performance. Choose a full smart toilet only when you want a fully integrated look, a skirted bowl or a heated seat that matches the unit's warranty.
Smart toilets and bidet seats both deliver warm-water cleansing, heated seats and remote-control operation, but they are very different products at very different price points. A smart toilet is a single integrated unit that combines the bowl, tank or tankless flush system and the bidet electronics into one piece. A bidet seat is a replacement seat that installs on any standard toilet bowl and adds wash, dry and heat functions to existing plumbing.
The decision between them comes down to three things: your budget, how much you value an integrated look over flexibility, and how important raw flush power is to you. Both options now appear frequently across the best flushing toilets in the market, but they serve different priorities. This guide breaks down both categories using published specifications, MaP flush-test scores, energy and water data, and aggregated owner input so you can make a clear, confident choice.
All specifications are sourced from manufacturer data sheets, MaP Testing Program databases, EPA WaterSense listings and major retailer verified owner ratings. No personal in-home testing was conducted. Where a spec is manufacturer-claimed rather than MaP-verified, this is noted. Flush performance comparisons rely on MaP gram scores where available as the most objective, standardized measure of clog-clearing ability.
Representative models from each category. MaP gram score reflects maximum waste cleared per flush. Higher is better for clog resistance. The tinted row marks the stronger overall value proposition.
| Model | Type | MaP Score | GPF | Wash | WaterSense | Rating | Check Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TOTO Neorest NX1 | Smart Toilet | 1,000 g | 1.0 / 0.8 | Yes | Yes | 4.8 | Check price |
| Kohler Veil | Smart Toilet | 800 g | 1.28 / 0.8 | Yes | Yes | 4.5 | Check price |
| Woodbridge B-0750 | Smart Toilet | 600 g* | 1.28 / 0.9 | Yes | No | 4.4 | Check price |
| TOTO Drake II + Washlet S7 | Toilet + Bidet Seat | 1,000 g | 1.28 | Yes | Yes | 4.8 | Check price |
| TOTO Washlet C5 | Bidet Seat Only | Depends on toilet | Depends on toilet | Yes | N/A | 4.7 | Check price |
| Kohler Puretide | Bidet Seat Only | Depends on toilet | Depends on toilet | Yes | N/A | 4.5 | Check price |
| American Standard SpaLet | Bidet Seat Only | Depends on toilet | Depends on toilet | Yes | N/A | 4.5 | Check price |
* Woodbridge B-0750 MaP score is manufacturer-claimed, not independently verified by MaP Testing. All other MaP scores are from the MaP Testing database.
Smart toilets are one-piece or skirted units with the bidet electronics built into the rear of the seat housing. The flush mechanism, rim design and seat controls are all engineered together, so there is no aftermarket seat bolted onto a separate bowl. TOTO's Neorest line and Kohler's Veil are the clearest examples in North America: both use tankless or concealed-tank designs with dual-flush or ultra-high-efficiency flushing, and both include warm air drying, oscillating wash, adjustable pressure and seat temperature, and automatic lid open and close.
The Woodbridge B-0750 is a more accessible smart toilet that uses a visible tank and a remote-controlled bidet seat integrated at the factory. It offers auto-flush, heated seat, warm wash and dryer at a substantially lower entry point than TOTO or Kohler's flagship smart units. Flush performance on the Woodbridge is solid for daily household use, though the unit does not appear on the MaP Testing database with an independently verified gram score, which matters if clog resistance is a priority for heavy users.
Swiss Madison has also entered the smart toilet space with integrated models targeting the design-forward buyer who wants a wall-style skirted look without the Neorest price point. These units trade some flush verification for visual appeal, and owners consistently rate installation as straightforward for experienced DIYers but potentially tricky for standard plumbing setups due to the electrical requirements.
Bidet seats separate the wash function from the flush system, which is both their main advantage and their main limitation. The advantage is that you choose the toilet bowl and the bidet seat independently, so you can pair a proven high-performer like the TOTO Drake II, which carries a certified 1,000 gram MaP score at 1.28 gallons per flush, with TOTO's own Washlet C5 or S7 seat to get elite flushing and wash comfort without the integrated-unit price.
The TOTO Washlet line is the most thoroughly tested bidet seat family on the North American market. The C5 uses a premist function that wets the bowl surface before use to reduce waste adhesion, a warm wand wash with adjustable pressure and position, a warm air dryer and an auto-close lid. The S7 adds a more powerful dryer, an auto-cleaning wand function and TOTO's ewater+ electrolyzed water misting to reduce bacteria. Both seats are designed specifically to pair with TOTO bowls, with a precise gap profile and matched ADA-compliant seat height.
Kohler's Puretide and Novita bidet seats offer a value entry into the bidet seat category and are compatible with most Kohler elongated bowls as well as standard ANSI-dimension bowls from American Standard, Gerber and others. American Standard's own SpaLet seat adds self-cleaning nozzles, three wash modes and a slow-close seat. For buyers pairing with an American Standard Champion 4 or Cadet 3 bowl, the SpaLet delivers a well-matched aesthetic, and the Champion 4's 1,000 gram MaP score means the combined setup rivals the wash and flush performance of a smart toilet at considerably lower total cost. A detailed look at those two bowls is in the American Standard Champion 4 vs Cadet 3 comparison.
This is the critical technical point that most buyer comparisons miss. When someone asks "which is better for flushing, a smart toilet or a bidet seat," the answer depends entirely on which toilet bowl the bidet seat is installed on. The bidet seat itself does not affect flush performance at all. If you mount a Washlet C5 on a TOTO Drake II, you have a 1,000 gram MaP-certified flush. If you mount it on a basic builder-grade toilet with a 500 gram MaP score, you have that same 500 gram flush with a better seat on top.
Smart toilets do not guarantee superior flush performance by virtue of being integrated. The TOTO Neorest NX1 uses an eMax siphon jet flush with EPA WaterSense certification and a MaP-tested score at the top of the scale for a high-efficiency unit. But the Woodbridge B-0750, which competes in a lower price segment, carries no independently verified MaP score, making it impossible to compare directly to the Drake II on a standardized basis.
For buyers who prioritize clog resistance above all else, the safer path is to choose a MaP-verified toilet bowl first, then add a bidet seat. The best flushing toilets guide lists the top MaP-certified models by score. The TOTO Drake vs UltraMax II comparison also shows how two of TOTO's most popular MaP-certified bowls stack up before adding a bidet seat to either.
The smartest budget move in this category is buying a TOTO Drake II or American Standard Champion 4 and a Washlet C5 or SpaLet seat separately. The combined MaP performance will exceed what most integrated smart toilets under their equivalent budget deliver, and both components carry their own manufacturer warranties rather than a single integrated unit warranty that can be harder to service.
Cost is where the bidet seat argument becomes most compelling for most buyers. A TOTO Washlet C5 on a Drake II gives you MaP-verified elite flushing, heated seat, warm wash, air dryer and premist for a total spend that sits well below the equivalent integrated smart toilet offering those same functions. The gap widens further when you compare the Kohler Cimarron paired with a Puretide seat against the Kohler Veil smart toilet, where the Veil commands a significant premium for the integrated look and the tankless design.
There are legitimate cases where the higher cost of a smart toilet is justified. Skirted bowl designs available only in smart toilet configurations provide a seamless visual that a bidet seat cannot replicate on a traditional two-piece or even most one-piece bowls. Tankless smart toilets also eliminate the tank entirely, which matters in tight bathrooms where a tank depth of nine to thirteen inches eats into usable space. And for buyers who strongly dislike the visible profile of a seat-mounted bidet unit, the integrated look is simply worth the premium.
Owners consistently report that bidet seats are simpler to service when components fail. A leaking bidet seat can be replaced or returned without touching the toilet bowl. A failed electronic component in a smart toilet often requires a service call, and parts for imported smart toilets from brands without deep North American dealer networks can take weeks to source.
Installation effort is a major practical consideration that gets undersold in product comparisons. Nearly every standard bathroom already has a working toilet. Adding a bidet seat means the toilet stays in place; only the seat changes. The T-valve that splits the water supply between the tank fill valve and the seat's internal heater is a standard plumbing fitting that requires no soldering or special tools. The electrical requirement is the one real constraint: you need a GFCI outlet within a few feet of the toilet, which many older bathrooms lack. Adding one is a $150-$300 electrician job but is typically a one-time cost.
Replacing the entire toilet with a smart toilet is a different scale of project. The old toilet must be drained, unbolted, removed and disposed of, the floor flange and wax ring must be checked and replaced, the new toilet must be set and leveled, and the water supply reconnected. Tankless smart toilets additionally require the electrical supply to handle the unit's instantaneous water-heating draw, which can be 1,000 to 1,400 watts continuously. Most licensed plumbers charge two to four hours of labor for a toilet replacement, and that rate applies regardless of whether the new toilet is a basic gravity-flush unit or a smart toilet.
For comparable brands and features, the TOTO vs Kohler toilet comparison covers the installation profiles and service networks of both companies in more depth, which is useful if you are deciding between those brands for either an integrated unit or a bowl to carry a bidet seat.
Choose a smart toilet if:
Choose a bidet seat if:
Buyers replacing a toilet for the first time often assume they need a smart toilet to get bidet comfort. That is rarely true. The TOTO Drake II is the most recommended toilet on any flush-focused review platform for a reason: its 1,000 gram MaP score at 1.28 gallons is difficult to beat, and adding a Washlet C5 delivers warm wash and air dry at a fraction of the cost of any integrated smart toilet with equivalent flush verification. Save the smart toilet premium for a bathroom gut renovation where you are starting from bare floor.
Always check whether the toilet (or the toilet in a smart toilet bundle) has an independently verified MaP score from the MaP Testing Program at map-testing.com. A score of 800 grams or above is considered strong for household use. A score of 1,000 grams is elite and corresponds to the best clog-resistant models. Smart toilets at lower price points frequently omit this data, which means you cannot compare them to a MaP-certified bowl on objective terms. TOTO's Neorest and Kohler's Veil both carry strong MaP-backed specifications. Entry-level smart toilets from Woodbridge and Swiss Madison often rely on manufacturer-reported claims rather than third-party test verification.
EPA WaterSense certified toilets use 1.28 gallons per flush or less, representing at least a 20 percent reduction over the federal maximum of 1.6 gallons. Both TOTO and Kohler maintain extensive WaterSense-certified lineups. Woodbridge's T-0001 and T-0019 models are WaterSense listed. The Gerber Viper and Avalanche carry WaterSense ratings at 1.28 gallons as well. When evaluating a smart toilet, confirm the flush volume on the full-flush cycle, as some mid-tier integrated units claim efficiency on the half-flush while the full flush exceeds 1.6 gallons.
Bidet seats list compatible bowl shapes (round vs elongated) and often list specific toilet models. TOTO Washlet seats are engineered for TOTO bowls, with precise gap dimensions and matching seat heights. They are functionally compatible with standard elongated bowls from other brands but may show a slight overhang or gap profile variation on non-TOTO bowls. Kohler bidet seats fit most Kohler elongated bowls with no modification. American Standard's SpaLet is designed to fit standard ANSI elongated bowls broadly. Confirm the bowl shape and overall length before ordering any bidet seat.
All electric bidet seats and smart toilets require a GFCI-protected 120V outlet within reach of the toilet. Non-electric bidet seats (cold-water-only, manual pressure models) have no electrical requirement and are the simplest possible upgrade, though they do not offer heated water or dryer functions. If your bathroom lacks a nearby outlet, factor the electrician cost into the comparison between a bidet seat and a smart toilet, since both need the same outlet.
Most toilets are built for a 12-inch rough-in, the distance from the wall to the center of the floor drain. If your bathroom has a 10-inch or 14-inch rough-in, many smart toilet models are not available in those dimensions, while standard bowls from American Standard, Kohler, TOTO and Gerber all offer dedicated 10-inch and 14-inch rough-in models. Adding a bidet seat to a correctly sized bowl for a non-standard rough-in is straightforward. Replacing the toilet with a smart toilet in a non-standard rough-in bathroom requires careful verification that the smart unit is offered in your dimension.
Both smart toilets and premium bidet seats now include self-cleaning wands that rinse with clean water before and after use. TOTO's ewater+ technology in the Washlet S7 and in Neorest units applies electrolyzed water to the wand and bowl surface to reduce bacteria. Kohler's self-cleaning nozzle uses a UV light in some Novita models. American Standard's SpaLet uses a stainless steel nozzle that self-rinses at each use. These features matter most for households with mobility limitations or seniors who want hygienic function with minimal manual cleaning.
The single most overlooked factor in this comparison is serviceability. TOTO and Kohler both have North American parts networks and local authorized service dealers. Some smart toilet brands sold primarily through online retailers have limited repair infrastructure, and a unit failure can mean waiting weeks for replacement parts or coordinating international warranty service. Before purchasing any integrated smart toilet, confirm the brand's service and parts availability in your region.
A smart toilet is a single integrated unit where the bidet electronics, seat and flush system are built together at the factory. A bidet seat is an aftermarket replacement seat that attaches to any standard toilet bowl to add wash, heat and dry functions without replacing the entire toilet.
No. A bidet seat connects to the water supply for wash functions and plugs into an electrical outlet for heating and controls, but it has no mechanical connection to the flush valve, trapway or siphon jet. Flush performance remains entirely determined by the toilet bowl and tank you install the seat on.
TOTO's Washlet series (C2, C5, S7) is the most consistently recommended line based on wash precision, reliability and aggregated owner ratings. Kohler's Novita and Puretide seats perform well on Kohler bowls. American Standard's SpaLet is a strong option for American Standard bowls and broad standard-bowl compatibility.
Yes, in most cases. A standard electric bidet seat requires removing the existing seat, attaching a mounting bracket to the bowl's existing bolt holes, connecting a T-valve to the water supply line and plugging into a nearby GFCI outlet. The entire process typically takes 20 to 30 minutes and requires only basic hand tools.
Not necessarily. Premium smart toilets from TOTO and Kohler use dual-flush technology at 1.0 gallons on the half flush and 1.28 gallons on the full flush, which meets EPA WaterSense standards. The bidet wash function uses a very small amount of water, typically under 0.15 gallons per wash cycle, regardless of whether it is on a smart toilet or a bidet seat.
A tankless smart toilet can reduce depth from wall to front of tank by 8 to 12 inches compared to a standard gravity-flush toilet, which is meaningful in tight bathrooms. If bathroom space is the primary motivation, a compact one-piece toilet with a bidet seat may achieve similar visual compactness at lower cost, depending on the specific dimensions.
A MaP score of 800 grams or above is widely considered strong for household use under normal conditions. A score of 1,000 grams is the highest tier tested by the MaP Testing Program and indicates the best clog resistance available. Toilets scoring below 500 grams are more prone to requiring multiple flushes for heavy use.
EPA WaterSense is a voluntary certification for toilets using 1.28 gallons per flush or less, with independent laboratory verification of both efficiency and flush performance minimums. It matters because some mid-range smart toilets claim water efficiency without WaterSense certification, making it harder to verify those claims. TOTO and Kohler maintain large WaterSense-certified product libraries across both smart toilets and standard bowls.
Yes, most bidet seat manufacturers offer both round and elongated versions. However, heated-seat bidet seats in the round size are less common than elongated versions, and wash position optimization is generally better on elongated bowls. Confirm the seat's compatibility list includes your specific bowl model or shape before purchasing.
Replacing a toilet with a smart toilet typically requires a licensed plumber for water connection, wax ring setting and potentially electrical work for the GFCI outlet. A confident DIYer with plumbing experience can handle the physical toilet swap, but most manufacturers recommend professional installation for smart toilets to avoid voiding the warranty.
The Neorest provides a fully integrated skirted look, tankless ultra-high-efficiency flushing and UV/ewater+ self-cleaning. The Drake II plus Washlet combination delivers the same 1,000 gram MaP flush performance and similar wash quality at significantly lower total cost, with the bowl and seat covered by separate warranties. For most buyers, the Drake II plus Washlet is the rational choice unless visual integration is a top priority.
Either option works well when the toilet meets ADA or comfort-height specifications, meaning a rim height of 17 to 19 inches. Bidet seats add hygiene independence for users who have difficulty with manual cleaning, and both TOTO Washlets and Kohler Novita seats include slow-close lids and remote controls that minimize need to reach behind the seat. TOTO's Neorest also includes an auto-open lid and auto-flush, which further reduces physical contact requirements.
TOTO smart toilets and Neorest units carry a one-year warranty on electronics and the TOTO standard limited warranty on the vitreous china. TOTO Washlet seats carry a one-year electronic warranty. Kohler provides a one-year warranty on bidet seat electronics. Woodbridge B-0750 smart toilets come with a one-year parts warranty and limited lifetime on the porcelain. Bidet seats on traditional bowls benefit from independent warranties: if the seat fails, the bowl is unaffected, and vice versa.
The Woodbridge B-0750 is one of the most accessible entry points into the smart toilet category and earns consistently positive owner ratings for ease of use, seat comfort and remote functionality. Its flush performance has not been independently verified by MaP Testing, which limits objective comparison to top-tier bowls. It suits buyers who prioritize integrated aesthetics and basic smart functions over verifiable heavy-duty flush performance.
Washlet seats are designed to fit TOTO elongated bowls for the best profile match, but they are physically compatible with most standard-dimension elongated bowls from other manufacturers. The seat may have a slightly different overhang or gap appearance on non-TOTO bowls. Wash nozzle positioning works correctly on most bowls regardless of brand. TOTO does not officially support Washlet installation on competitor bowls, which can complicate warranty claims if the seat is installed on a non-TOTO toilet.
Published studies from manufacturers and independent hygiene researchers consistently show that bidet seat users reduce toilet paper consumption by 70 to 90 percent. The exact savings depend on usage patterns. At average U.S. household toilet paper spending, most bidet seat payback periods are estimated at under two years even for electric heated-seat models, with ongoing savings beyond that point.
The C5 includes premist, adjustable warm wash, heated seat, warm air dryer and an auto-close lid. The S7 adds ewater+ electrolyzed water misting for both the wand and bowl, an upgraded warm air dryer with higher airflow, and a more powerful oscillating wash mode. Both are compatible with the same range of TOTO elongated bowls. The S7 is the stronger choice for buyers who want self-cleaning automation; the C5 is the value pick for essential warm-water bidet comfort.
The Veil is a tankless integrated smart toilet with a 0.8 / 1.28 gallon dual flush, skirted bowl and built-in bidet seat electronics under one unified design. Pairing a Kohler Cimarron with a Novita bidet seat achieves similar wash functions at a lower total cost, with the Cimarron's independently verified 1,000 gram MaP score providing stronger clog-resistance documentation than Veil's published specifications. The Veil's advantage is its skirted, seamless profile and the elimination of the tank. The Cimarron plus seat wins on verified flush performance and serviceability.
Most smart toilets retain basic flush function during a power outage if they use a gravity-fed tank system, since the tank fills and flushes mechanically. Tankless smart toilets that use electric pumps for flushing may not flush without power. Bidet functions, including heated seat, wash and dryer, require power on all units. Some TOTO Neorest models include a battery backup for the lid and basic flush trigger.
For most buyers, a high-MaP toilet bowl paired with a quality bidet seat is the stronger overall choice. The combination delivers verified flush performance, full wash and dry comfort, independent component warranties and straightforward installation at roughly half the total cost of an equivalent integrated smart toilet. The TOTO Drake II plus Washlet S7 is the standout pairing, combining a certified 1,000 gram MaP flush at 1.28 gallons with TOTO's most refined wash and ewater+ self-cleaning. A full smart toilet earns its premium when you need a skirted, tankless design and a fully unified look for a from-scratch bathroom renovation. Outside that scenario, the bowl-plus-seat approach wins on performance, cost and flexibility. For a cross-brand view of the strongest flushing bowls to pair with any bidet seat, the best flushing toilets guide is the best starting point. Those comparing TOTO and Kohler specifically will also find the TOTO vs Kohler brand comparison and the Kohler vs American Standard comparison useful for narrowing the bowl choice.
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