
How Often Should You Replace Your Toilet? Complete Guide
Buying GuidesMost toilets last 25 to 50 years, but the smart replacement window is usually the 20-year mark. Here is what the signs,…
Read the guideEverything you need to pick the right replacement flapper the first time, stop phantom leaks, and avoid the wasted water that drives up your utility bill.
Research updated June 2026.
Most toilets need a 2-inch flapper; 3-inch models are standard on American Standard Champion 4 and select Kohler flush valves. Match the flapper to your flush valve seat diameter, choose chlorine-resistant rubber or silicone for longevity, and stick to OEM or Fluidmaster universal flappers for reliable sealing and preserved MaP flush performance.
A toilet flapper is a roughly fist-sized rubber or silicone disc that seals the flush valve at the bottom of the tank. Every time you flush, it lifts, lets water rush into the bowl, then drops back down and reseals so the tank can refill. A worn or mismatched flapper is responsible for up to 200 gallons of wasted water per day per toilet, according to EPA WaterSense data, making it the single most common source of household water waste.
This guide covers every variable that determines the right flapper: seat diameter (2-inch vs. 3-inch), material (rubber, silicone, foam), adjustable vs. fixed flappers, brand and compatibility, and the fastest way to diagnose whether your flapper is actually the problem. We also cover how flappers interact with the broader flush system, so you understand why the wrong size or material will not merely shorten product life but will actively compromise flush power in top-ranked toilets like the best flushing toilets we cover across this site.
The toilet flapper seals the flush valve opening at the base of the tank. When you press the handle, it lifts via a chain, releasing a calibrated volume of water into the bowl to create flush momentum. After the tank empties, the flapper drops back onto its seat, creating a watertight seal that lets the tank refill without water continuously leaking into the bowl.
The flapper works in direct partnership with the flush valve seat -- the ring-shaped opening it rests against. If the flapper is too small, it will not seat properly and water will seep past the edges continuously. If it is too large, it may not seal flat and can rock slightly, creating an intermittent "phantom flush" or running toilet sound. The chain length also matters: too tight and the flapper cannot close fully; too long and it can get caught under the flapper, preventing a seal.
Because the flapper controls exactly how much water exits the tank during each flush, it directly affects gallon-per-flush (GPF) performance. An adjustable flapper lets you dial in the volume, which is particularly important in EPA WaterSense toilets rated at 1.28 GPF -- where the flush window is narrow and any air gap from a poorly seated flapper throws off the engineered water volume.
A 2019 study by the Alliance for Water Efficiency found that a standard running toilet caused by a faulty flapper can waste between 20 and 400 gallons per day depending on the severity of the leak. At the national average water rate of roughly $0.004 per gallon, even a modest 50-gallon-per-day leak adds measurably to an annual utility bill. Replacing a flapper costs under $10 in parts and takes under 15 minutes -- making it one of the highest-ROI plumbing maintenance tasks available.
Most toilets manufactured before 2005 use a 2-inch flush valve and require a 2-inch flapper. Toilets with large-diameter flush valves -- including the American Standard Champion 4, many Kohler Class Five models, and several Gerber flush valve designs -- use a 3-inch flush valve seat and require a 3-inch flapper. Measure the flush valve seat opening directly, or check your toilet model number against the manufacturer's parts lookup.
Size is the single most important variable in flapper selection. Install the wrong diameter and you will either get a constant slow leak (flapper too small, cannot bridge the opening) or poor sealing due to buckling or rocking (flapper too large for the seat ring). Here is a reliable way to determine which you need:
| Flush Valve Size | Common Toilet Models | Recommended Flapper | GPF Typically Supported | Check Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2-inch | TOTO Drake, TOTO Aquia IV (older), Kohler Highline (older), American Standard Cadet 3, most pre-2010 toilets | Fluidmaster 2-inch (400A series), TOTO THU008, Korky 100BP | 1.28 GPF to 1.6 GPF | Check price |
| 3-inch | American Standard Champion 4, Kohler Cimarron (select models), Gerber Viper, Woodbridge T-0001 | Fluidmaster 3-inch (5403 series), Korky 3060BP, American Standard 7301147 | 1.28 GPF to 1.6 GPF (high-velocity valve) | Check price |
| 2-inch dual-flush tower | TOTO Aquia IV (current), Swiss Madison Sublime II, Woodbridge T-0001 dual | OEM tower-style flush valve seal (not a standard flapper) | 0.8 GPF / 1.28 GPF | Check price |
Note on dual-flush toilets: most modern dual-flush designs (TOTO Aquia IV, Swiss Madison Sublime II) use a tower-style flush valve with a canister seal, not a traditional rubber flapper. If you own one of these models, you are replacing a canister seal or tower gasket, not a flapper. The process and parts are different -- check our dual-flush toilet guide for those specifics.
Silicone flappers last the longest in toilets exposed to chloramine-treated or heavily chlorinated municipal water, typically 7 to 10 years vs. 3 to 5 years for standard rubber. Standard neoprene or EPDM rubber flappers are less expensive and work well in moderately treated water. Foam-core flappers offer excellent sealing on slightly irregular seats but are more vulnerable to chemical degradation.
Flapper material determines two things: longevity and how well the flapper seals against the valve seat surface. Here is a breakdown of the three main types:
The vast majority of flappers sold and installed are neoprene or EPDM (ethylene propylene diene monomer) rubber. They are inexpensive, widely compatible, and perform well when water chemistry is moderate. The limitation is chlorine and chloramine sensitivity: municipal water treatment in many US cities has shifted to chloramine, which is more aggressive to rubber than free chlorine. Rubber flappers in high-chloramine systems can degrade in as little as 18 months, producing a slimy residue and a progressively worse seal.
If you notice your toilet flapper turning sticky, slimy, or warping within two years of replacement, chloramine is almost certainly the cause. Water utilities are legally required to report chloramine use in their annual Consumer Confidence Reports -- check yours before selecting a material.
Silicone flappers resist chlorine and chloramine degradation significantly better than rubber. Fluidmaster's PerforMAX and Korky's WaterWISE QuietFILL flappers use silicone or silicone-blended compounds. Published testing by Fluidmaster shows silicone flappers maintaining dimensional stability after accelerated aging equivalent to 10 years of municipal water exposure, where comparable rubber samples showed measurable surface tack and dimensional change at the 3-year mark.
Silicone flappers typically cost more than standard rubber options, which is higher upfront but lower total cost over a 10-year window.
Foam-core flappers (most notably the Korky 100BP and 481BP lines) use a closed-cell foam layer beneath a rubber face. The foam compresses slightly under water pressure, improving the seal on flush valve seats that have minor surface irregularities -- chipping, mineral deposits, or slight warping. They are a practical choice for older toilets with worn valve seats where a standard rigid rubber flapper no longer seals reliably. Foam-core flappers are not the best choice for heavily chlorinated water.
In areas served by water utilities that use chloramine disinfection -- which as of 2024 includes the majority of major US metro water systems -- silicone flappers are the correct choice regardless of slightly higher upfront cost. Plumbing trade associations including the American Society of Plumbing Engineers have documented accelerated rubber degradation in chloramine-treated systems for over a decade. If you are unsure what your utility uses, call them or look up the annual water quality report at your city or county website.
Fixed flappers release a preset water volume on every flush and are simpler to install. Adjustable flappers let you vary the water volume released per flush, which is valuable in EPA WaterSense 1.28 GPF toilets where flush performance depends on releasing the exact engineered volume -- not more or less. Choose adjustable if you have a 1.28 GPF toilet or are troubleshooting inconsistent flush power.
Adjustable flappers have a dial or slider that controls how quickly the flapper closes. A slower-closing flapper releases more water per flush; a faster-closing flapper releases less. This matters because the engineered flush in a 1.28 GPF toilet is calibrated around a specific volume. If your flapper closes too fast, not enough water enters the bowl and you may need multiple flushes. If it closes too slowly, you exceed the rated GPF and lose the water-efficiency benefit.
The Fluidmaster PerforMAX (502P21 series) is the most widely tested adjustable flapper on the market and compatible with the majority of 2-inch flush valves. It ships with a 10-position dial pre-set to a mid-range volume. For most users, the mid-range setting matches the original OEM behavior. If you are seeing incomplete flushes, dial toward the "more water" setting and test. If your toilet is consuming noticeably more water than its rated GPF (verifiable by a dye test and timing the tank refill), dial toward "less water."
Fixed flappers remain the right choice for older 1.6 GPF toilets where exact volume is less critical, and for anyone who prefers a simpler install with no calibration step.
The most reliable method is the dye test: drop food coloring or a dye tablet into the tank and wait 15 minutes without flushing. If color appears in the bowl, the flapper is leaking. You may also hear intermittent running water or see the water meter moving when no water is in use. Most failing flappers are silent in early stages, making the dye test essential for catching slow leaks.
A running toilet does not always sound like a roaring stream. Slow flapper leaks produce an intermittent trickle -- often just a brief hiss every 10 to 20 minutes as the water level drops slightly and the fill valve tops up the tank. Homeowners often mistake this for normal refill behavior. Prolonged patterns of brief fill cycles, however, are a clear sign the flapper is not holding a full seal.
The dye test catches leaks that do not audibly run. The EPA WaterSense program estimates that 20 to 30 percent of toilets in US homes have a running toilet at any given time, with the majority caused by degraded or mismatched flappers. Conducting a dye test once per year -- or immediately if your water bill increases unexpectedly -- is a sound maintenance practice.
For more context on how flush-system components interact, see our guide to toilet fill valves and our detailed review of how toilets work.
Plumbing inspectors routinely identify flapper leaks as the primary cause of inflated water bills in rental properties. A single faulty flapper leaking at even 50 gallons per day -- well below what the EPA considers a significant running toilet -- adds roughly 1,500 gallons per month. At the national median water and sewer rate, that is a measurable cost. The dye test requires under 5 minutes of hands-on time and zero tools, yet most homeowners never perform it.
Fluidmaster is the most widely compatible aftermarket flapper brand and is used as OEM-equivalent by several toilet manufacturers. Korky (Lavelle Industries) offers excellent chloramine-resistant options and broad compatibility charts. For TOTO toilets specifically, OEM TOTO flappers are recommended because TOTO's proprietary G-Max and E-Max valve seats are sized and shaped to precise tolerances that universal flappers occasionally fail to match fully.
The flapper aftermarket is dominated by a handful of brands. Here is how they differ in practice:
Fluidmaster is the largest plumbing fill-valve and flapper manufacturer in North America and holds a dominant market position in the aftermarket repair segment. Their model 400A fill valve is the de facto standard; their flapper lineup is similarly ubiquitous. The Fluidmaster 5403 is the reference 3-inch adjustable flapper and comes packaged with many Kohler and American Standard toilet repair kits. The PerforMAX 502 series is their premium silicone adjustable line. Aggregated retail reviews across major plumbing supply channels show Fluidmaster flappers consistently achieving 4.4 to 4.7 out of 5 stars over thousands of reviews.
| Brand | Top Model | Sizes Available | Material | Chloramine Resistant | Avg. Longevity |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fluidmaster | PerforMAX 502P21 | 2-inch, 3-inch | Silicone | Yes | 7-10 years |
| Korky | QuietFILL 100BP / 481BP | 2-inch, 3-inch | Foam-core rubber / rubber | Moderate | 3-7 years |
| TOTO OEM | THU167 (E-Max) | 3-inch proprietary | Rubber | Moderate | 5-8 years |
| American Standard OEM | 7301147-0070A | 3-inch proprietary | Rubber | Moderate | 4-7 years |
| Kohler OEM | GP1083167 (AquaPiston) | Canister seal | Rubber | Moderate | 5-8 years |
| Gerber OEM | 99-006 | 2-inch | Rubber | Standard | 3-5 years |
Korky is Fluidmaster's primary competitor in the universal flapper segment. Their foam-core designs (100BP, 481BP) are a top choice for older toilets with worn valve seats, and their QuietFILL Platinum flappers use a chloramine-resistant compound. Korky's compatibility guides are published openly on their website and are cross-referenced by model number, making it easy to confirm fit before purchase. Aggregated owner reviews rate Korky flappers at 4.3 to 4.6 out of 5 across major retail platforms.
TOTO toilets including the Drake, Drake II, UltraMax II, and Aquia IV use flush valve seats manufactured to specific tolerances optimized for TOTO's high-efficiency flushing systems. The TOTO THU008 and THU167 flappers are designed to maintain flush performance in these valves without requiring calibration. While universal flappers can work in TOTO toilets, plumbing professionals widely recommend OEM parts for TOTO to preserve MaP flush-test performance scores. The TOTO Drake II, for instance, achieves a MaP score of 1,000 grams (the maximum score) -- performance that depends on the calibrated water release the OEM flapper provides.
Kohler's AquaPiston flush valves (used in the Highline and Cimarron) use a canister-style mechanism rather than a traditional flapper. The canister lifts vertically on flush and drops back onto a seat ring, sealed by a rubber gasket. If your Kohler toilet is leaking, confirm whether it uses an AquaPiston canister or a conventional flush valve before purchasing a replacement. Kohler's parts catalog, available at their website, lists the correct part by model number.
American Standard Champion 4 and Cadet 3 toilets use 3-inch flush valves. American Standard sells direct-replacement flappers (part 7301147-0070A for the Champion 4 3-inch valve) that are engineered to deliver the full flush volume without the calibration step adjustable aftermarket flappers require. The Champion 4 earns a MaP score of 1,000 grams -- the maximum score -- and its flush performance is partly attributable to the precise flapper-to-valve interaction. See our full American Standard Champion 4 review for more on how the flush system works.
Gerber toilets including the Viper and Avalanche use a variety of flush valve sizes. Gerber's OEM flappers are sold under the Gerber Plumbing Fixtures brand and are cross-referenced by valve series in their published parts manual. Fluidmaster universal flappers typically fit Gerber 2-inch and 3-inch valves, but Gerber's tank-to-bowl profile on some elongated models creates a chain geometry where a slightly longer chain or a different chain anchor point is needed to prevent the chain from interfering with the flapper seal.
| Toilet Model | Flush Valve Type | Valve Size | OEM Flapper Part | Compatible Aftermarket | Check Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TOTO Drake (CST744SL) | G-Max conventional | 3-inch | TOTO THU008 | Fluidmaster 5403, Korky 3060BP | Check price |
| TOTO Drake II (CST454CEFG) | E-Max conventional | 3-inch | TOTO THU167 | Fluidmaster 5403 | Check price |
| TOTO UltraMax II (MS604114CEFG) | E-Max conventional | 3-inch | TOTO THU167 | Fluidmaster 5403 | Check price |
| TOTO Aquia IV (dual-flush) | Dual-flush tower | Tower seal (not flapper) | TOTO THU808 | OEM recommended only | Check price |
| Kohler Highline (K-3989) | AquaPiston canister | Canister seal | Kohler GP1083167 | Korky 4010BP | Check price |
| Kohler Cimarron (K-3609) | AquaPiston canister | Canister seal | Kohler GP1083167 | Korky 4010BP | Check price |
| American Standard Champion 4 (2034.014) | Conventional | 3-inch | AS 7301147-0070A | Fluidmaster 5403, Korky 3060BP | Check price |
| American Standard Cadet 3 (2383.128) | Conventional | 2-inch | AS 7301111 | Fluidmaster 502, Korky 100BP | Check price |
| Woodbridge T-0001 | Conventional | 3-inch | Woodbridge OEM | Fluidmaster 5403 | Check price |
| Swiss Madison Sublime II (SM-1T257) | Dual-flush tower | Tower seal (not flapper) | Swiss Madison OEM | Limited -- OEM preferred | Check price |
| Gerber Viper (21-012) | Conventional | 2-inch | Gerber 99-006 | Fluidmaster 502, Korky 100BP | Check price |
Note: Kohler AquaPiston and TOTO tower-style dual-flush valves use canister seals rather than traditional flappers. The replacement process and parts differ meaningfully from standard flapper replacement.
Replacing a toilet flapper requires no special tools and takes approximately 10 to 15 minutes. You do not need to turn off the water supply to the home -- only the toilet's local shutoff valve.
If the toilet continues to run after flapper replacement, the issue is likely the fill valve, the float adjustment, or a damaged flush valve seat. Consult our running toilet diagnosis guide for a systematic troubleshooting approach.
Chain length is the most commonly overlooked variable in DIY flapper replacement. Most flush handle arms have four to six chain attachment holes at different distances from the pivot point. If the flapper fails to close after flushing, try moving the chain to a hole that allows more slack. If the flapper does not lift high enough to allow a complete flush, move to a hole closer to the pivot for more lift. Adjusting chain position takes 30 seconds and resolves the majority of "new flapper still runs" complaints without any additional parts.
EPA WaterSense certification applies to the complete toilet, not to individual flappers. However, the flapper is integral to whether a WaterSense toilet actually achieves its certified 1.28 GPF rating in field conditions. An oversized or slow-closing flapper in a WaterSense toilet can push the effective GPF above the certified limit on every flush, negating the water-saving benefit. An undersized or fast-closing flapper reduces flush water volume below what the bowl needs, causing incomplete flushes and -- ironically -- requiring double-flushes that consume more water than a single 1.6 GPF flush.
MaP (Maximum Performance) testing evaluates toilet flush effectiveness using a standardized media (soybean paste and toilet paper) in grams. MaP scores above 500 grams are considered adequate; scores of 800 grams or above are considered excellent; the maximum score is 1,000 grams. These scores are established with the OEM flapper in place and calibrated water volume. Aftermarket flappers that change the effective flush volume will alter the real-world MaP performance even if the toilet's published score remains unchanged.
If you own an EPA WaterSense toilet and are replacing the flapper, the safest path to maintaining both water efficiency and flush performance is:
In municipal water with moderate chlorine treatment, standard rubber flappers typically last 3 to 5 years before degrading noticeably. In chloramine-treated water, expect 18 months to 3 years. Silicone flappers can last 7 to 10 years in most water conditions. Inspect the flapper annually by performing a dye test; replace it at the first sign of a leak regardless of age.
No. Flappers must match the flush valve seat diameter (2-inch vs. 3-inch) and the valve seat profile. Some toilet brands -- TOTO, Kohler AquaPiston, Swiss Madison dual-flush -- use proprietary valve designs incompatible with standard universal flappers. Always confirm compatibility by model number before purchasing.
The most common causes are: chain too long (bunching under the flapper), chain too short (preventing the flapper from fully closing), a damaged or mineralized valve seat the new flapper cannot seal against, or the wrong size flapper for the flush valve. Check all three before concluding the flapper itself is defective.
The chain should have approximately 1/2 inch of slack when the flapper is fully seated. Too much slack allows the chain to fold under the flapper; too little prevents the flapper from closing after the flush. Adjust by moving the chain clip to a different hole on the flush handle arm -- most arms have multiple holes for this purpose.
TOTO's G-Max and E-Max flush valve designs use conventional 3-inch flappers, so aftermarket options like the Fluidmaster 5403 are compatible. However, TOTO strongly recommends OEM flappers (THU008 for older G-Max models, THU167 for E-Max) to maintain calibrated flush performance. TOTO's dual-flush Aquia IV uses a tower seal assembly, not a flapper.
Kohler AquaPiston valves (Highline, Cimarron, and most newer Kohler toilets) do not use a standard rubber flapper. They use a canister with a rubber seal (OEM part GP1083167). Some aftermarket canister seals (Korky 4010BP) fit these valves, but standard 2-inch or 3-inch rubber flappers will not work in AquaPiston-equipped Kohler toilets.
Yes, if the original MaP score was compromised by a degraded flapper that was releasing insufficient water. Replacing with a correctly sized, correctly adjusted flapper matched to the OEM water volume restores the engineered flush volume. If using an adjustable aftermarket flapper, set it to the midpoint first and test for complete bowl clearing before finalizing the setting.
Measure the flush valve seat opening (the circular ring the flapper seals against) with a ruler. 2-inch seats measure roughly 2 inches across the interior; 3-inch seats measure roughly 3 inches. Alternatively, look up your toilet model number (printed inside the tank or on the tank bottom) in the manufacturer's parts catalog or Fluidmaster's online compatibility tool.
In chloramine-treated water systems, yes. Silicone flappers cost more upfront than standard rubber, but they last 2 to 3 times longer in chemically aggressive water. Over a 10-year window, silicone typically results in fewer replacements and less accumulated water loss from degraded seals. In well water or very lightly treated municipal water, standard rubber is adequate.
Yes. The flapper controls how much water is released per flush and how quickly. A fast-closing flapper reduces the flush volume; a slow-closing one increases it. In high-efficiency 1.28 GPF toilets, the engineered flush volume is precise -- an incorrectly adjusted flapper can produce weak flushes or waste more water than the certified GPF rating.
Chloramine or high chlorine concentration in municipal water is the primary cause of accelerated rubber flapper degradation. In-tank drop tablets that contain bleach are also documented to degrade rubber flappers rapidly -- the American Standard and Fluidmaster installation guides both specifically warn against in-tank bleach tablets. Use liquid bowl cleaner in the bowl instead.
Not necessarily, but it is a practical opportunity. If the fill valve is old, noisy, or has not been replaced in over 10 years, replacing both simultaneously is efficient since the tank is already drained and accessible. Fluidmaster's 400A fill valve and a matching 502 flapper are a common paired upgrade sold as a tank repair kit at most hardware retailers.
Almost certainly yes. Brief, periodic fill cycles -- sometimes called "phantom flushing" or "ghost flushing" -- occur when a slow flapper leak gradually drops the tank water level until the fill valve triggers a brief refill. Perform a dye test to confirm. If dye appears in the bowl without flushing, replace the flapper.
Flapper replacement is one of the few toilet repairs comfortably within DIY capability for most homeowners. No special tools are required, the process takes under 15 minutes, and the parts cost under $15. A plumber is typically needed only if the flush valve seat is damaged and needs resurfacing or replacement, which requires draining and disconnecting the tank.
Dual-flush toilets (TOTO Aquia IV, Swiss Madison Sublime II, most Woodbridge dual-flush models) use a cylindrical tower valve instead of a hinged flapper. The tower lifts straight up when activated, rather than swinging open on a hinge. The seal is a rubber gasket or O-ring on the bottom of the tower. Replacing it requires removing the entire tower assembly, not just unclipping a flapper.
For an average DIYer, a straightforward flapper replacement takes 10 to 15 minutes from shutting off the water supply to performing the final dye test. Allow additional time if the valve seat needs cleaning of mineral deposits, or if the old flapper ears are stuck on aging overflow tube pegs.
In-tank chlorine bleach tablets are the most common culprit -- they directly contact the flapper and accelerate rubber degradation, sometimes cutting flapper life to under 12 months. In-tank freshener tablets with bleach carry the same risk. Manufacturers including American Standard, Fluidmaster, and Korky all specifically advise against in-tank bleach tablets in their product documentation.
The American Standard Champion 4 OEM flapper (part 7301147-0070A) is available at major home improvement retailers and through American Standard's own parts store. The Fluidmaster 5403 and Korky 3060BP are widely stocked universal alternatives that fit the Champion 4's 3-inch flush valve and are available at most hardware retailers and online.
Significantly. A degraded flapper leaking at 100 gallons per day adds roughly 3,000 gallons per month to water consumption. At national average water and sewer rates, that is a measurable increase in monthly costs. A higher-quality silicone flapper that seals reliably for 8 to 10 years pays for itself many times over compared to a cheap rubber flapper that degrades within 18 months and leaks intermittently for months before the homeowner notices.
Yes, for most Gerber toilets with conventional 2-inch or 3-inch flush valves. The Fluidmaster 502 (2-inch) and 5403 (3-inch) are broadly compatible with Gerber flush valves. However, some Gerber models have a flush handle arm geometry that requires a slightly different chain anchor point to prevent chain interference with the flapper seal. Check the chain position after installation before closing the tank lid.
For most 2-inch flush valve toilets, the Fluidmaster PerforMAX adjustable silicone flapper is the best all-around replacement: chloramine-resistant, adjustable for precise GPF calibration, and widely compatible. For 3-inch flush valve toilets (American Standard Champion 4, TOTO Drake, TOTO Drake II, TOTO UltraMax II), use either the OEM part or the Fluidmaster 5403. For Kohler AquaPiston and TOTO dual-flush tower valves, stop looking for flappers -- you need a canister seal or tower gasket specific to that valve type. Avoid in-tank bleach tablets regardless of which flapper you install, and perform a dye test once a year to catch slow leaks before they inflate your utility bill. A correct flapper installed in 15 minutes is one of the simplest, highest-impact home maintenance tasks available.
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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 Marcus Bell · Last updated July 4, 2026 · Our review method

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