
Best French Toilets (2026)
ToiletsRefined, softly curved one-piece and skirted silhouettes with a polished, Parisian-elegant profile, paired with verified MaP flush scores rather than a stylist's…
Read the guideA broken toilet flange causes leaks, wobbling, sewer odors, and floor damage. Learn exactly how to diagnose the damage, choose the right fix, and decide when a full replacement is the only safe option.
Research updated June 2026.
A cracked flange collar or broken tab can often be repaired with a repair ring or repair bracket without removing the toilet. A flange that is rotted, collapsed, or sitting more than 1/4 inch below the finished floor almost always requires full replacement to restore a watertight, code-compliant seal.
A toilet flange (also called a closet flange) is the metal or PVC ring secured to the drain pipe in your subfloor. It anchors the toilet with bolts and creates a sealed connection between the toilet's horn and the drain. Without an intact flange, no wax ring or wax-free seal can hold reliably, and sewer gas can enter the home.
The flange sits at the junction of your toilet and your home's drain-waste-vent (DWV) system. It performs three jobs simultaneously: it connects the toilet drain horn to the 3-inch or 4-inch soil pipe in the subfloor; it anchors the toilet to the floor through two closet bolts (also called johnny bolts); and it accepts the wax ring or wax-free gasket that seals the joint against sewer gas and wastewater.
Most residential flanges are made from PVC, ABS plastic, cast iron, or brass. PVC and ABS flanges are common in newer construction and in remodels where the drain stack was replaced. Cast iron flanges are standard in homes built before the 1960s and are often found when bathrooms sit over basements or crawlspaces. Brass flanges appear primarily in luxury or commercial installations.
Flange height is as important as material. The Uniform Plumbing Code requires the top of the flange to sit at or up to 1/4 inch above the finished floor surface. When a flange sits too low -- common after tile or vinyl flooring is installed over an existing floor -- the wax ring cannot compress correctly and a slow, chronic leak develops at the base.
Licensed plumbers consistently report that a majority of toilet base leaks are traced back to a damaged or incorrectly seated flange rather than a failed wax ring. Replacing the wax ring without addressing a broken flange is one of the most common DIY mistakes and virtually guarantees the leak returns within months.
The most reliable signs of a broken flange are a toilet that rocks side to side even after tightening the base bolts, water staining or soft spots on the floor around the base, and persistent sewer odors that do not disappear after cleaning. A foul smell combined with a rocking toilet is nearly diagnostic of a damaged flange.
Before you diagnose the flange, rule out simpler causes. A running toilet, a condensation issue, or a leaking supply line can all cause water near the base without any flange damage. Turn off the water supply, flush the tank empty, and dry the floor completely. If the floor stays dry and the toilet no longer wobbles, your flange may be fine and the problem is elsewhere. If the toilet rocks, or if water reappears at the base only after flushing, proceed to inspect the flange.
To access the flange, turn off the water supply valve behind the toilet. Flush and hold the handle to empty as much water as possible from the tank and bowl. Use a sponge and shop vac to remove any remaining water. Disconnect the supply line and remove the two or four nuts from the floor bolts. Lift the toilet straight up and set it on its side on cardboard or an old towel. Scrape away the wax ring from both the flange and the toilet horn so you have a clear view of the full flange surface.
A flashlight and a flat screwdriver are your best inspection tools. Press the screwdriver gently against the ring in several places -- sound metal will not flex; a corroded or cracked section will deflect noticeably. On plastic flanges, look for whitening around stress points, which appears before visible cracks develop.
Yes, in many cases. If the drain pipe below is intact and the damage is limited to the flange ring or its bolt slots, a repair ring, repair plate, or repair bracket can restore a secure, leak-free connection without replacing the entire flange or disturbing the drain pipe. These repairs are code-accepted in most jurisdictions when installed correctly.
Repair options depend entirely on what is damaged. Here is a breakdown of the most common repair approaches:
| Damage Type | Best Repair Method | DIY Difficulty | Estimated Time | Full Replacement Needed? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| One or both bolt tabs broken | Repair bracket or repair plate | Easy | 30-60 minutes | No |
| Hairline crack in flange ring (PVC) | Full-coverage repair ring (stainless) | Easy | 30-60 minutes | Usually not |
| Flange sitting 1/4 to 1/2 inch low | Flange extender spacer | Easy | 45 minutes | No |
| Flange sitting more than 1/2 inch low | Flange extender stack or replacement | Moderate | 1-2 hours | Often yes |
| Heavy corrosion on cast iron ring | Full replacement | Difficult | 2-4 hours | Yes |
| Flange separated from drain pipe | Full replacement + pipe repair | Advanced | 3-6 hours | Yes |
| Rotted subfloor under flange | Subfloor repair + flange replacement | Advanced | Half to full day | Yes |
A stainless steel or zinc repair ring overlays the existing damaged flange ring and is secured with screws driven into the subfloor. These rings feature elongated bolt slots so you can position the closet bolts in undamaged areas of the original flange or in new positions entirely. Brands such as Sioux Chief and Fernco manufacture repair rings in dimensions sized for both 3-inch and 4-inch flange openings.
Procedure: Clean the old wax from the existing flange surface. Set the repair ring on top of the flange so its bolt slots align with your preferred bolt positions. Use a pencil to mark the screw hole positions through the repair ring onto the subfloor. Drill pilot holes, then secure the repair ring with the included screws. Slide new closet bolts into the slots. Install a new wax ring (or wax-free seal), lower the toilet, press down firmly, and tighten the nuts to hand-tight plus a quarter turn. Do not overtighten.
When only the bolt-mounting tabs are broken away -- a common failure on older cast iron flanges -- a bolt repair bracket slides under the toilet base and clamps around the drainpipe or the remaining flange body to create new anchor points. These brackets are narrow enough to fit under the toilet without lifting the toilet fully off the floor in some cases, though a full removal always produces a cleaner, more reliable result.
A flange extender (also called a closet flange spacer) is a stacking ring that snaps or bolts onto the existing flange to raise it to the correct height relative to the finished floor. Extenders are available in 1/4-inch, 1/2-inch, and 3/4-inch increments and can be stacked. They include new bolt slots and use a longer wax ring or a thick wax-free gasket to bridge the gap. Wax-free offset seals from brands such as Fernco Wax-Free and Fluidmaster are often preferred over stacked wax rings because they compress reliably across a wider height range without requiring perfect flange height.
When a homeowner uses a double-thickness wax ring to compensate for a low flange instead of installing an extender, the fix frequently fails within one to two years because the wax never compresses into a proper seal under normal toilet movement. Extenders are the code-correct solution and cost only a few dollars more.
Full flange replacement is necessary when the drain pipe below has separated from the flange, when cast iron corrosion has compromised the structural integrity of the ring itself, or when the subfloor beneath the flange is rotted and must be repaired. In these situations, repair rings sit on a foundation that cannot hold screws reliably.
Full replacement sounds intimidating but follows a logical sequence regardless of whether your current flange is PVC or cast iron. The key variable is what connects the existing flange to the drain pipe.
PVC flanges are glued to the hub of a PVC drain pipe with solvent cement. To remove a damaged PVC flange, you cut the flange off just above the glue joint using an oscillating tool or hacksaw blade, leaving the pipe stub intact. A repair flange designed for this situation -- sometimes called an inside-fit or push-in flange -- slides inside the cut pipe end and is secured with stainless screws into the subfloor. No solvent cement is required because the rubber gasket on the flange creates the seal with the pipe interior. This is the most DIY-friendly full replacement scenario.
If the pipe stub is long enough and the subfloor is clear, you can also cut further down, clean the pipe end, and glue a new standard closet flange. This produces a factory-grade connection but requires access from below if the drain pipe must be extended.
Cast iron flange replacement is more involved. The flange is typically lead-caulked or oakum-sealed into a cast iron drain hub. Removing it requires a specialty tool (a lead caulk removal tool) or an angle grinder to cut the lead joint. Once the old flange is out, a PVC or ABS flange can be fitted into the cast iron hub using a rubber compression coupling (Fernco or Mission brand) rather than re-caulking with lead. This is the standard modern approach and is accepted by most building codes. If you are not experienced with lead joint removal, hire a licensed plumber for this step specifically.
A toilet that has been leaking at the base for weeks or months may have caused subfloor damage. Press the subfloor near the flange -- if it feels soft, spongy, or visibly discolored, moisture has damaged the wood. A damaged subfloor must be repaired before the new flange is installed. Failure to do so means the new flange screws pull out under toilet movement and the leak returns.
Subfloor repair involves cutting out the damaged section, sistering new joists if the structural framing is wet, and installing a new plywood patch. This can be done from above if access from below is not available. Exterior grade plywood (minimum 3/4 inch) is appropriate for bathroom subfloors. After the repair area is dry and solid, install the new flange and new flooring before reinstalling the toilet.
For a basic flange repair using a repair ring, you need the repair ring itself, new closet bolts, a wax ring or wax-free seal, a wrench, a utility knife, and a putty scraper. A full flange replacement adds a reciprocating or oscillating saw, a new closet flange sized for your pipe, PVC solvent cement (for PVC-to-PVC), and silicone caulk for the toilet base perimeter.
A wax-free toilet seal such as the Fluidmaster 7530P8 or the Fernco Wax Free Toilet Seal offers a meaningful advantage when height is uncertain or the floor is not perfectly level. Unlike wax, these seals can be repositioned if the toilet shifts during installation before the final tightening, reducing the chance of a failed installation on the first attempt.
This procedure covers the most common repair: a cracked flange ring or broken bolt tabs on an otherwise structurally sound flange with intact drain-pipe connection.
A PVC or ABS toilet flange installed correctly in normal conditions can last 30 years or longer. Cast iron flanges in homes with older plumbing systems can last 50 or more years but are subject to corrosion, particularly when the bathroom is in a high-humidity environment or the drain system carries high-sulfur content water. Flange failure is usually caused by overtightening, mechanical impact, or subfloor movement rather than material fatigue alone.
The most common cause of premature PVC flange failure is overtightening the toilet mounting nuts. The closet nut compresses the PVC ring and, when torqued beyond hand-tight plus about a half turn, propagates stress fractures outward from the bolt slot. If a toilet is rocked by someone sitting toward one side consistently, those fractures grow over time until the bolt tab breaks entirely.
Cast iron flanges corrode most quickly when exposed to condensation from an undersized or unvented bathroom, or when the bathroom sits directly over a damp crawlspace without a vapor barrier. A coat of cold-galvanizing spray paint on exposed cast iron plumbing components in a crawlspace can meaningfully extend service life.
Homes that have gone through multiple flooring renovations without raising the flange are at higher risk of seal failure. Each layer of flooring -- ceramic tile over vinyl over the original subfloor -- drops the effective flange height relative to the finish floor surface and puts additional stress on the wax ring.
For a new toilet installation paired with a flange repair or replacement, the brands with the strongest independently verified reputations for flush reliability include the best flushing toilets on the market such as the TOTO Drake II (MaP score: 1,000 grams at 1.28 GPF), the American Standard Champion 4 (MaP score: 1,000 grams at 1.6 GPF), and the Kohler Cimarron (MaP score: 1,000 grams at 1.28 GPF). All three carry EPA WaterSense certification. Installing a high-quality toilet on top of a properly repaired flange ensures you are not returning to the same job in two years.
Related: see our guides on how to replace a wax ring, why a toilet rocks and how to fix it, how to install a toilet from scratch, and why a toilet leaks at the base.
A plumber once described the toilet flange as the foundation of the toilet -- not dramatic, but accurate. Everything above it depends on it being solid. Spend the extra 30 minutes to do a repair ring installation correctly the first time, and you will not think about the flange again for decades. Rush it, and you will be pulling the toilet again within a year.
Technically the toilet may still function, but using it with a broken flange risks worsening the subfloor damage through slow leaks and can expose the household to sewer gas. Repairs should be completed before resuming normal toilet use. At minimum, avoid heavy use and check for moisture at the base after every flush.
A DIY repair ring installation costs approximately $15 to $40 for parts, including the repair ring, new closet bolts, and a new wax ring. A professional plumber will typically charge $150 to $300 for a flange repair, or $250 to $500 or more for a full flange replacement, depending on your region and whether subfloor work is needed.
A repair ring is a flat stainless plate that overlays a cracked or broken flange to provide new bolt anchoring points. A flange extender is a raised ring that increases the height of the flange to bring it closer to or flush with the finished floor surface. Both solve different problems and are sometimes used together when a flange is both cracked and sitting low.
Yes. Wax rings are single-use components. Once a toilet is lifted off the flange, the wax seal is disturbed and cannot reliably re-seal. Always install a new wax ring or wax-free seal when reinstalling a toilet. Budget for a new wax ring whenever you plan to remove the toilet for any reason.
Stacking two wax rings is a workable solution when a flange sits up to about 1/2 inch below the finished floor and a flange extender is not available. However, a properly installed flange extender is the code-correct approach and produces a more reliable seal over the long term. Stacked wax can migrate under toilet movement.
Most residential toilets use a 4-inch closet flange that connects to a 4-inch drain pipe, or a 3-inch flange that connects to a 3-inch pipe. The 4-inch drain is more common in North American residential construction built after 1980. Measure the inside diameter of your drain pipe before purchasing a replacement flange.
Permit requirements vary by jurisdiction. In most areas, replacing a flange on an existing drain line (without relocating the drain) is classified as minor plumbing repair and does not require a permit. Full drain relocation or drain line replacement typically does require a permit and inspection. Check with your local building department if you are unsure.
Press firmly on the subfloor in multiple spots within 12 inches of the toilet base. Undamaged plywood subfloor will feel rigid. Moisture-damaged subfloor feels soft, spongy, or slightly springy under pressure. Discoloration (dark staining), a musty odor, or visible mold in the area are additional indicators that the subfloor has been wet for an extended period.
Yes. This is a common and code-accepted practice. A rubber compression coupling (Fernco or Mission) is used to connect the new PVC or ABS flange to the existing cast iron hub after the old flange is removed. The rubber coupling creates a watertight, structurally sound connection without requiring a lead-caulked joint.
The most common cause is overtightening the toilet mounting nuts during installation, which applies compressive stress that the PVC cannot absorb without fracturing. Settling or shifting of the subfloor can also transfer mechanical stress to the flange collar. Very rarely, manufacturing defects in the PVC material cause cracks to develop independent of installation technique.
Tighten the nuts to hand-tight, then add a quarter to a half turn with a wrench. The toilet should feel completely stable and should not rock when you sit on it. If the toilet rocks after tightening, the problem is likely a damaged flange, an uneven floor, or a compressed wax ring -- not insufficient torque on the nuts.
If the toilet still rocks after a wax ring replacement, the most likely explanation is a broken or inadequately anchored flange. The closet bolts need a solid flange to grip. If the bolt tabs are cracked or the screws securing the flange to the subfloor are loose in soft wood, the bolts will not hold regardless of how tight the nuts are.
Caulking around the toilet base is required by the International Plumbing Code but some local jurisdictions and plumbers omit it at the rear to allow leak detection. Both practices are common. If you do caulk, leave a 2-inch gap at the back of the base so that any future base leak is visible before it causes hidden subfloor damage.
Sioux Chief and Fernco are the most widely used brands among professional plumbers for flange repair hardware. Both produce stainless steel and zinc repair rings in multiple diameters with elongated bolt slots. Their products are stocked at major plumbing supply houses and big-box home improvement retailers.
Yes. The toilet flange and wax ring together form the primary barrier between the drain system and the bathroom air. A broken flange that allows the toilet to lift or shift during use -- even slightly -- breaks the wax seal and allows sewer gas containing hydrogen sulfide to enter the room. A persistent sewer smell in a bathroom with no visible leak is a strong indicator of flange damage.
A flange that sits more than 1/4 inch above the finished floor can prevent the toilet base from sitting flat. In most cases the solution is to use a thinner wax ring (a standard non-extended ring rather than a thick wax ring). If the flange sits very high, a small bead of grout or a custom-cut spacer under the toilet base may be required for the toilet to sit level.
The rough-in is the distance from the finished wall behind the toilet to the center of the drain pipe. Standard rough-in is 12 inches; 10-inch and 14-inch rough-ins also exist. The rough-in affects toilet selection but not the flange repair method. As long as the center of the flange aligns with the original drain center, any compatible repair product will work regardless of rough-in distance.
Wax-free seals from brands such as Fernco and Fluidmaster perform as well as traditional wax rings when installed according to manufacturer specifications. They offer the advantage of being repositionable before final toilet seating and work reliably across a wider range of flange heights. Some plumbers prefer wax for its decades-long track record; others prefer wax-free for convenience in complex installations.
In most cases, yes. Repair rings and push-in replacement flanges are designed to be installed from above without requiring access to the space below. The only scenario that typically requires ceiling access is when the drain pipe below the flange needs to be repaired or extended, such as when the pipe has separated from the flange hub.
A repair ring installation on an accessible flange with no subfloor damage takes 60 to 90 minutes for a homeowner doing it for the first time. A full PVC flange replacement (push-in type) takes 2 to 3 hours. A cast iron flange replacement or any repair that involves subfloor work can extend to a full day and may be better suited to a licensed plumber.
Most toilet flange failures fall into one of two categories: damaged bolt tabs or a cracked ring that still has a sound drain connection, which a $20 repair ring fixes permanently in under an hour; or a corroded, separated, or subfloor-compromised flange that genuinely requires full replacement. Inspect carefully before committing to either path, replace the wax ring or wax-free seal every time the toilet is lifted, and never overtighten the mounting nuts. A correctly repaired flange should outlast the toilet itself.
How we rank & our data sources
We do not run physical lab tests. Rankings are built from published, verifiable data and real owner feedback, never paid placement.
Researched by Derek Whitman · Last updated May 24, 2026 · Our review method

Refined, softly curved one-piece and skirted silhouettes with a polished, Parisian-elegant profile, paired with verified MaP flush scores rather than a stylist's…
Read the guide
Clean, low-profile silhouettes with real MaP-verified flush performance and efficient dual-flush water use, sized for a minimalist Nordic bathroom without sacrificing function.
Read the guide
Classic two-piece toilets with tall tanks and elegant, understated proportions, the quiet country-house look that suits a traditional English bathroom without tipping…
Read the guide