
Best French Toilets (2026)
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Read the guideA leaking tank-to-bowl gasket causes silent water waste, floor damage, and rust streaks. This step-by-step guide shows you exactly how to diagnose, remove, and replace the gasket without a plumber, in under two hours.
Research updated June 2026.
A tank-to-bowl gasket leak almost always means the rubber spud gasket has hardened or warped. Turn off the water supply, empty the tank, remove the two tank bolts, lift the tank, swap the old gasket for a universal replacement (Korky 485BP or Fluidmaster 7301), and reassemble. Total parts cost is under $15 and the fix takes roughly 60 to 90 minutes with basic tools.
The tank-to-bowl gasket (also called the spud washer or flush valve gasket) is a thick rubber ring that seals the connection between the flush valve at the bottom of the tank and the inlet opening at the top of the toilet bowl. Over time, the rubber hardens, cracks, or deforms under constant water pressure and chemical exposure, causing water to seep out around the joint. Chloramine-treated municipal water, cleaning tablet chemicals, and simple age accelerate gasket degradation.
Inside every two-piece toilet sits a tank held to the bowl by two threaded tank bolts and sealed by the spud gasket. The gasket compresses against the porcelain surfaces on both sides to create a watertight barrier. When water bypasses that seal, the leak can appear as a drip from the back of the bowl, rust streaks on the porcelain, water stains on the floor behind the toilet, or in severe cases a steady puddle. Left unaddressed, the moisture damages the subfloor and can cause mold growth under the toilet base.
Because the leak originates inside the toilet cabinet or at the rear of the bowl rim where it meets the tank, it is easy to confuse with a cracked tank, faulty tank bolts, or a bad wax ring. Knowing which part is at fault saves time and prevents unnecessary parts purchases.
Licensed plumbers consistently report that tank-to-bowl gasket failures account for a significant share of slow toilet leaks that homeowners mistake for condensation. The key diagnostic clue is that condensation forms on the outside of a cold tank in humid weather, while a gasket leak produces water specifically at the joint seam between tank and bowl. Run your finger along that seam immediately after a flush to feel for moisture originating from inside.
Dry the entire tank and bowl exterior with a towel, then drop a few drops of food coloring into the tank. Wait 15 minutes without flushing, then inspect the seam where tank meets bowl. If colored water appears at the joint, the spud gasket is leaking. If color appears only at the base of the toilet on the floor, the wax ring is suspect instead.
Beyond the dye test, check for these specific signs:
If you are unsure whether the wax ring or the tank gasket is responsible, address the tank gasket first. Replacing the spud gasket does not require removing the toilet, making it the lower-effort diagnostic starting point.
Replacing both the tank bolts and the spud gasket at the same time is considered best practice, even when only one component looks visibly damaged. The rubber components age at the same rate and separating the tank from the bowl is the hardest step in the repair. Spending an extra $3 to $4 on a complete tank bolt kit eliminates a return trip under the tank within the next few years.
You need a replacement tank-to-bowl gasket (universal options like the Korky 485BP or Fluidmaster 7301 fit most standard two-piece toilets), a tank bolt kit with brass bolts and rubber washers, an adjustable wrench or channel-lock pliers, a sponge and bucket, and a towel. Total parts cost is typically $10 to $20 at any hardware store or online.
| Part | Common Brand/Model | Fits | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tank-to-bowl gasket (sponge type) | Korky 485BP | Most 2-piece toilets | Extra-thick foam; best for older, uneven flanges |
| Tank-to-bowl gasket (rubber) | Fluidmaster 7301 | Most 2-piece toilets | Dense rubber; good for newer porcelain with flat seat |
| Tank bolt set (brass) | Korky 9906BP | Universal | Brass resists corrosion; includes all washers and nuts |
| TOTO-specific gasket | TOTO THU195 | TOTO Drake, Ultramax II, Aquia IV | Use OEM part for TOTO; universal gaskets may not seat correctly |
| Kohler-specific gasket | Kohler 1099455 | Kohler Highline, Cimarron, Memoirs | Kohler's larger flush valve diameter requires brand-specific part |
| American Standard gasket | American Standard 738551-0070A | Champion 4, Cadet 3, Edgemere | OEM part; Champion 4 has oversized 3-inch valve |
Before ordering a universal gasket, note whether you have a standard 2-inch or oversized 3-inch flush valve. The best flushing toilets from brands like TOTO, Kohler, and American Standard use various valve diameters. The American Standard Champion 4, for instance, uses a proprietary 3-inch flush valve that requires an oversized spud gasket. Check the existing gasket diameter before purchasing a replacement.
Turn off the water supply valve, flush to empty the tank, disconnect the supply line, unscrew the two tank bolts from under the bowl, lift the tank straight up, pull off the old gasket, press the new gasket onto the flush valve tailpiece, lower the tank back onto the bowl, insert new tank bolts, tighten alternately until snug (do not overtighten), reconnect the supply line, turn water on, and check for leaks. The full process takes 60 to 90 minutes for a first-time DIYer.
Turn the supply shut-off valve clockwise until it stops. This valve is typically located on the wall behind or to the left of the toilet, close to the floor. If the valve is old and corroded and will not turn, use the main house shut-off. Consider replacing the shut-off valve at this time, as corroded valves are a common secondary problem in older bathrooms. Our guide on toilet water shut-off valves covers replacement in detail.
Flush the toilet to remove the bulk of the water. Use a large sponge to absorb the last inch of water that remains after flushing, then wring the sponge into a bucket. A wet-dry shop vacuum also works well for this step. The tank must be as dry as possible to avoid spilling water inside the cabinet when you lift it.
The supply line connects the shut-off valve to the underside of the tank. Unscrew the coupling nut at the tank end by hand or with an adjustable wrench. Have a towel ready to catch residual drips. If the braided steel supply line is older than seven years, replace it now while you have access. Supply line failures cause significant water damage and are preventable with a $10 replacement part.
Look under the toilet bowl for two bolt heads, one on each side, protruding below the rear of the bowl where the tank sits. Each bolt passes up through the tank floor and is secured by a nut and rubber washer above. Hold the bolt head with a flathead screwdriver from inside the tank while turning the wing nut or hex nut below counterclockwise with a wrench or pliers. If the bolts spin instead of loosening, the rubber washer inside the tank has deteriorated and is no longer gripping. In that case, cut the bolt with a hacksaw or oscillating tool, or use a bolt extractor.
With the bolts removed, lift the tank straight up off the bowl. Tanks are heavy (10 to 20 pounds when dry) and porcelain chips easily. Work with a helper if the tank is large, or place a folded towel on the floor next to the toilet to set the tank on its side. Do not let the tank hang from the supply line or any remaining connections.
The old tank-to-bowl gasket is seated on the bottom of the flush valve tailpiece, which protrudes from the bottom of the tank. Pull the gasket off. If it has hardened and is stuck to the porcelain, use a plastic putty knife or your fingers to work it loose. Avoid metal tools that could chip the flush valve housing. Clean any mineral deposits or old rubber residue from the tank bottom and the bowl inlet opening using a mild bathroom cleaner and a scrub brush.
Press the new gasket firmly onto the flush valve tailpiece with the wider, beveled side facing the bowl (away from the tank). The gasket should seat securely and not slide off when you turn the tank upside down. If you are using a sponge-type gasket like the Korky 485BP, wet it slightly before installation to help it conform and seal.
Insert new tank bolts with their rubber washers into the two holes in the tank floor. Lower the tank carefully onto the bowl, guiding the flush valve tailpiece into the bowl inlet opening and the two bolt holes into the bowl mounting holes. The gasket should compress evenly as the tank settles.
Thread new rubber washers and nuts onto the tank bolts from below the bowl. Tighten by hand first, then snug with a wrench. Alternate between the two bolts, tightening a half-turn at a time, to keep even pressure and prevent the tank from cracking. Stop tightening when the tank feels firm and does not rock. Over-tightening is the most common mistake and the leading cause of hairline tank cracks during this repair.
Thread the supply line coupling nut onto the tank fill valve inlet by hand, then snug with a wrench (one-quarter turn past hand-tight). Open the supply shut-off valve slowly. Allow the tank to fill completely. Perform three flush cycles and inspect the gasket seam, tank bolts, and supply line connection after each flush. Use the dry paper towel method: press a sheet of white paper towel around each connection point after flushing and check for moisture transfer.
Porcelain toilet tanks crack from over-tightening more often than from any other cause during DIY repair. The standard guidance from plumbing professionals is hand-tight plus one full clockwise turn on each nut, alternating sides. If you feel resistance before one full turn, stop. A slightly loose tank that needs another quarter-turn later is far preferable to a cracked tank that requires a full toilet replacement.
A quality rubber or sponge tank-to-bowl gasket typically lasts 10 to 15 years under normal conditions. Exposure to chloramine-treated water, in-tank chemical tablets, or high water temperatures shortens gasket life. Avoiding in-tank drop-in cleaners and using only external bowl cleaners can significantly extend gasket longevity.
Several factors affect how quickly a spud gasket degrades:
If your toilet is more than 15 years old and you are already replacing the gasket, it is worth evaluating whether a full toilet replacement makes sense. EPA WaterSense-certified toilets must use no more than 1.28 gallons per flush (GPF), while toilets manufactured before 1994 used 3.5 to 7 GPF. Replacing a pre-1994 toilet with a current WaterSense model can save a family of four up to 16,500 gallons of water annually, according to EPA WaterSense program data. Our guide to how to replace a toilet walks through the full process if you decide an upgrade makes more sense than another repair.
TOTO Drake and Drake II: These models use a 3-inch flush valve with TOTO's specific flush valve boot design. The OEM replacement is the TOTO THU195. Universal gaskets occasionally seat on TOTO models, but the fit is less reliable. Given that the TOTO Drake consistently earns MaP flush-test scores of 1,000 grams (the maximum rating), the unit is worth the minor extra cost of an OEM gasket to preserve its performance. See our TOTO Drake review for full specifications.
Kohler Highline and Cimarron: Kohler two-piece models use a 2-inch flush valve seat but with a larger overall flush valve canister. Kohler's OEM gasket (Kohler 1099455) is the safest choice. The Kohler Cimarron carries EPA WaterSense certification at 1.28 GPF and the Cimarron earned strong MaP scores in flush testing.
American Standard Champion 4: The Champion 4 uses a proprietary 3-inch wide flush valve, the same oversized design that contributes to its class-leading 1,000-gram MaP score. The matching gasket must accommodate this larger diameter. Use American Standard part 738551-0070A. A standard 2-inch universal gasket will not seal correctly on the Champion 4's flush valve.
American Standard Cadet 3: The Cadet 3 uses a 2-inch flush valve and is compatible with most universal gaskets. It is one of the easiest two-piece toilets to service, which contributes to its popularity in rental property applications.
Woodbridge T-0001: Woodbridge's popular one-piece toilet does not have a separate tank-to-bowl gasket in the traditional sense, as the tank and bowl are formed as a single unit. If a Woodbridge T-0001 leaks near the tank area, the cause is typically a flush valve seal or siphon jet issue, not a spud gasket.
Gerber toilets: Gerber's two-piece models including the Viper and Maxwell use standard 2-inch flush valve designs compatible with universal gaskets. Gerber parts are also available through the company's replacement parts program.
Swiss Madison: Many Swiss Madison models are one-piece designs (Ivy, St. Tropez, Clarence) and do not have a separate tank-to-bowl gasket. Swiss Madison's two-piece Chateau series does use a spud gasket. Contact Swiss Madison's customer service line for the correct replacement part number, as their parts catalog is not as widely distributed as legacy brands.
The tank-to-bowl gasket replacement is well within the skill range of an average DIYer. However, specific conditions justify calling a licensed plumber:
Plumber rates for a tank-to-bowl gasket replacement range from $100 to $200 in most U.S. markets for a straightforward service call, including parts. The DIY cost is under $20 in parts and the time investment of about two hours for a first-time repair.
A tank-to-bowl gasket leak produces moisture at the seam between tank and bowl, typically at the rear of the toilet above floor level. A wax ring failure causes water at the floor around the toilet base. Use the dye test: add food coloring to the tank, wait 15 minutes without flushing, and check where the colored water appears. Gasket = seam area; wax ring = floor level at the base.
Only if the bolts were never properly torqued from installation. If the gasket has aged and hardened, tightening the bolts will not restore the seal and risks cracking the porcelain. Test first: give each bolt a careful quarter-turn snug. If the leak persists after 24 hours, the gasket must be replaced.
Most standard two-piece toilets use a 2-inch flush valve requiring a 2-inch spud gasket. American Standard Champion 4, some Gerber, and select other models use a 3-inch flush valve requiring an oversized gasket. Measure the flush valve tailpiece diameter before ordering, or check your toilet's model number against the manufacturer's parts list.
Not strictly required, but strongly recommended. The rubber bolt washers inside the tank age at the same rate as the spud gasket, and the brass or steel bolts may be corroded. Since you already have the tank off, adding a $4 to $6 tank bolt kit eliminates the need to repeat this repair in the near future.
Yes. Slow leaks at the tank-to-bowl joint allow water to seep behind and under the toilet base over months or years. This moisture saturates the subfloor, promotes mold growth, and can cause structural wood rot in severe cases. Addressing the leak promptly prevents repair costs that can reach hundreds to thousands of dollars for subfloor remediation.
It depends on the severity. A drip that occurs only after flushing may not significantly affect water consumption, but a gasket leak that allows a slow continuous seep can waste 30 to 100 gallons per day. The EPA estimates that household toilet leaks waste approximately 1 trillion gallons of water nationally each year, much of it from small, slow leaks that go undetected.
Expect 60 to 90 minutes for a first-time repair. Experienced DIYers who have done the job before typically complete it in 30 to 45 minutes. The most time-consuming steps are draining the tank completely, removing corroded tank bolts, and allowing sufficient time after reassembly to confirm the repair is leak-free before considering the job done.
Both are reliable, widely available brands. The Korky 485BP foam gasket works well on older or slightly uneven porcelain seating surfaces, as its compressible sponge material accommodates minor irregularities. The Fluidmaster 7301 dense rubber gasket provides a firmer, more consistent seal on newer porcelain with flat, level bowl seats. Either choice is appropriate for most standard residential toilets.
No. Plumber's putty is not appropriate for the tank-to-bowl connection and will not provide a reliable seal under the water pressure inside the tank. It also does not have the flexibility to accommodate the minor movement that occurs each time the toilet is used. Only an appropriate rubber or foam gasket designed for this application should be used.
No. One-piece toilets (such as the TOTO UltraMax II, Woodbridge T-0001, and Swiss Madison St. Tropez) are manufactured as a single unit with the tank and bowl permanently joined. They do not have a separate tank-to-bowl gasket or tank bolts. Leaks near the tank area on one-piece toilets typically originate from the flush valve seal, fill valve, or supply line connection.
You need an adjustable wrench or channel-lock pliers, a large flathead screwdriver, a sponge and bucket, a towel, and a mild abrasive pad for cleaning mineral deposits. A wet-dry vacuum speeds up tank draining. If the tank bolts are severely corroded, a hacksaw or oscillating multi-tool with a metal cutting blade may be needed to cut the old bolts.
The most common causes of a post-replacement leak are: the gasket was not fully seated on the flush valve tailpiece, the tank bolts are not tightened evenly causing the tank to sit at a slight angle, the bowl seating surface has mineral deposits preventing a flat seal, or the tank bolts themselves have degraded rubber washers still causing a secondary leak path. Re-check each point before dismantling the tank again.
Yes, but use the correct American Standard OEM part (738551-0070A). The Champion 4 uses a 3-inch flush valve, which is larger than the standard 2-inch valve found in most two-piece toilets. A universal 2-inch gasket will not properly seal the Champion 4's oversized flush valve opening. Order the OEM part directly from American Standard or through a plumbing supply distributor.
Always hand-tighten both bolts first, then use a wrench to snug each bolt alternately (left, right, left, right) in small increments of one-quarter to one-half turn. The standard guidance is hand-tight plus approximately one full turn. Stop immediately when resistance is felt. If the tank wobbles, add another quarter-turn. Never torque tank bolts aggressively; porcelain tolerates compression poorly and cracks without warning under excessive force.
Most standard tank bolt kits with 5/16-inch diameter brass bolts are compatible with the large majority of two-piece toilet tanks. However, some older Kohler models and certain vintage American Standard toilets used different bolt diameters or spacing. Measure the existing bolt diameter before purchasing a replacement kit, or take the old bolt to the hardware store for matching.
EPA WaterSense certification applies to complete toilet fixtures, not individual repair parts. However, replacing a leaking gasket in any toilet directly reduces water waste, which aligns with WaterSense water-efficiency goals. If your toilet predates 1994, the EPA WaterSense program recommends full replacement with a certified 1.28 GPF or lower model to maximize long-term water savings.
Indirectly, yes. Ghost flushing (the toilet refilling on its own without being used) is most often caused by a leaking flapper, not the tank-to-bowl gasket. However, if a gasket leak is severe enough to drop the water level in the tank, the fill valve will cycle to compensate, mimicking ghost flushing behavior. Check the flapper first, then inspect the gasket if flapper replacement does not resolve the symptom.
They are the same part. "Spud washer" and "tank-to-bowl gasket" are interchangeable terms used by different manufacturers and plumbing references. You may also see it called a flush valve gasket or bowl spud seal. When searching for parts, all four terms refer to the rubber or foam ring that seals the flush valve to the toilet bowl opening.
Not necessarily, but it is a reasonable time to inspect it. If the fill valve is noisy, slow to refill, or more than 10 years old, replacing it while the tank is already disconnected saves a second drain-and-refill cycle later. Fluidmaster's 400A fill valve is the most widely recommended replacement for standard toilets and is compatible with virtually all two-piece models.
Replacing a toilet tank-to-bowl gasket is one of the most accessible plumbing repairs a homeowner can perform. The job requires $10 to $20 in parts, basic hand tools, and about 90 minutes. Using a quality replacement gasket matched to your specific toilet's flush valve size, tightening the tank bolts evenly and conservatively, and replacing the tank bolts at the same time will produce a reliable seal that lasts a decade or more. For toilets older than 15 to 20 years, evaluate whether a full replacement with an EPA WaterSense-certified model offers better long-term value than ongoing repairs.
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Researched by Derek Whitman · Last updated May 31, 2026 · Our review method

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