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Read the guideWe ranked the strongest-flushing comfort height toilets of 2026, the taller chair-height models that sit roughly 16 to 19 inches off the floor, using independent MaP flush-test scores, EPA WaterSense ratings, trapway design and aggregated owner reviews, so you can pair a knee-friendly seat height with a flush that clears in one pass.
Research updated June 2026.
The best flushing comfort height toilet of 2026 is the TOTO Drake II. Its elongated bowl sits at a chair-height 17.25 inches yet still earns a perfect 1000 g MaP flush at just 1.28 GPF, pairing the dual-nozzle Tornado rinse with a glazed CeFiONtect trapway. For the same height at a lower price, the American Standard Cadet 3 Right Height also clears 1000 g.
Comfort height, which Kohler markets as Comfort Height and American Standard calls Right Height, places the seat roughly 16 to 19 inches off the floor instead of the 14 to 15 inches of a standard bowl. That extra few inches matters: it is easier on the knees, hips and lower back, it follows the same seat range as an accessible ADA chair, and it is the height most adults and taller users now prefer. The catch is that height alone tells you nothing about flush power, and a tall bowl that needs two pulls is no bargain. This guide solves both problems at once by ranking comfort height toilets on the one number that proves flushing strength: the independent MaP score.
The MaP (Maximum Performance) test loads a real toilet with weighted media and records how many grams of solid waste it clears in a single flush, then publishes the result independently of the manufacturer. That grams figure is the most honest way to compare flushing strength across brands, and it is the backbone of this ranking. Layered on top are EPA WaterSense certification (proof a toilet flushes well at 1.28 gallons or less), trapway width and glaze, and the pattern of aggregated owner reviews across major retailers. This guide is part of our wider coverage of the best flushing toilets, narrowed here to chair-height models. Brands covered include TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, Woodbridge, Swiss Madison and Gerber.
Ten chair-height models ranked by flush power and value. MaP is the single-flush waste-clearing score in grams (higher is stronger). GPF is gallons per flush (lower saves water). Height is the seat height with the lid down. Every model except the Champion 4 is WaterSense rated at 1.28 GPF or lower.
| Toilet | Best For | MaP | GPF | Seat Height | Rating | Check Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TOTO Drake II | Best overall | 1000 g | 1.28 | 17.25 in | 4.7 | Check price |
| American Standard Cadet 3 | Best value | 1000 g | 1.28 | 16.5 in | 4.6 | Check price |
| Kohler Cimarron | Best canister flush | 1000 g | 1.28 | 16.5 in | 4.6 | Check price |
| American Standard Champion 4 | Best for bulk waste | 1000 g | 1.6 | 16.5 in | 4.5 | Check price |
| TOTO UltraMax II | Best one-piece | 800 g | 1.28 | 17.25 in | 4.7 | Check price |
| Kohler Highline | Best Kohler value | 800 g | 1.28 | 16.5 in | 4.5 | Check price |
| Kohler Santa Rosa | Best compact one-piece | 1000 g | 1.28 | 16.5 in | 4.5 | Check price |
| Woodbridge T-0001 | Best modern design | 800 g | 1.28 | 17.25 in | 4.5 | Check price |
| Gerber Viper | Best budget | 1000 g | 1.28 | 16.5 in | 4.4 | Check price |
| Swiss Madison St. Tropez | Best dual-flush | 600 g | 0.8/1.28 | 16 in | 4.4 | Check price |
Each pick sits in the 16 to 19 inch chair-height range and is matched to the buyer it suits best, with the flush data, water rating and honest trade-offs that decide whether it earns a place in your bathroom.

The Drake II is the comfort height flush to beat in 2026 because its elongated bowl sits at a tall 17.25 inches yet still earns a perfect 1000 g MaP score at just 1.28 gallons per flush.
At 17.25 inches the Drake II sits at the upper end of the comfort height range, which is one of the tallest seats here and the easiest to stand up from. That height does nothing to soften the flush. The Tornado system feeds water through dual nozzles that spin it around the bowl rather than dumping it from a single rim hole, clearing waste in one pass and rinsing the bowl evenly, which is how a 1.28 GPF toilet reaches the top 1000 g MaP tier.
The trapway is sealed with TOTO's CeFiONtect ceramic glaze, an ultra-smooth surface that resists the staining and buildup that turn older toilets into a cleaning chore. Owners across major retailers consistently report years of clog-free use at this seat height, and because the Drake line is so common, any plumber can service it. The seat is the one catch, as it ships separately on most listings, so budget for a soft-close lid.
If you want one comfort height toilet you never have to think about again, the Drake II is the default answer. It is the rare model that combines the tallest chair-height seat here, a perfect MaP score and a fully glazed trapway, which is why it appears in more plumbers' trucks than almost anything else. Order the elongated version and add a soft-close seat.

The Cadet 3 Right Height delivers the same 1000 g MaP flush as comfort height toilets that cost noticeably more, which is exactly why plumbers reach for it when a household needs a tall seat and dependable power.
Right Height is American Standard's name for comfort height, putting the seat at 16.5 inches, an easy step up from a standard bowl that still suits most adults. The oversized 3-inch flush valve is the power secret. It empties the tank faster than a standard 2-inch valve, so water hits the bowl with more force and pushes heavy loads through in one flush, reaching the top 1000 g MaP tier without using extra water.
American Standard coats the bowl with its EverClean antimicrobial glaze, which slows the stain and odor-causing organisms that build up between cleanings. The fully glazed 2-1/8-inch trapway shrugs off the larger loads that come with kids and frequent guests, making it a natural fit for a toilet that handles maximum bulk flushing while keeping a knee-friendly seat.
The Cadet 3 is the value benchmark every other comfort height flush gets measured against. You get the same 1000 g flush as the Drake II for less money, plus a longer warranty, at a true chair height. The trade-off is plainer styling and a slightly less even bowl rinse, but for a busy or accessible household it is the smartest dollar-for-dollar tall toilet of 2026.

The Cimarron Comfort Height earns the top 1000 g MaP flush using Kohler's AquaPiston canister valve, which opens a wide 360-degree path so the whole tank dumps at once for a fast, complete clear from a 16.5 inch seat.
Kohler labels this layout Comfort Height, seating it at 16.5 inches. Where most toilets use a flapper that lifts from one side, the AquaPiston canister opens from the center and releases water around the full 360 degrees of the valve. That feeds the rim evenly, so the Cimarron rinses the bowl cleanly and reaches the same 1000 g MaP ceiling as the Drake II and Cadet 3.
The canister also has fewer wear points than a flapper, so it tends to hold a seal longer before it needs service. Owners report a strong, quiet flush and easy parts availability at any home center. It is the comfort height toilet to choose if you prefer the Kohler ecosystem but still want a flush at the top of the MaP chart.
The Cimarron is the answer for buyers loyal to Kohler who refuse to give up flush power at chair height. The canister valve is genuinely better engineering than a standard flapper, giving an even rinse and a longer seal life. It matches the best 1.28 GPF flushes on the market, so the choice between it and the Drake II usually comes down to styling, seat height preference and which brand your local plumber stocks.

The Champion 4 is the brute-force comfort height pick, built around a 4-inch flush valve and a 2-3/8-inch fully glazed trapway that swallow loads other tall toilets choke on, all from a 16.5 inch Right Height seat.
The trapway is the widest on this list, large enough to pass a golf ball, and the oversized 4-inch valve dumps the full 1.6 gallons in a fast surge. That combination is why the Champion 4 is the model people buy after years of fighting a weak toilet, and getting it in a comfort height bowl means you stop the clogs without giving up the taller seat. It is built to never clog rather than to save water.
The trade-off is right there in the spec sheet: at 1.6 GPF it uses more water than the 1.28 GPF picks, so it is not WaterSense rated. If your priority is ending clogs in a hard-working accessible bathroom, that is a fair exchange, and the 10-year warranty signals how confident American Standard is in the parts. For pure bulk-clearing it is one of the best clog-free picks you can install.
The Champion 4 is the comfort height toilet to buy when nothing else has stopped the clogs. Its 4-inch valve and wide glazed trapway are overkill for a powder room but exactly right for a heavily used main or accessible bathroom, or a home with older drain lines. Just go in knowing it trades the 1.28 GPF water savings for raw flushing muscle, and that it flushes louder than the gravity picks.

The UltraMax II is the comfort height one-piece to buy, pairing the Drake family's Tornado rinse with a seamless molded body at a tall 17.25 inch universal height that removes the seam and gasket where grime collects.
TOTO markets the UltraMax II as a Universal Height bowl, which lands at 17.25 inches, matching the Drake II for the tallest comfort seat in this guide. The Tornado flush carries over from the Drake line, swirling water through dual nozzles for an even rinse and a strong 800 g MaP clear. That is a notch below the 1000 g leaders but still well above the level where double-flushing happens, so for a typical home it flushes more than hard enough.
The real win is the one-piece body. With no tank-to-bowl seam there is no gasket to leak and no crevice to trap grime, so it is the fastest toilet here to keep clean, a point owners raise again and again. The CeFiONtect glaze on the bowl reinforces that easy-clean reputation. The trade-off is weight, since a one-piece is awkward to set at this height without a second person.
The UltraMax II is the pick when easy cleaning matters as much as flush power and you still want a tall seat. You give up the last 200 g of MaP versus the Drake II, but you gain a seamless body that is far simpler to wipe down and has no gasket to fail, all at a true 17.25 inch comfort height. For a modern, low-maintenance bathroom it is the one-piece I point people to first.

The Highline Comfort Height is Kohler's value workhorse, a no-frills two-piece that uses the Class Five flush system to push a solid 800 g MaP clear at 1.28 GPF from a 16.5 inch seat.
The Class Five system uses a larger flush valve and an angled rim feed to move more water faster, giving the Highline a flush stronger than its modest price suggests. The 800 g MaP score clears normal household waste without complaint, and the Comfort Height version puts the seat at a knee-friendly 16.5 inches, a design refined over many model years.
What makes the Highline a smart buy is ubiquity. It is stocked at every home center, parts are everywhere, and the simple two-piece design installs in minutes. It will not win a flush contest against the 1000 g leaders, but as a reliable, affordable comfort height replacement that just works, it is one of the easiest recommendations to make.
The Highline is the comfort height toilet I suggest when someone wants a trustworthy brand at the lowest sensible price. It is not exciting, and it sits below the 1000 g leaders on flush power, but the Class Five system is genuinely strong for the money and parts are everywhere. Be sure to order the Comfort Height variant, since the Highline also sells in a standard height, and for a rental or a second bathroom it is hard to go wrong.

The Santa Rosa is the comfort height one-piece for smaller rooms, combining a compact elongated bowl with the AquaPiston canister to reach a top 1000 g MaP flush at a 16.5 inch seat.
The Santa Rosa squeezes a compact elongated bowl into a footprint close to a round-front toilet, so it gives you the comfort of an elongated, chair-height seat without the usual length. The same AquaPiston canister found in the Cimarron drives it, opening a full 360-degree path so the tank empties fast and the bowl clears a top 1000 g MaP load in one flush.
Because it is a one-piece, there is no tank-to-bowl gasket to leak and no seam to trap grime, so it stays easy to clean. Owners highlight the strong, even rinse and the space savings. The Comfort Height seat sits at 16.5 inches, and as with other Kohler models you simply confirm the Comfort Height listing rather than the standard one.
The Santa Rosa is the pick when you want comfort height, a 1000 g flush and a one-piece body, but the bathroom is too tight for a full-length bowl. It is the rare compact one-piece that does not give up flush power, thanks to the canister valve. Just confirm the Comfort Height version, and if you want the tallest possible seat look at the Drake II or UltraMax II instead.

The Woodbridge T-0001 wraps a strong 800 g dual-flush siphon in a sleek skirted one-piece body at a tall 17.25 inch seat, hiding the trapway for a clean, modern look.
The dual-flush siphon swirls water around the bowl much like a TOTO Tornado flush, clearing an 800 g MaP load and rinsing evenly, while a dual button adds a light rinse for liquid waste. The skirted, fully concealed trapway is the headline feature: there are no nooks behind the bowl to collect dust, so it wipes clean in seconds, and the 17.25 inch seat puts it among the tallest comfort height options here.
Woodbridge includes a soft-close seat in the box, which adds real value, and backs the toilet with a 5-year warranty. The catch is that it is an online-first brand, so replacement parts come from the manufacturer rather than a local plumber's shelf. For a stylish, accessible bathroom on a sensible budget, it remains one of the best-looking strong-flushing comfort height toilets available.
The T-0001 is the pick for buyers who want the designer skirted look and a tall seat without paying premium-brand prices. The flush is genuinely strong at 800 g, the dual button saves water, and the included soft-close seat sweetens the deal. The one thing to plan for is parts sourcing, since you order from Woodbridge rather than grabbing a flapper at the hardware store. For most homes that is a minor trade for the styling and height.

The Gerber Viper is the budget comfort height champion, a commercial-grade two-piece that quietly reaches the top 1000 g MaP flush at 1.28 GPF from a 16.5 inch seat for one of the lowest prices here.
Gerber built its reputation on commercial plumbing, and the Viper carries that DNA. Its siphon jet bowl and 2-1/8-inch trapway clear a full 1000 g of waste, the same top tier as toilets costing several times more, and the elongated comfort height bowl puts the seat at 16.5 inches. For the money, no other model on this list matches its raw flush-to-price ratio at a tall seat height.
What you give up is finish and styling. The Viper skips premium glaze coatings and the smooth skirted look, so the bowl needs slightly more frequent cleaning and it reads as utilitarian rather than upscale. That makes it the ideal pick for rentals, basements and busy secondary bathrooms where flush power and a comfortable seat matter far more than appearance.
The Viper is the value sleeper of this list. It reaches the same 1000 g flush as the Drake II at a comfort height for a fraction of the cost, which is why landlords and remodelers buy it by the pallet. You sacrifice glaze and looks, not flush power or seat height, so put it where performance and budget matter and save the premium models for the main bath.

The Swiss Madison St. Tropez packs a respectable 600 g dual-flush into a compact, skirted comfort height one-piece, making it the pick when space, water savings and modern looks matter more than a record flush score.
The dual-flush button offers a light 0.8 GPF rinse for liquid waste and a 1.28 GPF full flush, so day-to-day water use drops below every single-flush pick here. The comfort height bowl sits at 16 inches, the lowest of the chair-height range in this guide but still a step up from a standard toilet. The 600 g MaP score is the lowest on this list, which is fine for a low-traffic powder room but means it is not the pick for a busy main bathroom.
Where it shines is fit and finish. The compact skirted body tucks into tight spaces and wipes clean easily, giving a small or modern bathroom an upscale look for a modest price. Treat it as a styling, space and water-saving choice rather than a flush-power choice, and it is a strong fit for the right room. If raw power is the priority instead, see our picks for the strongest flushing toilets of 2026 with the highest MaP scores.
The St. Tropez is the right call for a small or stylish comfort height bathroom that does not see heavy traffic. The dual-flush saves real water and the compact skirted body looks great, but the 600 g flush is the weakest here, so I would not put it in a high-use family bathroom. Match it to a powder room or a guest bath and it earns its place.
Across all 10 picks the pattern is clear: a comfort height seat and a strong flush are not a trade-off, you can have both. The toilets worth buying hit 800 g or higher on MaP at a 16 to 19 inch seat, and the strongest reach the 1000 g ceiling. If you want the single best comfort height flush, the Drake II wins at the tallest 17.25 inch seat. If budget leads, the Cadet 3 and Gerber Viper deliver the same 1000 g flush for less. The Champion 4 is the answer for chronic clogs, the UltraMax II and Santa Rosa are the cleanest one-pieces, and the rest match a specific need like modern styling or dual-flush water savings.
The best flushing comfort height toilet in 2026 is the TOTO Drake II. Its elongated bowl sits at a tall 17.25 inches yet earns a perfect 1000 g MaP score at 1.28 GPF using a dual-nozzle Tornado rinse and a glazed CeFiONtect trapway. The American Standard Cadet 3 Right Height and Gerber Viper match that 1000 g flush at a comfort height seat for less money.
A comfort height toilet places the seat roughly 16 to 19 inches off the floor, compared with about 14 to 15 inches on a standard bowl. Kohler markets it as Comfort Height and American Standard calls it Right Height. The taller seat falls in the same range as an accessible ADA chair, making it easier on the knees, hips and back for older adults and taller users.
A comfort height toilet is easier to sit down on and stand up from for most adults, older users and taller people, which is why it now outsells standard height in many markets. A standard height bowl at around 15 inches can suit shorter users and small children better. Flush power is identical when the specs match, so height is a comfort and accessibility choice, not a performance one.
They overlap but are not identical. ADA-compliant toilets must seat between 17 and 19 inches measured to the top of the seat, while comfort height is a broader marketing range of about 16 to 19 inches. A comfort height toilet at 17 to 19 inches can meet the ADA seat-height requirement, but full ADA compliance also depends on clearances and grab-bar placement.
A MaP score of 800 grams is strong for a typical home and 1000 grams is the highest tier the independent test awards, and the best comfort height toilets reach it. Scores around 600 grams are acceptable for a low-traffic powder room but not ideal for a busy main bathroom. Seat height does not change MaP, so always check the flush score separately from the height.
Six specs decide whether a tall toilet flushes powerfully and fits your bathroom for a decade. Match these and you can shop with confidence.
Comfort height covers roughly 16 to 19 inches measured to the top of the seat. The Drake II and UltraMax II sit at the tall 17.25 inch end, the Cadet 3, Cimarron, Highline, Santa Rosa, Champion 4 and Viper land around 16.5 inches, and the Swiss Madison sits at 16 inches. If accessibility matters, aim for 17 to 19 inches to meet the ADA seat range. Remember that adding a thick seat or a bidet attachment raises the final sitting height by another half inch or so.
Height tells you nothing about power, so the MaP test is the single most useful number for comparing flush strength. It measures how many grams of solid waste a toilet clears in one flush and is run independently of manufacturers. A score of 600 g is workable for light use, 800 g is strong, and 1000 g is the top tier. For a busy household aim for 800 g or higher. The Drake II, Cadet 3, Cimarron, Champion 4, Santa Rosa and Gerber Viper all hit the 1000 g ceiling at a comfort height, which is why they sit near the top of this list.
WaterSense is the EPA program that certifies toilets using 1.28 gallons per flush or less while still passing performance standards. Almost every pick in this guide is WaterSense rated; the lone exception is the 1.6 GPF Champion 4, which trades efficiency for raw clog-clearing muscle. In many states a WaterSense toilet is now required for new installs, and even where it is not, the water savings add up quickly across a year of daily flushes.
Flush power comes from two things: how fast water leaves the tank and how cleanly it passes the trapway. A 3-inch or 4-inch flush valve empties faster than a standard 2-inch valve, hitting the bowl with more force, which is why the Cadet 3, Cimarron and Champion 4 flush so hard. A wider, fully glazed trapway then carries that waste away without snagging. Toilets with glazed trapways like TOTO CeFiONtect and American Standard EverClean resist buildup and clean up faster between uses.
At comfort height the choice still matters. A one-piece like the UltraMax II or Santa Rosa has no tank-to-bowl seam, so there is no gasket to leak and no crevice to trap grime, making it the easiest to wipe clean, though it is heavier to lift onto the bolts. A two-piece like the Drake II, Cadet 3 or Highline is lighter to carry and set at this height, cheaper, and lets you replace just the tank or bowl later. Both flush the same when the specs match.
Elongated bowls are more comfortable for most adults and are standard on nearly every pick here, while the Santa Rosa shows a compact elongated bowl can save space in a tight room. Before buying, measure your rough-in, the distance from the finished wall to the center of the floor bolts. The standard is 12 inches, but 10-inch and 14-inch rough-ins exist and the wrong size will not fit. Also check the clearance in front of the bowl, since a taller comfort height toilet can feel cramped in a very small room.
If you only remember one rule for a comfort height toilet, make it this: confirm the seat height and the MaP score together, then check the rough-in. A bowl in the 16 to 19 inch range with an 800 g or higher MaP score and the correct rough-in will be comfortable, flush well and fit regardless of brand. Once those boxes are checked, choose one-piece versus two-piece and styling on preference. Do not assume a taller bowl flushes weaker, the strongest models on this list are also the tallest.
For most bathrooms the TOTO Drake II is the best flushing comfort height toilet of 2026. Its elongated bowl sits at a tall 17.25 inches and earns a perfect 1000 g MaP flush at 1.28 GPF using a dual-nozzle Tornado rinse and a glazed CeFiONtect trapway. The American Standard Cadet 3 Right Height and Gerber Viper match that 1000 g flush at a comfort height for less.
A comfort height toilet places the seat roughly 16 to 19 inches off the floor, versus about 14 to 15 inches on a standard bowl. Kohler calls it Comfort Height and American Standard calls it Right Height. The taller seat is easier on the knees and back and falls in the same range as an accessible ADA chair.
They overlap but are not identical. ADA-compliant toilets must seat between 17 and 19 inches to the top of the seat, while comfort height is a broader range of about 16 to 19 inches. A comfort height toilet at 17 to 19 inches can meet the ADA seat-height rule, but full ADA compliance also depends on clearances and grab bars.
No. Seat height has nothing to do with flush power, which is set by the flush valve and trapway. The strongest models on this list, the Drake II and UltraMax II, are also the tallest at 17.25 inches and reach 1000 g and 800 g MaP respectively. Always check the MaP score separately from the height.
Aim for at least 800 g for a typical home and 1000 g if your household sees heavy use. The MaP test measures grams of solid waste cleared in one flush, so a higher number means fewer clogs and less double-flushing. Scores near 600 g are fine for a low-traffic powder room only.
For raw bulk-clearing the American Standard Champion 4 flushes hardest, using a 4-inch valve and a 2-3/8-inch trapway at 1.6 GPF from a 16.5 inch seat. Among efficient 1.28 GPF models, the Drake II, Cadet 3, Cimarron, Santa Rosa and Gerber Viper all reach the top 1000 g MaP score at comfort height. The Champion 4 trades water savings for the most muscle.
Yes. The taller 16 to 19 inch seat suits tall adults far better than a standard 15 inch bowl, reducing the deep squat that strains the knees and hips. For the tallest seat in this guide, the TOTO Drake II and UltraMax II both sit at 17.25 inches, and adding a thicker seat raises the final height a little more.
Comfort height is one of the most recommended features for older adults and limited-mobility users because the raised seat reduces how far you bend the knees and hips. For accessibility aim for the 17 to 19 inch end of the range to meet the ADA seat height, and pair it with grab bars. The Drake II, UltraMax II and Woodbridge T-0001 sit at 17.25 inches.
Yes. Modern 1.28 GPF WaterSense toilets use larger flush valves and engineered trapways to move waste with less water. Several comfort height picks here, including the Drake II, Cadet 3, Cimarron and Gerber Viper, reach the top 1000 g MaP score at 1.28 GPF, so you get a tall seat and a strong flush together.
WaterSense is the EPA program that certifies toilets using 1.28 GPF or less while still passing flush performance standards. A WaterSense label guarantees the toilet saves water without sacrificing function, and in many states it is now required for new installs. Every comfort height pick here except the 1.6 GPF Champion 4 is WaterSense rated.
Choose a one-piece like the UltraMax II or Santa Rosa if easy cleaning matters most, since there is no seam or gasket to trap grime or leak later. Choose a two-piece like the Drake II or Cadet 3 if value and serviceability come first, as it is lighter to lift onto the bolts, cheaper, and lets you replace just the tank or bowl. Both flush the same when specs match.
The Gerber Viper is the best budget pick because it reaches the top 1000 g MaP flush at 1.28 GPF from a 16.5 inch comfort height seat for a low price, plus a 5-year warranty. It skips premium glaze and skirted styling, which makes it ideal for rentals, basements and secondary bathrooms rather than showcase main baths.
The Kohler Santa Rosa is the best fit for a tight space, packing a compact elongated bowl and a top 1000 g flush into a one-piece comfort height body close to a round-front footprint. The Swiss Madison St. Tropez is another compact option, adding dual-flush water savings at a lower 600 g flush for low-traffic rooms.
For chronic clogs the American Standard Champion 4 is the strongest comfort height choice, with the widest trapway here and a 4-inch flush valve that passes loads other toilets choke on. Among 1.28 GPF models, the Cadet 3 and Drake II pair a 1000 g flush with a wide glazed trapway. A wide glazed trapway is the key clog-fighting feature.
Yes, slightly. The seat height on a spec sheet usually assumes the standard seat, and a thicker cushioned or bidet seat can raise the final sitting height by half an inch or more. If you are aiming for the 17 to 19 inch ADA range, factor the seat into your measurement so the finished height lands where you want it.
Both reach the top of the MaP chart at comfort height. TOTO leads on trapway glaze and the dual-nozzle Tornado rinse, with the Drake II hitting a perfect 1000 g at a tall 17.25 inch seat. Kohler counters with the AquaPiston canister in the Cimarron and Santa Rosa, which also reach 1000 g. The choice often comes down to local parts availability and seat height preference.
Comfort height suits tall adults, older users, anyone with knee, hip or back issues, and accessible bathrooms, because the raised seat reduces how far you have to lower yourself. It is less ideal for households with small children, who may find a 15 inch standard bowl easier to use. Nearly every pick in this guide is comfort height.
Measure your rough-in, the distance from the finished wall to the center of the floor bolts. The standard is 12 inches, but 10-inch and 14-inch rough-ins exist, so confirm yours before buying. Also check clearance in front of and beside the bowl, since a taller comfort height toilet can feel cramped in a very small room.
TOTO, Kohler and American Standard have the strongest long-term reliability records and the widest parts availability, which is why they fill the top of this list. Woodbridge, Swiss Madison and Gerber offer strong value, with Gerber especially trusted as a commercial-grade workhorse. For peace of mind, prioritize brands with universal replacement parts.
The TOTO Drake II is the best flushing comfort height toilet of 2026 for most bathrooms, combining the tallest 17.25 inch chair-height seat here with a perfect 1000 g MaP flush, a dual-nozzle Tornado rinse and a glazed CeFiONtect trapway that stays powerful and clog-free for decades. To save money without losing flush power, the American Standard Cadet 3 Right Height and Gerber Viper also hit 1000 g at comfort height, the Champion 4 is the answer for chronic clogs, the UltraMax II and Santa Rosa are the cleanest one-pieces, and the Swiss Madison St. Tropez fits compact, water-saving baths. Confirm the seat height and MaP score together, match the rough-in to your bathroom, check for WaterSense, and check the current price on Amazon before you order.
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