
Best French Toilets (2026)
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Read the guideA waterlogged or misaligned float ball is one of the most common causes of a running toilet. This guide covers how float balls work, the signs that yours has failed, a step-by-step replacement walkthrough, and the upgrade that most plumbers now recommend instead.
Research updated June 2026.
Replace a toilet float ball when the tank runs continuously, the water level sits more than half an inch off the overflow tube, or the ball feels hollow but logs water. Replacement costs under $10 in parts, takes roughly 20 minutes, and requires no special tools. Most plumbing experts now recommend upgrading to a fill valve with a float cup instead.
A toilet float ball is a buoyant sphere, traditionally made of rubber or plastic, attached to a horizontal arm connected to the fill valve (ballcock) inside the tank. As water rises after a flush, the ball floats upward and physically pushes the valve arm shut when the water reaches the correct level. When the ball drops below the set point -- either because the tank empties during a flush or because water has leaked past the flapper -- the arm tips down, opens the fill valve, and water flows in until the ball rises again and closes it.
Float ball assemblies have been standard equipment in residential toilets for well over a century. You will find them most often in older two-piece toilets from the 1980s and 1990s, and in some budget models still sold today. Brands like Kohler, American Standard, and TOTO shifted to float cup fill valves in most product lines during the early 2000s, so if your toilet is a newer TOTO Drake or American Standard Cadet 3, you likely have a different mechanism. That said, the float ball remains in service in tens of millions of homes across the country.
The fill valve that the ball arm connects to is called a ballcock. The ball arm is threaded or clipped onto the ballcock shaft, and bending or adjusting that arm up or down changes the water level target. The entire assembly -- ball, arm, and ballcock body -- can be replaced as a unit, or you can replace just the ball itself if the ballcock is in good shape.
A running toilet wastes between 200 and 7,000 gallons of water per day depending on severity, according to EPA WaterSense data. Most of those losses trace back to one of two components: the flapper or the fill valve and its float mechanism. Diagnosing which one is failing before reaching for a replacement part saves a second unnecessary trip to the hardware store.
The clearest sign is a toilet that runs continuously or cycles on and off every few minutes without anyone flushing. A second sign is visible water damage to the float ball itself -- cracks, pitting, or a ball that has taken on water and no longer rides at the surface. You can confirm a waterlogged ball by lifting the tank lid and pressing gently on the ball: a healthy float is light and firm, while a waterlogged one feels heavy and may sit partially submerged even when the tank is full.
Here is a full list of symptoms that point specifically to the float ball assembly rather than other tank components:
Before replacing the float ball, rule out the flapper. Drop a few drops of food coloring into the tank and wait 15 minutes without flushing. If color appears in the bowl, the flapper is leaking and you should address that first. If the tank stays colored but you still hear running water, the float assembly is the more likely culprit. For a fuller diagnosis, our guide to how to fix a running toilet walks through all the common causes in order.
Rubber float balls typically last 7 to 12 years in normal tap water, but homes with hard water or high chlorine levels often see failures in as few as 4 to 5 years. Plastic float balls resist chlorine better but can develop hairline cracks that are not visible until you actually feel water sloshing inside them. If your toilet is older than 10 years and you have not replaced any tank internals, replacing both the float assembly and the flapper at the same time is the most cost-effective approach.
Most plumbers recommend replacing the entire fill valve rather than just the float ball, for two reasons. First, if the ball has failed, the ballcock it connects to is roughly the same age and likely has worn seals of its own. Second, modern fill valves with float cups -- such as the Fluidmaster 400A or Korky QuietFILL -- are quieter, more reliable, do not corrode, and are certified to EPA WaterSense efficiency standards in ways that older ballcock assemblies are not. The upgrade costs $8 to $15 and takes about 30 minutes.
That said, there are legitimate reasons to do a ball-only swap. If the ballcock is less than five years old, if the toilet is a rental property unit where you want the fastest possible fix, or if the ballcock body is a proprietary design that is still in production, replacing just the ball is perfectly valid. You can also buy a universal replacement float ball for about $3 to $6 at any hardware store, and the procedure takes under 10 minutes once the tank water is off.
| Feature | Float Ball + Ballcock | Float Cup Fill Valve |
|---|---|---|
| Typical lifespan | 7 to 12 years | 10 to 15 years |
| Noise level | Moderate to loud hissing | Near-silent fill |
| EPA WaterSense compatible | Not typically | Yes (Fluidmaster, Korky) |
| Water level adjustment | Bend arm or turn screw | Twist-and-lock dial |
| Replacement part cost | $3 to $6 (ball only) | $8 to $15 (entire valve) |
| Installation complexity | Very easy (ball only) | Easy (30 min, DIY-friendly) |
| Hard water resistance | Low (rubber degrades) | High (plastic body, no metal arm) |
| Compatibility with modern toilets | Limited (2-inch shank required) | Universal (adjustable height) |
Replacing a toilet float ball takes five steps: shut off the water supply, flush to empty the tank, unscrew the float ball from the float arm, thread on the new ball, restore water, and check the level. No special tools are needed beyond hand strength -- float balls thread on by hand. The whole process takes 10 to 20 minutes for most homeowners.
Locate the shut-off valve on the wall or floor behind the toilet. Turn it clockwise until it stops. If the valve is corroded and will not turn, shut off water at the main house valve instead. If your shut-off valve is stiff or leaking, this is a good time to replace it -- our toilet shut-off valve replacement guide covers that procedure in detail.
Press the flush lever fully down and hold it for a full 3 to 4 seconds to drain as much water as possible. The tank will not refill because the supply is off. Blot any remaining water from the bottom of the tank with a sponge or towel. This keeps the work area dry and prevents water from dripping when you remove the old ball.
The float arm is the horizontal rod extending from the ballcock body (the tall cylindrical or pillar-shaped component connected to the water supply line). The float ball is threaded onto the end of the arm. Look at the threading -- most float balls have a standard 3/8-inch threaded connection and unscrew counterclockwise.
Grip the float ball firmly and turn it counterclockwise. Most balls unscrew by hand. If corrosion has seized the threads, hold the float arm steady with one hand and use adjustable pliers on the ball shank with the other. Avoid twisting the float arm itself, as this can crack the ballcock body. Once the ball is free, inspect the threads on the arm for damage. Light corrosion can be cleaned with a wire brush; cracked or stripped threads mean the ballcock needs replacing too.
Start the new ball onto the float arm threads by hand, turning clockwise. Tighten until snug -- hand-tight is sufficient. Over-tightening can crack the plastic or rubber shank. Confirm the ball is centered on the arm and can swing freely up and down without contacting the tank walls or the overflow tube.
The water level in the tank should sit approximately 1 inch below the top of the overflow tube when full. To raise the water level, gently bend the float arm upward (on older brass arms) or turn the adjustment screw at the ballcock end (on newer plastic arms) clockwise. To lower the level, bend the arm down or turn the screw counterclockwise. Do this before restoring water -- you will fine-tune after.
Turn the shut-off valve counterclockwise to restore water. Watch the tank fill. When the water reaches approximately 1 inch below the overflow tube top, the float ball should rise and close the valve completely -- you will hear the fill sound stop. If the valve keeps running, the arm needs to be adjusted lower. If the tank fills too slowly or the level sits too low, the arm needs to go slightly higher. Flush once and confirm the fill cycle is clean and quiet.
Setting the water level correctly matters beyond just stopping the running sound. On a 1.6 GPF toilet, every additional half-inch of water depth above the correct level adds roughly 0.05 to 0.10 gallons per flush. Over 365 days and 5 flushes per day, that is 90 to 180 extra gallons per year -- wasted water that never reaches the bowl where it could aid flushing power.
Upgrading replaces the entire ballcock and float ball assembly with a single float cup fill valve. Shut off the supply, flush and dry the tank, disconnect the supply line, unscrew the lock nut under the tank, pull out the old ballcock, drop in the new fill valve at the correct height, hand-tighten the lock nut, reconnect the supply, and adjust the float cup to the correct water level. The Fluidmaster 400A is the most widely available universal fill valve and fits virtually all two-piece toilets with a standard 2-inch tank hole.
For a deeper look at fill valve function and brands, our article on the best toilet fill valves compares the Fluidmaster 400A, Korky QuietFILL, and several other models by noise level, durability, and compatibility with low-flow toilets from TOTO, Kohler, and American Standard.
Homeowners replacing a float ball assembly in an older toilet -- say, a 1990s-era 3.5 GPF model -- should also check whether the toilet itself is a candidate for replacement. EPA WaterSense-certified toilets such as the TOTO Drake (1.28 GPF) and Kohler Highline (1.28 GPF) use substantially less water per flush, and MaP testing confirms both move 1,000 grams of solid waste in a single flush. The water savings from replacing the toilet may outweigh the repair cost within a few years, especially in areas with high water rates. See our best flushing toilets guide for current top-rated models.
Fluidmaster and Korky are the two most widely available and consistently reviewed fill valve and float assembly brands in North America. Fluidmaster's 400A fill valve holds a 4.6-star aggregate rating across tens of thousands of owner reviews and is referenced in nearly every major plumbing supply catalog. Korky's QuietFILL line earns similarly high marks for silent operation. For original float ball replacements, Fluidmaster, Korky, and Danco all offer universal rubber float balls with standard thread sizes that fit the majority of older ballcock assemblies.
Fluidmaster 5103 Float Ball -- 3-inch universal rubber ball with standard 3/8-inch thread. Fits most ballcock assemblies made since the 1970s. Rated for use with chlorinated and moderately hard water. Available at virtually all hardware retailers.
Korky 2001BP Float Ball -- Hard plastic construction resists UV and chlorine better than rubber alternatives. Standard 3/8-inch thread. Slightly more buoyant than equivalent rubber balls, which can help close a stiff ballcock arm more reliably.
Danco 88580 Float Ball -- Budget option made of solid polyethylene. Cannot absorb water and will not crack from mineral buildup. A good choice for rental properties or second bathrooms where cost is the main concern.
Fluidmaster 400A Fill Valve -- The most-sold toilet fill valve in North America. Adjustable from 9 to 14 inches to fit all standard tank sizes. Anti-siphon design meets ASSE 1002 standards. Installs in about 30 minutes without tools. Compatible with TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, Woodbridge, Swiss Madison, and Gerber two-piece toilets.
Korky QuietFILL 528 Fill Valve -- Marketed primarily on its near-silent fill cycle. Uses a wider tower float that responds faster to water level changes than a traditional float cup. Adjustable from 7 to 13 inches. A good option for master bathrooms or bedrooms where toilet noise is disruptive at night.
Fluidmaster 400CRP14 Complete Repair Kit -- Includes the 400A fill valve, a 2-inch PerforMAX toilet flapper, and all necessary hardware. If the flapper and fill valve are both overdue for replacement -- which is likely in any toilet older than 10 years -- this kit handles both at the same time for less than buying the parts separately.
For a detailed look at fill valve options ranked by noise, reliability, and compatibility, see our guide to toilet fill valve types and function.
Most post-replacement problems fall into one of four categories:
Tank still runs after replacement -- If the fill sound continues after you have installed a new float ball and the ball rides at the surface, the ballcock diaphragm or washer is worn and the ballcock body itself needs replacing. Alternatively, if you installed a new fill valve and water still runs, confirm the float cup is not set too high -- it should be adjusted so the water line sits 1 inch below the overflow tube.
Water level too low after replacement -- Low water level reduces flush power and can contribute to frequent clogs. Adjust the float arm upward (ball-type) or twist the float cup adjustment dial upward (cup-type). The correct level is 1 inch below the overflow tube, or at the water line mark molded into some tanks. If your toilet was previously clogging frequently, low tank water may have been a contributing factor -- our article on why your toilet flush is too weak covers this in depth.
Fill valve leaking from base after installation -- This usually means the lock nut was not tightened evenly or the rubber cone washer was displaced during installation. Shut off supply, dry the tank, remove and reinstall the valve, making sure the cone washer seats flat against the inside of the tank before threading the lock nut.
Refill tube spraying into tank rather than overflow tube -- Clip the refill tube end to the inside of the overflow tube. If it is not clipped, it hangs free and sprays water into the tank, which can create a slow internal siphon that causes ghost flushing. Some fill valve kits include a clip; if yours did not, a small zip tie around the tube and overflow pipe works identically.
Remove the tank lid and look inside. A float ball is a sphere (usually 3 to 4 inches in diameter) attached to a horizontal arm extending from the fill valve. A float cup is a cylindrical or donut-shaped sleeve that rides up and down directly on the fill valve body without a separate arm. Float cups are standard on virtually all toilets made after roughly 2000.
Technically yes -- if you can identify the entry point (usually a hairline crack near the shank threads), you can dry the ball out, seal the crack with silicone adhesive, and reinstall it. In practice, a new float ball costs $3 to $6 and takes 5 minutes to install, so reusing a waterlogged ball is rarely worth the effort or the risk of a repeat failure within weeks.
Most plumbing associations recommend replacing the flapper every 3 to 5 years and the fill valve or float assembly every 7 to 10 years as preventive maintenance. Hard water areas should use the shorter end of those ranges. Replacing all tank internals at the same time (using a complete repair kit like the Fluidmaster 400CRP14) is more cost-effective than making separate trips as each part fails.
It depends on the cause. If the toilet runs because the float ball is waterlogged and cannot rise to close the fill valve, a new ball will fix it. If the toilet runs because the flapper is leaking -- causing the water level to slowly drop, which then opens the fill valve -- the float ball is not at fault. The dye test described earlier in this guide tells you which component is responsible.
Most residential toilets use a 3-inch float ball with 3/8-inch threads, and universal replacements are made to this size. Some older or commercial units use 4-inch balls. Measure the diameter of your old ball or check the ballcock label before buying. If in doubt, a 3-inch ball fits the vast majority of standard residential tanks.
Float cup fill valves are designed to be universal and adjust in height from about 7 to 14 inches depending on the model, covering virtually all standard tank depths. The only toilets where a standard fill valve will not work are those with proprietary internal configurations, such as some pressure-assist models and certain imported smart toilet tanks. TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, Woodbridge, Swiss Madison, and Gerber standard two-piece toilets all accept universal fill valves.
The water should sit approximately 1 inch below the top of the overflow tube (the open vertical pipe inside the tank). Many tanks also have a water line mark molded or etched into the porcelain. If the water level is at or above the overflow tube, water is constantly draining into the bowl -- a major source of waste. If the level is more than 1.5 inches below the mark, flush power is reduced.
On older brass float arms, gently bend the arm downward to lower the water level (the ball rises sooner relative to the valve) or upward to raise it. Use both hands and bend gradually to avoid cracking the arm. On newer plastic float arms, look for a small adjustment screw at the ballcock end of the arm -- turning it clockwise typically lowers the level, counterclockwise raises it.
Replacing a float ball is one of the most accessible DIY plumbing tasks. It requires no pipe cutting, no soldering, and no specialized tools. The main risk is overtightening components and cracking the tank or ballcock body, which is easily avoided by stopping at hand-tight plus a quarter turn. If you are comfortable shutting off a water valve and following step-by-step instructions, this is a reasonable DIY project.
Not directly -- a bad float ball affects tank water level, not water pressure in the supply line. However, a corroded or partially clogged ballcock (which the float arm connects to) can restrict water flow and cause the tank to fill slowly, which shortens the time available for a full tank to form between back-to-back flushes. If your tank fills in more than 3 minutes, the ballcock or supply line is worth inspecting.
EPA WaterSense certification applies to complete toilet fixtures, not to individual components. However, installing an accurate fill valve that maintains the correct water level ensures your toilet operates at its rated GPF (gallons per flush). An overflowing tank due to a miscalibrated float wastes additional water beyond the toilet's rated usage, undercutting any WaterSense or efficiency benefit the toilet was designed to deliver.
If the running resumes after a float ball replacement, the more likely culprit is now the ballcock itself -- specifically its internal diaphragm or plunger washer, which ages independently of the float ball. At that point, replacing the entire fill valve assembly is a more permanent solution than continuing to replace individual components on an aging ballcock.
If the refill tube is pushed too far down into the overflow tube, it creates a siphon effect that continuously siphons water out of the tank, causing it to run even though the fill valve has shut off. The fix is to pull the refill tube back so its tip sits just above the rim of the overflow tube (or clip it to the outside of the tube). This is a commonly overlooked step that can cause confusion after an otherwise correct fill valve installation.
Yes, though access can be tighter in one-piece models because the tank and bowl are a single unit and there is less room to maneuver inside the tank. The replacement procedure is identical -- the only difference is that some one-piece tanks have a narrower opening that makes lifting out the old ballcock assembly slightly more difficult. Angled pliers can help if space is limited.
A slow-running toilet that trickles water past the overflow tube wastes roughly 200 to 300 gallons per day, according to EPA WaterSense estimates. A more severe running toilet (with the fill valve fully open and water constantly flowing) can waste 4,000 to 7,000 gallons per day. Over a 30-day month, even the minor case adds 6,000 to 9,000 gallons to your water bill -- enough to justify an immediate repair even if the sound is not especially annoying.
Indirectly, yes. If the float ball is set too low, the tank never fills completely before the next flush, resulting in less water volume to drive the siphonic action in the trapway. On toilets that rely on a specific water volume to achieve their MaP flush score -- such as the TOTO Drake II at 1.28 GPF with a 1,000-gram MaP rating -- a reduced tank fill directly undermines that flushing performance.
Technically possible but not recommended. Without shutting off the supply, you risk water spraying as you disconnect the float arm, and you cannot work in a dry tank environment. The shut-off valve takes 3 seconds to close. The small time savings of skipping that step is not worth the risk of a wet bathroom or slipping while reaching into a live tank.
Yes. Pressure-assist toilets (such as those using a Flushmate pressure vessel) use a sealed bladder system with no traditional float mechanism. Wall-hung toilets with in-wall cisterns also use compact cartridge fill valves with no external float. Some tankless electric toilets eliminate the tank entirely. For standard gravity-flush toilets from brands like TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, Gerber, Woodbridge, and Swiss Madison, a float mechanism of some kind is always present.
A stripped or cracked float arm means the ballcock should be replaced in its entirety. A broken arm cannot reliably close the fill valve at any water level, so just replacing the ball will not solve the problem. The complete ballcock and arm assembly are removed and replaced as described in the fill valve upgrade section above, and a modern float cup fill valve is the most practical replacement.
Some TOTO and Kohler models specify a particular fill valve for optimal performance and warranty compliance. The TOTO Drake (CST744SL) and TOTO UltraMax II (MS604114CEFG) use TOTO's TSS series fill valve, available from TOTO's parts catalog. The Kohler Highline and Cimarron use standard-thread fill valves, but Kohler also sells branded replacement kits. For most repairs, a quality universal fill valve works correctly -- but if your toilet is under warranty, check the manufacturer's documentation before installing a third-party part.
A failing toilet float ball is a straightforward and inexpensive repair that every homeowner can tackle in under 30 minutes. A new float ball costing $3 to $6 solves the problem when the ballcock is in good condition. If the ballcock itself is aging or you want a quieter, more reliable solution, upgrading to a Fluidmaster 400A or Korky QuietFILL fill valve for $8 to $15 is the better long-term investment. In either case, fixing a running toilet promptly is one of the highest-return water conservation actions available -- stopping even a slow tank leak can prevent thousands of wasted gallons per month. Correct water level calibration also protects the flushing performance of high-efficiency toilets, ensuring that EPA WaterSense-rated models from brands like TOTO, Kohler, and American Standard deliver the MaP-tested flush performance they were engineered to achieve.
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Researched by Derek Whitman · Last updated June 28, 2026 · Our review method

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