
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 guideThe overflow tube is a two-inch standpipe inside your tank that silently prevents a flooded bathroom and restores water to the bowl after every flush. When it is the wrong height, cracked, or misaligned, you get a running toilet, a weak flush, or water on the floor. This guide explains exactly what the overflow tube does, how to diagnose every common failure, and how to fix each one yourself in under fifteen minutes.
Research updated June 2026.
The toilet overflow tube is an open standpipe at the center of the tank that routes excess water into the bowl if the fill valve fails, preventing a flood. It also carries the refill tube that restores the bowl water seal after each flush. Most problems trace to a tube that is too tall, a cracked body, or a disconnected refill tube, all of which are fixable in under fifteen minutes without specialized tools.
Open the tank lid on almost any toilet and you will see a vertical pipe standing near the center, taller than any other component, with a thin rubber or vinyl tube clipped to its rim. That is the overflow tube. It looks passive, and for most of a toilet's life it is. However, once you understand what it does and how it interacts with every other tank part, you realize it controls three separate outcomes at once: it caps the maximum safe water level in the tank, it provides emergency drainage if the fill valve malfunctions, and it replenishes the bowl's water seal after each flush so sewer gases cannot enter the room.
Overflow tube failures cause some of the most common and puzzling toilet symptoms. A toilet that runs constantly, a bowl that refills slowly, a tank that sounds like it keeps trickling water, or a bowl whose water level is always too low, all of these can trace back directly to this one small part or its relationship with the fill valve setting. Because the overflow tube is integral to every EPA WaterSense-certified flush cycle, understanding it is also part of understanding how to keep your toilet at the 1.28 GPF efficiency level it was designed for. For the full picture of how all tank parts work together, the toilet parts explained guide covers every component from supply line to trapway.
All specifications come from manufacturer published technical documentation, parts diagrams, and installation instructions. Water-efficiency data references EPA WaterSense records at epa.gov/watersense. Flush-performance benchmarks reference the Maximum Performance (MaP) testing program at map-testing.com. Owner reliability patterns are drawn from aggregated reviews across major retail platforms. We do not test parts in our own lab.
The overflow tube performs two jobs simultaneously. First, it acts as a safety drain: if the fill valve ever fails to close, water flows down the open top of the tube and into the bowl rather than over the tank rim onto the floor, giving you a running toilet instead of a flooded bathroom. Second, a thin refill tube clips over its rim and directs a small steady stream of water down into the bowl during each refill cycle to restore the water level in the bowl trap, which is the liquid seal that blocks sewer gases from entering your home.
The tube itself is simply a hollow vertical pipe, typically made of PVC or ABS plastic, that is either molded as part of the flush valve assembly or attached to it. In most two-piece toilets, the overflow tube, flush valve, and flapper seat are all one molded unit that bolts through the bottom of the tank. On canister-style flush valves, such as those used in Kohler's AquaPiston system, the overflow tube is still present but integrated into a slightly different profile.
Because the overflow tube is open at the top, any water in the tank that rises above that rim will flow into it and drain away continuously. This is not a flaw. It is intentional protection against a stuck-open fill valve, which would otherwise cause a tank overflow. The tube's height is precisely calibrated at the factory so that the normal operating water level sits about one inch below the rim of the tube.
The relationship between the fill valve's shutoff height and the overflow tube rim height is the single most important adjustment in the tank. According to manufacturer documentation from TOTO, Kohler, and Fluidmaster, the standard guidance is to set the water level so it sits one inch below the overflow tube rim and one inch below any critical level mark on the flush valve body. Even a quarter-inch deviation can mean the difference between a toilet that silently wastes gallons per day and one that operates at its rated 1.28 GPF efficiency.
The most common reason an overflow tube causes a running toilet is that the fill valve's shutoff level is set too high, meaning water keeps rising past the tube rim and draining into the bowl indefinitely. A second cause is a cracked overflow tube itself, where water escapes through the crack rather than being held in the tank until the next flush. Both problems produce the same symptom: the fill valve never fully shuts off because the tank cannot hold water at the proper level.
When water is running down the overflow tube, it often makes a distinct sound: a steady, high-pitched hiss or a faint trickling that you can hear even with the tank lid on. To confirm that the overflow tube is the path, remove the tank lid and observe the water surface. If water is visibly flowing over the rim of the tube and disappearing down inside it, you have a water level that is set too high relative to the tube.
To fix a high-water-level running toilet, you simply lower the fill valve's shutoff height. On a modern cup-float fill valve such as the Fluidmaster 400A or any current Kohler, TOTO, or American Standard fill valve, you adjust the height by turning a dial or pinching and rotating the float cup on the valve body. The adjustment should bring the water level to one inch below the overflow tube rim. On ball-and-arm style fill valves found in older toilets, you bend the brass arm gently downward to lower the float's cutoff position. After adjustment, flush the toilet and watch the refill: the fill valve should close completely, water should stop flowing, and the tank surface should be still.
| Symptom | Likely Overflow Tube Cause | Fix | Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Toilet runs continuously | Water level above tube rim | Lower fill valve float setting | Easy (5 min) |
| Toilet runs continuously | Cracked overflow tube | Replace flush valve assembly | Moderate (30 min) |
| Bowl water level too low | Refill tube disconnected from tube | Clip refill tube back onto rim | Easy (2 min) |
| Slow bowl refill after flush | Refill tube kinked or too short | Straighten or replace refill tube | Easy (5 min) |
| Tank water level too high | Fill valve not adjusted after tube install | Readjust fill valve float | Easy (5 min) |
| Hissing noise from tank | Water trickling over tube rim | Lower fill valve float setting | Easy (5 min) |
| Intermittent running (ghost flush) | Water slowly rising to tube rim from worn flapper | Replace flapper, then recheck water level | Easy (10 min) |
The correct overflow tube height keeps its open rim approximately one inch below the underside of the tank lid and also one inch above the normal operating water level in the tank. If you measure from the bottom of the tank, the tube should be roughly one inch shorter than the critical level mark on the fill valve, which is itself calibrated to the maximum safe water level. Tubes that are too tall cause water to flow into the bowl before the tank has accumulated enough volume for a full-power flush; tubes that are too short allow dangerous water levels that can warp tank lids or spill onto the floor in a fill valve failure.
Most overflow tubes on modern toilets are either fixed-height or adjustable. Fixed-height tubes are molded at the correct dimension for the specific toilet model, so as long as you install the correct replacement flush valve, the height will be right. However, aftermarket universal flush valve assemblies often include an adjustable overflow tube with a locking ring or a telescoping section that you snap to the correct height before installing. Getting the height wrong on a universal replacement is one of the most common installation mistakes.
To measure the correct height for an adjustable tube:
TOTO Drake and Drake II models use a fixed-height overflow tube molded into the flush valve unit, so the tube height is not adjustable and is always correct for those models if you use the genuine TOTO flush valve. Third-party replacements for TOTO valves sometimes have slightly different heights, which can shift the effective water level and reduce flush performance. Kohler Highline, Cimarron, and Cimarron Comfort Height models similarly use Kohler-specific flush valve assemblies where the overflow tube geometry is part of the overall design.
Plumbing industry guidance from the Uniform Plumbing Code requires the overflow tube to terminate below the tank lid so it cannot be blocked. The purpose is ventilation: the tube must remain open to atmosphere to drain freely. Some early compact toilet designs placed the overflow tube so close to the tank lid that condensation or a slightly warped lid would partially seal the tube opening, reducing emergency drainage capacity. If your tank lid sits unusually close to the tube opening, note this during any future fill valve replacement.
A cracked overflow tube cannot be patched reliably because tank water is constantly in contact with it and plumbing sealants do not bond permanently to wet PVC in that environment. The correct fix is to replace the entire flush valve assembly, since the overflow tube is almost always molded into the flush valve body as a single unit. The repair requires draining the tank, disconnecting the flapper chain, unscrewing the flush valve lock nut beneath the tank, and installing a new assembly, which takes most homeowners 20 to 35 minutes.
Before buying a replacement flush valve, identify whether your toilet uses a standard flapper-seat style or a canister-style design. The vast majority of two-piece toilets, including the American Standard Cadet 3, American Standard Champion 4, Gerber Viper, and most Woodbridge models, use a standard flapper seat that accepts universal replacement flush valves in 2-inch, 3-inch, or 4-inch sizes. Match the diameter to your existing valve unless you are deliberately upgrading to a larger valve for better flush performance.
For TOTO Drake, TOTO Drake II, and TOTO Ultramax II two-piece models, TOTO recommends using OEM replacement flush valve assemblies because these toilets are designed around specific internal water volumes and flow rates that their MaP 1,000 gram scores depend on. Using an off-brand replacement may hold water correctly but can alter the flush dynamics enough to reduce performance. The same applies to Kohler's AquaPiston canister, which is only interchangeable within Kohler's own canister family.
The most common mistake in flush valve replacement is overtightening the lock nut. Tank porcelain is rigid but brittle, and cracks develop silently at the bolt hole before appearing as visible fractures weeks later. Published installation instructions from Fluidmaster specify hand-tight plus a maximum one-quarter turn with tools. If you feel resistance before a quarter turn, stop. A properly seated spud washer seals on compression from that small torque, not from being cranked down.
When the refill tube disconnects from the overflow tube, all the refill water that is supposed to run down into the bowl trap instead falls into the tank bottom and goes nowhere useful during refill. The result is a bowl whose water level is noticeably lower than normal after each flush, which means the water trap is shallower than it should be and sewer gases can begin entering the bathroom. The fix takes about two minutes: just clip the refill tube back onto the overflow tube rim so water runs down into the tube and into the bowl.
The refill tube should always rest on the rim of the overflow tube rather than being inserted deeply inside it. A refill tube pushed several inches down inside the overflow tube creates a siphon effect under some conditions that can partially drain the tank back into the bowl after the fill valve closes, causing the fill valve to cycle on again shortly after it shuts off. This is a very common cause of intermittent running in otherwise healthy toilets. Fluidmaster's published installation instructions specify that the refill tube clip should sit at the top of the overflow tube with the tube end just inside the rim, not deep inside the column.
If your bowl water level is consistently low, check the refill tube clip first before assuming the fill valve is defective. In many cases the clip has simply slipped off the tube rim during a prior tank lid removal. A low bowl water level is also worth investigating because it reduces the effectiveness of the toilet's siphon action during the next flush, which can affect how completely the bowl clears and may show up as a slightly reduced effective MaP performance even on a toilet rated for 1,000 grams. For more context on how bowl water level affects flush quality, see the guide on how to increase toilet bowl water level.
Yes. An overflow tube that is set too low relative to the fill valve's shutoff height limits the effective tank water volume, because water drains into the bowl through the tube before the tank accumulates enough for a full flush. The toilet may still flush, but it delivers less water volume than its rated GPF, which directly reduces the force available to clear the trapway. This is one of the non-obvious reasons a toilet can flush noticeably more weakly after a flush valve replacement that used a slightly shorter aftermarket tube.
The EPA WaterSense program certifies toilets at their rated GPF, typically 1.28 GPF for High-Efficiency Toilets (HETs). That certification was tested with the overflow tube at its designed height. If the tube is shorter than intended, the effective flush volume drops below 1.28 GPF, weakening the flush. If the tube is taller than intended, the tank fills to a higher level and technically delivers more than rated water per flush, which wastes water. Both deviations move the toilet away from its certified optimum.
This is one reason models like the TOTO Drake, TOTO Aquia IV, and Kohler Cimarron use flush valve assemblies where the overflow tube height is a fixed part of the design rather than a field-adjustable element. The manufacturer has calibrated the tube height to the tank dimensions and fill valve cutoff point to produce the rated flush volume and the MaP performance claimed on the product. For a ranking of which toilets consistently deliver those MaP scores in real-world conditions, the best flushing toilets guide covers the top performers across all major brands.
When a toilet is new and flushes strongly but gradually becomes weaker over years without any obvious failure, one underappreciated cause is mineral scale building up on the inside of the overflow tube, narrowing its internal diameter. The refill tube delivers water at low volume, but minerals in hard water leave deposits that slowly constrict the tube bore and reduce refill flow to the bowl, ultimately leaving the bowl with a shallower water seal. Descaling the overflow tube interior with white vinegar during a tank cleaning session is a simple preventive step. See the guide on how to clean a toilet tank for the full procedure.
Because the overflow tube is integral to the flush valve assembly, each major brand has a slightly different design philosophy that affects how and why issues arise.
TOTO's flush valve assemblies use a fixed-height overflow tube molded in ABS plastic. The refill tube on TOTO toilets clips to the outside of the overflow tube rim using a small plastic elbow adapter. Owner reports across aggregated reviews consistently indicate that TOTO flush valves are among the most durable of any major brand, with refill tube clips occasionally working loose after tank lid removals but the flush valve body itself rarely cracking. TOTO recommends original replacement parts (THU174, THU176, or model-specific codes) to preserve the Drake's MaP 1,000 gram certification. Aftermarket universal flush valves with a different tube height can reduce that performance by changing the effective flush volume.
Kohler's AquaPiston canister flush valve, found on most Highline, Cimarron, and several other Kohler comfort height models, integrates the overflow tube into the canister housing. The tube geometry is different from a standard flapper-seat valve: the overflow protection is built into the canister body structure. Kohler's published parts documentation lists the AquaPiston canister as a serviceable replacement unit. The refill tube on Kohler toilets is slightly shorter than on many other brands, and some owners report that the clip loosens more easily on the Kohler-style overflow tube rim, particularly in very hard water areas where mineral deposits affect the clip's grip. Kohler's warranty covers manufacturing defects including flush valve body cracks for the stated warranty period, which varies by product line.
American Standard's Champion 4 uses a 4-inch diameter flush valve with a corresponding wider overflow tube compared to standard 3-inch or 2-inch designs. The larger tube diameter means a slightly greater overflow flow rate in an emergency, but it also means the tank-bottom hole is larger and replacement requires an American Standard-specific flush valve rather than a generic universal part. The Cadet 3 uses a 3-inch flush valve with a more standard tube profile. Both models use a clip-on refill tube that attaches to a dedicated nozzle on the fill valve and routes to the overflow tube rim. American Standard's Fluidmaster-based fill valves on newer Cadet 3 and Champion 4 production units are field-adjustable within a documented range.
Woodbridge T-0001 and similar modern one-piece designs typically use standard 3-inch flush valve assemblies with a fixed-height overflow tube. Swiss Madison's St. Tropez and St. 2049 use a dual-flush tower actuator design where the overflow tube concept still exists but is embedded within the tower mechanism rather than being a freestanding tube, which makes the tube itself less accessible for inspection. Gerber's Viper and Ultra Flush models use standard two-piece flapper-seat valve designs with adjustable overflow tubes on their universal flush valve kits. For any of these brands, the diagnosis and adjustment process for overflow tube height follows the same steps outlined earlier in this guide.
| Brand / Model | Flush Valve Type | Overflow Tube Type | Tube Height | Aftermarket Compatible | Check Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TOTO Drake / Drake II | 3-inch flapper seat (G-Max) | Fixed-height ABS, molded in | Fixed (OEM only) | Limited (may reduce MaP score) | Check price |
| TOTO UltraMax II | 3-inch flapper seat (Double Cyclone) | Fixed-height ABS | Fixed (OEM only) | Limited | Check price |
| TOTO Aquia IV | Dual-flush tower | Integrated in flush tower | Fixed | TOTO OEM only | Check price |
| Kohler Highline / Cimarron | AquaPiston canister | Integrated in canister body | Fixed (Kohler spec) | Kohler canister replacements | Check price |
| Am. Standard Champion 4 | 4-inch flapper seat | Fixed-height, wide diameter | Fixed (Am. Std. specific) | American Standard only | Check price |
| Am. Standard Cadet 3 | 3-inch flapper seat | Fixed-height ABS | Fixed | Universal 3-inch compatible | Check price |
| Gerber Viper | 2-inch flapper seat | Adjustable on aftermarket | Adjustable | Universal 2-inch compatible | Check price |
| Woodbridge T-0001 | 3-inch flapper seat | Fixed-height ABS | Fixed | Universal 3-inch compatible | Check price |
Adjusting the water level in your tank is one of the most straightforward toilet repairs there is, but it is frequently misunderstood because people adjust the fill valve without first measuring the overflow tube rim height, which means they may inadvertently set the water level either too high or too low for the tube that is actually installed. The correct sequence is:
This process is also described in the how to adjust toilet water level guide alongside fill valve replacement instructions for cases where the fill valve itself is too old or worn to hold a reliable adjustment.
One important note: adjusting the water level up to increase flush power has limits. You can raise the tank water level until it approaches the overflow tube rim, but you cannot raise it above the rim, because water will simply drain away continuously. If your toilet still flushes weakly even with the water level correctly set one inch below the tube rim, the issue is elsewhere: a worn flapper that opens slowly, a partially clogged trapway, or a flush valve that is undersized for the bowl. In those cases, a flush valve upgrade or toilet replacement may be the more practical fix. For diagnostic help, the weak toilet flush fix guide covers all the causes systematically.
Most overflow tube problems resolve with a float adjustment or a flush valve replacement, and neither repair is expensive. However, there are situations where the overflow tube issue is a symptom pointing toward a larger decision about whether to repair or replace the toilet altogether.
If the overflow tube is cracked as a result of a cracked flush valve body, and the flush valve body crack extends to or through the porcelain tank itself, no plumbing repair can fix a cracked tank. A cracked porcelain tank is not structurally repairable and the toilet must be replaced. Similarly, if the toilet is more than fifteen years old, has a 3.5 GPF or 5 GPF tank (a design from before the 1992 federal Energy Policy Act mandated 1.6 GPF maximum), and the flush valve assembly is failing, replacing the toilet rather than the valve is usually the smarter investment. A new toilet rated at 1.28 GPF and EPA WaterSense certified will save a typical household approximately 13,000 gallons of water per year compared to a pre-1992 model, according to EPA estimates. For guidance on which current models deliver the best combination of flush power and water efficiency, the guide to the best flushing toilets covers every major brand.
On newer toilets in the three-to-ten-year range from TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, or Gerber, a flush valve replacement that costs under thirty dollars and takes half an hour is almost always the right choice. These brands are designed for modular part replacement, and their overflow tube assemblies are readily available through plumbing supply sources and major retailers.
The overflow tube is a hollow vertical pipe standing near the center of the toilet tank. It has two functions: it acts as an emergency drain, routing water into the bowl if the fill valve fails to close, and it carries the refill tube that restores the bowl water level after each flush.
Water runs down the overflow tube when the fill valve's shutoff level is set too high, meaning the tank fills past the tube rim. The fix is to lower the float adjustment on the fill valve until the water settles one inch below the tube rim. If adjustment does not stop the flow, the fill valve itself may be stuck open and need replacement.
The correct water level is one inch below the rim of the overflow tube. This is a standard specification published by fill valve manufacturers including Fluidmaster, TOTO, and Kohler. Water at or above the tube rim will drain continuously, wasting water and preventing a proper full-tank flush.
Yes. If the overflow tube is shorter than the manufacturer intended, water begins draining into it before the tank accumulates the rated flush volume. The toilet flushes before the tank is full, which reduces the hydraulic force available and can lower effective performance below the toilet's MaP-tested rating.
That is the refill tube, a thin rubber or vinyl tube that runs from a nozzle on the fill valve to the rim of the overflow tube. During each refill cycle, it carries a small flow of water down into the overflow tube and then into the bowl to refill the bowl's water trap after a flush.
Often yes. The most likely cause is that the refill tube has slipped off the overflow tube rim, meaning the refill water falls into the tank instead of into the bowl. Check that the refill tube clip is seated on the rim of the overflow tube, not inserted several inches down inside it.
Lift the tank lid and look for water streaks, mineral deposits, or visible hairline cracks on the tube body below the water line. You can also shut off the water supply, drain the tank, dry the overflow tube exterior, and feel along the entire body for any crack or soft spot. A cracked tube cannot be patched and the flush valve assembly should be replaced.
In almost all toilets, the overflow tube is molded integrally with the flush valve body as one piece. You cannot replace just the tube. The correct repair is to replace the entire flush valve assembly, which includes the overflow tube, the valve seat, and the flapper mounting ears. Aftermarket flush valves with adjustable overflow tubes cost under thirty dollars at most hardware stores.
Indirectly, yes. An overflow tube that is set to the correct height ensures the tank fills to exactly its designed volume before each flush, maintaining the toilet's rated GPF. A tube that is too short results in under-filling, wasting flush power without saving water overall because a second flush is often needed. EPA WaterSense certification is based on the tube and valve at their designed settings.
If the fill valve closes but you still hear hissing, water may be slowly rising to the overflow tube rim due to a leaking flapper. The flapper allows tank water to seep into the bowl, the level drops slightly, the fill valve opens briefly to compensate, and this cycle produces intermittent hissing. Replacing the flapper usually resolves it. Confirm by adding a few drops of food coloring to the tank and checking whether color appears in the bowl without flushing.
Yes. Dual-flush tower designs such as those in the TOTO Aquia IV or Swiss Madison models integrate overflow protection into the flush tower mechanism itself rather than using a freestanding tube. The functional principle is the same, but the tube is not visible or field-adjustable as a separate component. Dual-flush tower repairs generally require replacing the tower unit rather than an overflow tube.
If the fill valve fails and water is rising toward the tank rim, the overflow tube will handle moderate over-fill by routing water to the bowl. However, if the bowl drain is also blocked or the overflow tube is undersized for the flow rate, shut off the supply valve immediately. Turn the oval or round handle at the wall behind the toilet clockwise until it stops. This is the fastest way to stop any toilet overflow from progressing to a floor flood.
Technically you can install a universal 3-inch flush valve in a TOTO Drake or Drake II tank, but TOTO does not recommend it and the practice may reduce flush performance. TOTO calibrates the overflow tube height, tank volume, and flush valve release rate together to achieve the toilet's rated MaP 1,000 gram score. An aftermarket assembly with a slightly different tube height shifts the effective flush volume and can move actual performance below the rated level.
The overflow tube is plastic and does not move, so it has no mechanical wear mechanism. In most toilets it will outlast the fill valve and flapper, often lasting the full life of the toilet, which is typically fifteen to thirty or more years under normal conditions. The most common failure modes are cracks from physical impact during tank lid handling, UV degradation in tanks without lids, or chemical degradation from aggressive toilet tank cleaners containing bleach tablets left in continuous contact with the plastic.
The refill tube should rest on the rim of the overflow tube with the tube opening just inside the top, not inserted deeply into the column. Inserting it several inches inside the tube creates a siphon condition that can drain tank water back into the bowl after the fill valve closes, causing the fill valve to cycle on again and producing intermittent running. Fluidmaster's published installation instructions specify the clip-on-rim method specifically to prevent this.
You need an adjustable wrench or large pliers for the flush valve lock nut beneath the tank, a sponge and bucket to remove remaining tank water, and optionally a utility knife to cut a refill tube to length if the new assembly's tube is too long. No specialty plumbing tools are required. The complete repair including draining, replacing, and testing typically takes 20 to 35 minutes for someone doing it for the first time.
Yes. Continuous contact with highly concentrated bleach from in-tank bleach tablets degrades PVC and ABS plastic over time, including the overflow tube, flapper, and refill tube. This is a documented failure mode acknowledged by manufacturers including Kohler, TOTO, and American Standard, and it typically voids warranty coverage for the affected parts. Bowl cleaner strips that hang on the rim rather than sitting in the tank are a safer alternative for ongoing cleaning.
Phantom or ghost flushing is usually caused by a leaking flapper that slowly drains the tank until the water level drops enough to trigger a partial fill cycle, not by the overflow tube directly. However, if the overflow tube is set slightly below the fill valve's shutoff point due to a misadjusted float, the water level can creep up to the tube rim and drain slowly into the bowl, mimicking a flapper leak. Check both the flapper and the water-to-tube-rim distance when diagnosing ghost flushing.
The bowl water seal, the standing water you see in the bowl, is restored after each flush by the refill tube clipped to the overflow tube rim. When the tank refills, the refill tube carries a portion of that incoming water down through the overflow tube and into the bowl to rebuild the trap. Without this secondary flow, the bowl trap would remain depleted after flushing, which allows sewer gases to enter the bathroom through the trapway.
A float adjustment to fix water running over the overflow tube rim is a straightforward DIY task that takes about five minutes and requires no tools. Replacing the entire flush valve assembly is a moderate DIY job that most homeowners complete in under an hour following the step-by-step process above. A licensed plumber is worth calling if the tank itself is cracked, if the floor flange or supply line is also in need of service, or if the toilet is a wall-hung model where tank access is more complex.
The toilet overflow tube is a small part that does a large job: it protects your bathroom from flooding, maintains your bowl's water seal, and anchors the water level that determines every flush's power. Most overflow tube problems reduce to two simple fixes: lowering the fill valve float to stop water running over the rim, or clipping the refill tube back onto the rim to restore the bowl water level. When the tube itself is cracked, replacing the flush valve assembly is a straightforward DIY repair on every major brand from TOTO Drake to Kohler Highline to American Standard Cadet 3. Spending fifteen minutes on this repair instead of ignoring it preserves the water efficiency and MaP flush performance the toilet was designed to deliver.
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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 28, 2026 · Our review method

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