
Best Scandinavian Toilets (2026)
ToiletsClean, 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 guideRemoving a toilet is a manageable DIY task if you have the right tools and follow each step in order. This guide covers everything from shutting off the water supply to lifting the bowl without damaging your floor, so you can swap in a new model or access a drain clog with confidence.
Research updated June 2026.
Shut off the water supply, flush to drain the tank and bowl, disconnect the supply line, unbolt the toilet from the floor flange, and lift straight up. A standard two-piece toilet removal takes 30 to 45 minutes with basic plumbing tools. Stuff the drain with a rag to block sewer gases while the toilet is out.
Toilet removal is one of the most common DIY plumbing tasks homeowners tackle before upgrading to a high-efficiency model. Whether you are replacing an aging 3.5 GPF toilet with an EPA WaterSense-certified 1.28 GPF unit from TOTO, Kohler, or American Standard, or pulling the toilet to access a blocked drain, the preparation steps are the same.
Before touching a single bolt, gather all your supplies. Running back to the hardware store in the middle of the job -- with a sewer-gas-producing open drain in your bathroom -- is not a pleasant experience.
Plumbing contractors consistently note that the majority of DIY toilet removal problems come from corroded closet bolts that cannot be unscrewed. Soaking the bolt area with penetrating oil 15 minutes before you start saves enormous frustration. If the bolts still will not budge, a hacksaw cuts through them in under a minute.
One more note on timing: if you are replacing the toilet rather than just pulling it for access, read the specs on your new model first. Measure your rough-in distance (the gap from the finished wall to the center of the floor drain) before purchasing. Standard rough-in is 12 inches, but older homes may have 10-inch or 14-inch rough-ins. See our guide on how to measure toilet rough-in to confirm yours before you buy.
No, you do not need to shut off the main water supply to remove a toilet. The toilet's individual shut-off valve (located on the wall or floor behind the toilet) is sufficient. Turn this valve clockwise until it stops, then flush the toilet to confirm the tank does not refill. If the shut-off valve is stuck or leaking, only then should you close the main supply valve.
Locate the toilet shut-off valve before you start. In most installations, it is a small oval or round handle on a 3/8-inch supply line coming out of the wall or floor near the base of the toilet tank. Turn it clockwise (righty-tighty) until it is fully closed. If the valve has not been turned in years, it may be stiff. Apply steady pressure rather than forcing it to avoid cracking the valve body.
Once the valve is closed, flush the toilet. You will hear the tank empty and you will see the bowl water level drop. The tank will not refill -- that confirms the shut-off is working. This is the single most important preparatory step. Skipping it and proceeding directly to disconnecting the supply line guarantees a flooded bathroom floor.
Old angle-stop shut-off valves that have not been operated in 10 to 20 years sometimes fail to close completely. If you turn the valve but water continues trickling, close the main house supply valve temporarily, replace the angle-stop, and then proceed with the toilet removal. A new quarter-turn ball valve shut-off costs under $10 and takes 15 minutes to swap.
| Task | Avg. Time (DIY) | Difficulty | Special Tools Needed | Most Common Problem |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Two-piece toilet removal | 30–45 min | Easy | Wrench, bucket | Corroded closet bolts |
| One-piece toilet removal | 30–60 min | Easy–Moderate | Wrench, second person for lifting | Weight (50–120 lbs) |
| Wall-hung toilet removal | 60–90 min | Moderate | Wrench, access to carrier frame | Carrier frame access, wall repair |
| Two-piece toilet installation | 45–90 min | Easy–Moderate | Wrench, wax ring, level | Wax ring seating, rocking |
| One-piece toilet installation | 60–120 min | Moderate | Two-person lift, wax ring | Alignment, weight management |
Times reflect competent first-time DIY installations in normal conditions. Add 30 minutes if closet bolts require cutting or if caulk bonds the toilet base to tile.
Turn off the shut-off valve and flush to empty the tank and bowl. Disconnect the water supply line. Remove tank-to-bowl bolts and lift the tank off. Pop the plastic bolt caps at the base, remove the nuts, rock the bowl gently to break the wax seal, and lift straight up. Stuff the drain opening with a rag. The entire process takes 30 to 45 minutes with basic hand tools.
Turn the shut-off valve clockwise until completely closed. Flush the toilet and hold the handle down to drain as much water as possible from the tank and bowl. Most of the water will drain, but some will remain at the bottom of the tank and in the toilet trap. You will need to remove this manually.
Use a sponge or a wet/dry shop vac to remove the water remaining in the tank. Getting the tank as dry as possible makes it significantly lighter and prevents water from spilling during disconnection. A 5-gallon bucket and a large sponge can handle this in about two minutes.
Use your wet/dry shop vac to suck out the standing water in the bowl. Alternatively, use a small cup to bail out the visible water, then use a sponge to soak up the rest. If you skip this step, water in the trap will pour out when you rock the toilet free from the floor -- and it is not clean water.
The water supply line connects from the shut-off valve to the underside of the toilet tank. Hold the shut-off valve steady with one hand and use an adjustable wrench or channel-lock pliers to unscrew the coupling nut at the bottom of the tank counterclockwise. Place a rag or small bucket under the connection before loosening, as residual water will dribble out. Once disconnected, move the supply line out of the way.
Supply lines that are 10 or more years old are brittle braided steel or old plastic -- they crack when flexed. Plan to replace the supply line whenever you remove a toilet. A new 12-inch braided stainless steel supply line costs about $6 to $12 and eliminates the risk of a future supply-line leak, which is one of the most common sources of water damage under bathroom floors.
For two-piece toilets, the tank is bolted to the bowl with two or three tank-to-bowl bolts that pass through the bottom of the tank and the back shelf of the bowl. Inside the tank, you will see rubber washers and nuts on these bolts. Use a flathead screwdriver to hold the bolt head steady inside the tank while you use a wrench to loosen the nut from underneath. Remove both (or three) nuts and bolts, then lift the tank straight up off the bowl. Set it on a protected surface -- an old towel or cardboard on the floor.
Tank-to-bowl bolts are often brass and may be corroded. If they spin without loosening, apply penetrating oil and wait 10 minutes. If they still will not budge, use a hacksaw to cut through the bolt below the nut. You can replace these bolts as part of the reinstall process.
Look at the base of the toilet on either side of the bowl. You will see plastic caps (usually white) snapped over the closet bolts. Pry these caps off with a flathead screwdriver or your fingers. Underneath each cap is a washer and nut threaded onto the closet bolt. Use an adjustable wrench to turn these nuts counterclockwise and remove them. Set the nuts and washers aside (you will likely replace them with new hardware when reinstalling).
If the closet bolts are corroded and the nuts will not turn, apply penetrating oil. If they still will not move after 15 minutes, use a hacksaw to cut through the bolt just above the flange. Replacement closet bolts (T-bolts) cost a few dollars at any hardware store and should be replaced as a matter of course when installing a new toilet.
Many toilet bases are caulked to the floor at installation. Run a utility knife around the entire base perimeter to cut through the caulk bead. This prevents you from cracking tile or tearing up flooring when you rock the toilet free. Do not skip this step if you see a white or clear bead of caulk at the base.
With the nuts removed and caulk scored, gently rock the toilet bowl from side to side. You are breaking the seal of the old wax ring between the toilet horn (the outlet at the base of the bowl) and the floor flange. Do not rock it violently -- a steady, even rocking motion is all that is needed. Once you feel the wax seal break (the toilet will suddenly rock more freely), lift the bowl straight up.
A standard two-piece toilet bowl weighs approximately 50 to 70 pounds. One-piece toilets can weigh 60 to 120 pounds. If you are working with a heavy one-piece unit like the TOTO UltraMax II (approximately 99 lbs) or the Kohler Cimarron (approximately 75 lbs for the two-piece), get a second person to help with the lift. Lift with your legs, keep the toilet level, and move it immediately to your prepared landing spot (cardboard or drop cloth) to avoid dropping wax residue on the floor.
Lift the toilet with the bowl opening facing down and carry it to its landing spot quickly. Flipping it or setting it on its side can crack the porcelain. American Standard, Kohler, and TOTO all use vitreous china for their bowl construction -- it is strong under normal use but can crack if dropped or set on a hard edge. Lay down a flattened cardboard box before you start so you have a designated safe landing zone ready.
The moment the toilet is lifted away, you will see the floor flange -- a metal or plastic ring set into the floor over the drain pipe. This drain pipe leads directly to your sewer line. Sewer gases (hydrogen sulfide, methane) are present in every drain and are both foul-smelling and, in sufficient concentrations, potentially flammable. Stuff a large rag or an old towel firmly into the drain opening the moment the toilet is removed. Keep it there until you are ready to set the new toilet.
The wax ring is a ring of beeswax (or a synthetic alternative) that seals the toilet horn to the floor flange. After removing the toilet, you will find wax residue on the floor flange and possibly on the toilet horn. Use a putty knife to scrape away all wax residue from the floor flange. Get the flange surface as clean as possible. Any old wax left behind can prevent the new wax ring from seating properly, which leads to sewer gas leaks at the base -- one of the most common causes of toilet odor problems.
A two-piece toilet tank weighs 25 to 40 lbs and the bowl weighs 50 to 70 lbs, making solo removal manageable if you separate them first. One-piece toilets are a single unit weighing 60 to 120 lbs and strongly benefit from a second person. Smart toilets with integrated electronic components can weigh even more and always require at least two people.
For two-piece toilets, the safest approach is always to disconnect and remove the tank first (it is lighter and more awkward to grip when attached), then lift the bowl separately. This converts a 75 to 100 lb single lift into two manageable lifts of 20 to 60 lbs. If you have back issues or are working alone with a one-piece toilet, consider renting a toilet dolly or asking a neighbor to help. The $0 cost of asking for help is far less than the cost of a back injury or a cracked porcelain toilet.
Check with your local waste hauler first -- many municipalities accept toilets as bulk trash on scheduled pickup days. Home improvement retailers like Home Depot and Lowe's sometimes offer haul-away services when delivering a new toilet. Some Habitat for Humanity ReStore locations accept working used toilets. Porcelain is not recyclable through standard curbside programs but is inert landfill material.
Before deciding on disposal, assess whether the toilet is still functional. A toilet that is being replaced purely for aesthetic reasons or to upgrade to a water-saving model may be accepted by reuse organizations. A toilet with cracks in the bowl or tank, active leaks at the base, or a damaged trapway should be disposed of rather than donated.
Wrap the toilet in plastic sheeting before transporting it in a vehicle. Residual wax and sewer residue will soil upholstery, and broken porcelain edges are sharp. Never place a toilet in the bed of a pickup truck unsecured -- porcelain shatters on impact and can create a road hazard.
If you are upgrading from a 1.6 GPF model to a WaterSense-certified 1.28 GPF unit, your old toilet is a legitimate water-saving swap candidate for a household that is currently using an even older 3.5 or 5 GPF toilet. Donating working older toilets to organizations serving low-income communities can be a meaningful environmental and community contribution rather than pure waste.
After removing the old toilet and scraping off wax residue, examine the floor flange for cracks, chips, or corrosion. A flange that sits at or slightly above the finished floor level is ideal. A cracked or broken flange must be repaired or replaced before setting a new toilet -- a damaged flange is the leading cause of wax ring failures and sewer gas leaks at the toilet base.
The floor flange (also called the closet flange) is the connection point between the toilet and the drain pipe in the floor. It is typically made of PVC, ABS plastic, cast iron, or brass, depending on the age and plumbing type of the home. After removing your old toilet, perform a thorough inspection before proceeding.
Before setting a new toilet, slide new closet bolts into the flange slots. Position them directly opposite each other, parallel to the wall behind the toilet. Many installers use a nut finger-tightened on each bolt to hold it upright during toilet placement, then remove the temporary nut before adding the washer and final nut.
Score caulked toilets around the full base perimeter with a utility knife before attempting to rock the bowl free. For rusted or corroded bolts that will not unscrew, apply penetrating oil and wait 15 minutes. If they still will not turn, cut through the bolt just above the floor flange nut with a hacksaw or reciprocating saw fitted with a metal-cutting blade -- this takes less than 60 seconds per bolt.
Plumbing codes in some regions and many installer preferences call for caulking the toilet base to the floor. The reasoning is to prevent water from seeping under the base where it can cause invisible mold and subfloor rot. However, this also means removal requires extra attention to avoid cracking tile. Use a sharp utility knife and make multiple passes around the full perimeter. Do not attempt to rock the toilet before fully cutting through the caulk -- the force required can crack tiles or shear off a porcelain tab at the base.
This is the most common toilet removal obstacle. Brass closet bolts installed without proper waterproofing over many years can become completely fused to their nuts. The approach in order of escalation:
Silicone caulk is much harder to cut through than latex or acrylic caulk. Use a utility knife with a fresh blade and work slowly. A silicone caulk remover tool (a flexible plastic blade specifically designed to slide under silicone beads) can help. After the toilet is removed, use a razor scraper to clean silicone residue off the floor before applying fresh caulk during reinstallation.
Plumbing contractors keep a mini-hacksaw and a can of penetrating oil in their standard toolkit specifically for toilet removal jobs. Even on seemingly recent installs, closet bolt corrosion can set in surprisingly fast in humid bathroom environments. Having these two items on hand before you start means you will never be stopped by stuck bolts.
With the old toilet out and the drain plugged, you are in a clean position to proceed with your actual goal. Here is what typically follows:
This is the most common reason for toilet removal. After inspecting and repairing the flange, set new closet bolts, place a new wax ring (on the floor flange or on the toilet horn -- follow the manufacturer's recommendation), position the new toilet bowl over the bolts, and press down firmly to seat the wax. Do not rock the toilet once it contacts the wax. Add washers and nuts, hand-tighten, then snug them with a wrench -- do not overtighten, as this can crack the porcelain base. For the full process, see our complete toilet installation guide.
If you are upgrading to a water-efficient model, the best flushing toilets guide covers the top-rated options across all price points, including MaP-tested models from TOTO, Kohler, and American Standard. The TOTO Drake II (1.28 GPF, MaP score of 1000g) and the American Standard Champion 4 (1.28 GPF, MaP score of 1000g) consistently top performance rankings for standard two-piece replacements.
Toilet removal is sometimes necessary for clogs deep in the drain line that cannot be reached with a standard toilet auger. After removing the toilet, a plumber's snake (drain snake) can access the drain pipe directly and reach significantly further than it could through the toilet. Once the clog is cleared, reset the toilet with a new wax ring. See our guide on how to snake a toilet for detailed technique.
Tile work, vinyl plank installation, or subfloor replacement around a toilet always requires removal of the fixture. Once the floor work is complete, verify that the finished floor height does not require a flange extender before reinstalling the toilet. New flooring added on top of existing subfloor raises the finished floor height and can leave the flange sitting too low relative to the new surface.
A leaking toilet base, recurring wax ring failures, or sewer smell that persists despite repeated wax ring replacements often points to a damaged or improperly positioned flange. With the toilet removed, you have clear access to inspect and repair the flange. Replace the wax ring any time you pull a toilet, regardless of whether the old ring appeared to be failing -- they are inexpensive insurance against sewer gas and leaks. See our guide on toilet wax ring replacement for detailed steps.
The single most common DIY mistake after toilet removal is reusing the old wax ring. Even if the ring looks intact after you pull the toilet, the compression of the wax has been permanently deformed to fit the old toilet horn position. A new wax ring costs $5 to $15 and provides a guaranteed seal. There is no good reason to reuse the old one.
Toilet removal is safe for most DIYers, but a few specific hazards deserve attention:
The drain pipe exposed when a toilet is removed leads directly to the sewer. Hydrogen sulfide (the rotten egg smell) and methane are present in all residential drain systems. Hydrogen sulfide is toxic at high concentrations and methane is flammable. The risk from a brief toilet removal in a ventilated bathroom is low, but plug the drain immediately with a large rag or a specifically designed drain plug. Keep the bathroom door open and turn on the exhaust fan if available. Do not leave the drain unplugged overnight.
Vitreous china is dense and heavy. Lift with your legs, not your back. For one-piece toilets, use a second person or a furniture dolly. Never attempt to catch a falling toilet -- step back and let it fall rather than risk injury. Set the removed toilet on a padded surface immediately rather than holding it while you assess the floor situation.
Broken or chipped porcelain has razor-sharp edges. Wear work gloves when handling any toilet with visible chips or cracks. Wrap cracked or broken fixtures in heavy plastic before disposal to protect sanitation workers.
In homes built before 1980, floor adhesives under vinyl tile may contain asbestos. If you see old vinyl tile under the toilet base and you are in a pre-1980 home, have the area tested before disturbing the flooring. Old wax rings themselves do not contain asbestos, but the flooring beneath can. Disturbing asbestos-containing material requires professional abatement in most jurisdictions.
In most jurisdictions, simply replacing a toilet (same location, same drain configuration) does not require a permit. However, if you are moving the toilet location, changing the rough-in distance, or replacing drain piping, check with your local building department. Work done without required permits can create issues at resale and may void homeowner's insurance claims related to the work.
| Scenario | DIY Cost | Plumber Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Remove and dispose (standard) | $0–$20 | $100–$200 | Tools + disposal; most people already own tools |
| Remove and install new toilet | $15–$30 | $150–$300 | Wax ring, bolts, supply line |
| Remove + flange repair (repair ring) | $20–$50 | $200–$400 | Repair ring + hardware |
| Remove + full flange replacement (PVC) | $25–$80 | $250–$500 | Requires PVC primer, cement, pipe cutter |
| Remove + subfloor repair | $50–$200 | $400–$1200+ | Depends on damage extent; not typical DIY territory |
The materials needed for a straightforward toilet removal and reinstall (new wax ring, new closet bolts, new supply line) cost $15 to $30 total. The labor savings compared to hiring a plumber for a standard swap are typically $150 to $250. For more detail on professional installation costs, see our guide on plumber cost to install a toilet.
Hiring a plumber makes sense when the flange is fully broken and requires pipe work, when the subfloor is damaged, when you are moving the toilet's location, or when you are not comfortable with the heavy lifting involved. A licensed plumber for a standard remove-and-replace job in most U.S. markets charges $150 to $300 in labor, not including the toilet itself.
No. Standard toilet removal is a DIY task most homeowners can complete in 30 to 45 minutes with basic hand tools. You need a plumber only if you encounter a broken flange requiring pipe work, damaged subfloor, or if the drain configuration is being changed.
A standard two-piece toilet removal takes 30 to 45 minutes for a first-time DIYer working carefully. Experienced plumbers can remove a toilet in 15 to 20 minutes. Add 15 to 30 minutes if closet bolts are corroded and require cutting.
Yes, for a two-piece toilet. Remove the tank first (20 to 40 lbs), then tackle the bowl separately (50 to 70 lbs). One-piece toilets weigh 60 to 120 lbs and are much safer to move with a second person helping.
Plug the drain opening with a large rag or a rubber drain plug immediately after lifting the toilet. The sewer smell comes from hydrogen sulfide gas in the drain pipe. Keep the plug in place anytime the toilet is not installed and open a window or run the bathroom exhaust fan for ventilation.
Yes, always. The old wax ring has been permanently deformed and will not reseal properly. New wax rings cost $5 to $15. This is non-optional; skipping it causes sewer gas leaks and eventually water damage at the base.
Lay down moving blankets, cardboard, or thick drop cloths along the path from the toilet to your disposal area before starting. Use a putty knife -- not a sharp chisel -- to scrape old wax. When moving the toilet, use a furniture dolly rather than dragging it across tile.
The shut-off valve (angle-stop) is partially failed. Close your main house water supply valve, then either proceed with the toilet removal or replace the angle-stop before continuing. A quarter-turn ball valve shut-off is a reliable upgrade over old compression-style angle-stops.
No. You must close the shut-off valve before disconnecting the supply line. Without closing the water supply, disconnecting the supply line will release water at line pressure -- typically 40 to 80 PSI -- directly onto your bathroom floor.
Run a sharp utility knife around the entire base perimeter to cut through the caulk. Make multiple passes to ensure you have cut all the way through. Only then attempt to rock the toilet free. Forcing the toilet without cutting caulk first can crack tiles or shear porcelain tabs off the base.
A cracked floor flange must be repaired before installing a new toilet. A stainless steel repair ring ($8 to $25) slides over the cracked flange and provides new bolt slots, typically fixing the problem without pipe work. A fully broken flange that has separated from the drain pipe requires a plumber or advanced DIY skill.
Carry the bowl upright with the horn (the bottom outlet) facing down to prevent residual water and wax from dripping. Keep it level and close to your body. Never hold it at arm's length -- the weight at a distance creates extreme back strain. Set it on padded cardboard or a drop cloth immediately.
Yes, as standard practice. Replace T-bolts (closet bolts) every time you reset a toilet. They are inexpensive ($3 to $8 per pair) and old bolts with corroded threads cause the exact problem you likely just experienced when trying to remove the old toilet.
Most construction dumpsters accept porcelain. Confirm with the dumpster rental company first -- some charge extra for heavy individual items. Wrap the toilet in plastic before placing it to protect workers from sharp edges and residual waste.
Hold the bolt head inside the tank with a flathead screwdriver while turning the nut below with a wrench. If the rubber washer is deteriorated and the bolt spins freely without the screwdriver catching, grip the bolt with locking pliers from inside the tank. If it still spins, use a hacksaw to cut the bolt below the nut.
Replace the flange if it is visibly cracked, corroded through, broken at the bolt slots, or sitting more than 1/4 inch below the finished floor level. Surface rust on a cast iron flange that is otherwise structurally sound is not sufficient reason to replace -- clean with a wire brush and proceed.
No, if done correctly. The toilet sits on top of the floor flange -- it is not plumbed in permanently. The supply line is a compression or push-fit connection that disconnects cleanly. The only risk of damage is to the floor flange itself if you rock the toilet violently rather than gently, or to supply line connections if you apply wrench force in the wrong direction.
Check for cracks in the bowl (especially near the base and around the trap), cracks in the tank, and chips on the seat. Flush it before removal to confirm it drains and refills. Document the model number and rough-in size for the next owner. Clean thoroughly with a disinfectant before donating.
Not fundamentally. Pre-1994 toilets used 3.5 to 7 GPF and are heavier due to larger tanks. The removal process is identical. The larger tank means more water to bail out and a heavier tank to lift. These older units are much less likely to have WaterSense certification, which is one of the best reasons to replace them with a modern 1.28 GPF or 0.8 GPF model.
Basic removal is the same (water shut-off, supply line disconnect, unbolt and lift), but smart toilets add electrical connections. Turn off the circuit breaker for the bathroom outlet the toilet is connected to before disconnecting any wiring. Consult the manufacturer's manual for model-specific steps -- TOTO Washlet+ and similar integrated units have specific disconnection sequences.
Toilet removal is a well within reach for most homeowners with basic tools and two to three hours of time. The preparation steps -- shutting off water, draining tank and bowl, and gathering supplies -- take as long as the actual removal in most cases. The most frequent obstacle is corroded closet bolts, and the solution (penetrating oil plus a hacksaw) costs under $10 and takes under five minutes. Remove the tank first on two-piece toilets to make lifting manageable, plug the drain immediately, scrape the old wax ring cleanly, and always install a new wax ring and new closet bolts when reinstalling. Done correctly, the job leaves your plumbing exactly as solid as before while opening the door to a much more water-efficient and higher-performing toilet.
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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 June 1, 2026 · Our review method

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