
Best French Toilets (2026)
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Read the guideBought a toilet that does not fit your floor flange? Before returning it or calling a plumber, understand exactly what a rough-in mismatch means and which fix is right for your bathroom.
Research updated June 2026.
If your toilet rough-in is 10 or 14 inches instead of the standard 12, you have three main paths: buy a toilet made for that exact rough-in, use an offset flange extender for a small gap, or move the flange if the gap is large. Returning the toilet and buying the correct size is almost always the simplest and cheapest fix.
The toilet rough-in is the horizontal distance from the finished wall behind the toilet to the center of the floor drain (flange). It determines which toilet models will physically fit against your wall without a gap in front or a tank collision behind. The wrong rough-in measurement means the toilet either juts away from the wall or cannot sit flat over the flange at all.
When a plumber runs your drain line, the position of that floor flange is set before tile or flooring is laid. Once the floor is finished, changing that distance becomes a significant plumbing job. Rough-in size is the single measurement most homeowners forget to check before ordering a replacement toilet, and it is the number-one cause of toilet returns on every major plumbing supply site.
In North American homes built after roughly 1900, the standard rough-in is 12 inches. That dimension is so common that most toilet manufacturers build exclusively to it. However, older homes, additions, and some mobile or manufactured homes use a 10-inch rough-in, and a smaller share use 14 inches. Knowing which one you have before you shop is not optional; it is the entire ballgame.
Published data from the Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Contractors Association shows that roughly 15 to 20 percent of pre-1950 homes in the United States have a 10-inch rough-in. If your home was built before World War II and you are replacing a toilet for the first time, always measure before ordering.
Remove the toilet, then measure from the finished wall surface (not the baseboard) to the center of the floor flange bolts. If the toilet is still in place, measure from the wall to the center of the hold-down bolts visible at the base. Do not measure to the wall tile or trim, and do not measure from studs or drywall that is not yet tiled. Round to the nearest inch; 11.5 to 12.5 inches all count as 12 inches.
The most reliable method requires the toilet to be removed or at least loosened. Once exposed, use a steel tape measure and measure from the finished wall surface (not the baseboard molding, which adds about 0.5 inch) straight to the center of the closet flange. The center is marked by the bolt holes.
Common measurement results and what they mean:
If you measure between 11 and 13 inches, you almost certainly have a 12-inch rough-in. Tile, flooring, and baseboard variations account for the half-inch play on either side. If you measure under 11 inches, assume 10 inches. Over 13.5 inches, assume 14 inches and re-measure to be sure.
One important note: always measure to the finished wall. If tile has been added since original construction, your effective rough-in shrinks by the thickness of that tile (usually 0.375 to 0.5 inch). A home originally plumbed for 12 inches with thick tile added later can measure as 11.5 inches. In that case, you still buy a 12-inch toilet because the flange position has not changed, only the wall surface has moved outward.
Installing a 12-inch toilet on a 10-inch rough-in leaves an unsightly gap between the tank and the wall, creates a rocking or unstable base, and may prevent the toilet from seating properly on the wax ring. A toilet installed more than 1 inch off its intended rough-in is also a leak risk because the wax seal will be offset from center.
The specific problems depend on which direction the mismatch runs:
In both cases, the wax ring seal is the critical concern. Modern wax rings have some tolerance for minor offset, but a wax ring centered on a 12-inch flange while the toilet outlet is designed for a 10-inch position will be pulled to one side. Over time, this causes seepage at the base -- the most common cause of floor rot and subfloor damage in bathrooms. Do not rely on a mismatched installation to hold; the risk is not worth it.
Plumbing code in most jurisdictions (following the Uniform Plumbing Code and International Plumbing Code) requires the wax ring to form a watertight seal. An off-center installation does not technically comply, and some home inspectors will flag it during a sale. Fix the rough-in mismatch before closing on a home sale.
Your main options are: return the toilet and buy one with the correct rough-in measurement, install an offset closet flange to shift the drain center by up to 2 inches, extend a recessed or sunken flange with a flange extender ring, or relocate the drain line as a last resort. The correct option depends on the size of the mismatch and whether the existing flange is in good condition.
This is always the first recommendation for a reason. Major brands including TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, Gerber, and Woodbridge offer popular models in 10-inch, 12-inch, and occasionally 14-inch rough-in versions. The toilet you want likely exists in the dimension you need; you just have to order the correct variant.
Examples of toilets available in multiple rough-in sizes:
| Model | Brand | Available Rough-Ins | Flush System | MaP Score | GPF |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drake II (CST454CEFG) | TOTO | 10, 12, 14 in | Tornado Flush | 1,000 g | 1.28 |
| Highline Classic | Kohler | 10, 12 in | Class Five | 1,000 g | 1.28 / 1.6 |
| Cadet 3 | American Standard | 10, 12 in | PowerWash Rim | 800 g | 1.28 |
| Champion 4 | American Standard | 10, 12 in | Champion 4 Flushing | 1,000 g | 1.6 |
| Cimarron | Kohler | 12 in only | Class Five | 1,000 g | 1.28 |
| Viper | Gerber | 12 in only | Jet Action | 800 g | 1.28 |
| T-0001 | Woodbridge | 12 in only | Dual Flush Siphonic | Not rated | 1.0 / 1.6 |
The TOTO Drake II is the most versatile choice if you are uncertain because TOTO explicitly manufactures and warranties all three rough-in variants under distinct SKUs. When you see a toilet listed as "10-inch rough-in," the manufacturer has changed the trap location, not just added a filler strip. It is a genuinely different unit.
An offset closet flange is a PVC or ABS fitting that replaces your existing floor flange. The drain inlet on an offset flange is shifted to one side, typically by 2 inches, allowing you to move the bolt pattern forward or backward relative to the wall. This is the most practical mechanical fix when the flange itself is in good condition but its position does not match your new toilet.
Key facts about offset flanges:
When to use an offset flange: your toilet is a 12-inch model and your floor flange sits at 10 inches from the wall. The offset flange shifts the center forward 2 inches, placing it at 12 inches. Conversely, if your flange is at 14 inches and your toilet needs 12, the offset pulls it back. Make sure to orient the offset in the correct direction before gluing; it is a one-way commitment once the PVC solvent welds.
A flange extender is not the same as an offset flange. An extender raises the height of an existing flange that sits below the finished floor surface -- a common problem after tile installation adds thickness. It does not move the horizontal position of the drain. If your mismatch is purely a vertical height issue (the flange is recessed), not a rough-in distance issue, an extender kit solves it. Do not buy an extender expecting it to fix a horizontal rough-in mismatch.
If your flange is at 10 inches and you want a toilet that only comes in 12 inches, and no 10-inch model satisfies you, the only remaining option is moving the drain. This is a full plumbing job requiring opening the subfloor, cutting the drain line, installing a new flange at the correct position, and patching everything. Cost in most U.S. markets runs $500 to $1,500 or more depending on access and whether the subfloor needs replacement. Reserve this option for bathroom remodels where the subfloor is already opened, or for situations where no other solution is physically workable.
TOTO, Kohler, and American Standard all manufacture specific 10-inch rough-in variants of their most popular models. The TOTO Drake II (model CST454CEFG.10), Kohler Highline Classic (K-3493), and American Standard Champion 4 (2034.014) are among the most-reviewed 10-inch rough-in toilets, each carrying EPA WaterSense certification and MaP scores of 800 to 1,000 grams.
Shopping for a 10-inch rough-in toilet requires more care because the selection is smaller and some retailers stock only the 12-inch version. The SKU suffix or model number variant is your best signal. TOTO appends ".10" or "N" to 10-inch variants; Kohler includes a "10" in the part number; American Standard designates it in the product title. When ordering online, read the full specifications panel, not just the product title, because titles sometimes omit the rough-in dimension.
For 14-inch rough-in needs, selection is even more limited. TOTO is one of the few major brands that still manufactures 14-inch rough-in versions of current production models (notably the Drake and Drake II lines). Kohler historically offered 14-inch options on the Wellworth line but has largely discontinued them. If you have a 14-inch rough-in and cannot find a suitable new toilet, an offset flange pulling 2 inches back to 12 inches is often the cleanest path.
See our best toilets for 10-inch rough-in and best toilets for 14-inch rough-in roundups for vetted current picks across price points.
No legitimate spacer or adapter product moves a toilet's rough-in distance in a way that is safe and code-compliant for a mismatch larger than about 0.5 inch. Some sellers market "rough-in adapters," but these generally only address flange height, not horizontal position. For a true rough-in mismatch of 2 inches or more, there is no adapter that relocates the drain connection; you must change the toilet or change the flange.
The confusion here often comes from two different but related products: wax ring extensions and flange extenders. Wax ring extensions add height to compensate for a flange that sits slightly below the finished floor. They do not shift the drain laterally. Some thick wax rings (called "double wax" or "extra thick" rings) accommodate up to about 0.375 inch of lateral offset from center, but this is meant to handle imprecise installation alignment, not a 2-inch rough-in mismatch. Using a double wax ring on a 2-inch mismatch is not a safe solution; the ring will be inadequately sealed on one side and may fail within a few years.
The only legitimate adapter that shifts the rough-in is the offset closet flange described above. Everything else you see marketed as a "rough-in adapter" should be examined carefully before purchasing.
Online plumbing forums are filled with DIYers who used oversized wax rings to compensate for a rough-in mismatch and then faced water damage months later. A proper offset flange or a toilet with the correct rough-in costs far less than subfloor repair. Manufacturer published installation guides for TOTO, Kohler, and American Standard all state that the wax ring must be centered on the drain outlet.
Returning a toilet and buying the correct rough-in size costs nothing beyond any restocking fee. An offset flange repair typically runs $150 to $300 including a plumber's labor. Relocating the drain line entirely runs $500 to $1,500 or more depending on subfloor access. Buying the right-sized toilet upfront remains the lowest-cost outcome by a wide margin.
Cost breakdown by solution:
| Solution | DIY Possible? | Typical Cost (Parts) | Typical Cost (Pro Labor) | Covers Mismatch Up To |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Return toilet, buy correct rough-in | Yes | $0 (restocking fee varies) | $0 to $150 for install | Any size |
| Offset closet flange | Intermediate DIY | $15 to $40 | $100 to $250 additional | Up to 2 in |
| Flange extender (height only) | Yes, easy | $8 to $20 | $50 to $100 | Height only (not horizontal) |
| Relocate drain line | No (licensed plumber) | $50 to $200 materials | $400 to $1,400 | Any size |
One often-overlooked cost: many online retailers (Home Depot, Wayfair, Amazon) charge a 15 to 25 percent restocking fee on returned toilets, plus you may pay return shipping for a 75-to-100-pound item. That can easily run $80 to $150 in fees. If you measure before buying, you avoid this entirely. The toilet rough-in measurement guide on this site walks through the exact process step by step -- read it before placing any order.
For a complete look at the top-performing toilets across all rough-in sizes, our best flushing toilets guide includes rough-in filters to help narrow your selection before you buy.
Follow this decision tree if you have already purchased a toilet and it does not fit:
For help identifying your bathroom's drain layout and what affects rough-in positioning, the toilet rough-in guide and our how to measure a toilet rough-in walkthrough both cover the full process with diagrams and common mistakes to avoid.
According to aggregated owner reviews of 10-inch rough-in toilets on major retail platforms, the TOTO Drake II in the 10-inch variant consistently receives the highest ratings for fit accuracy, with reviewers specifically noting that the tank clears the wall with the expected gap described in the specs. American Standard's Cadet 3 in 10-inch gets high marks for value. Both carry EPA WaterSense certification at 1.28 GPF, so you do not sacrifice efficiency by choosing a non-standard rough-in.
No. Rough-in size affects only the physical positioning of the toilet relative to the wall, not flush power or water use. A TOTO Drake II in 10-inch rough-in has identical flush performance (MaP score of 1,000 grams, 1.28 GPF) to its 12-inch and 14-inch counterparts. EPA WaterSense certification and MaP flush-test scores apply to the toilet model as a whole, not to individual rough-in variants.
This is a common misconception. Some homeowners worry that a 10-inch rough-in toilet "flushes differently" because the trap path is slightly repositioned inside the toilet. In practice, manufacturers maintain identical trapway diameter, flush valve size, and tank volume across all rough-in variants of the same model. The MaP testing program, which tests toilets with solid waste simulants up to 1,000 grams, rates the entire model family, and any rough-in variant that carries that rating performs at the same level.
The EPA WaterSense label works the same way. Certification is granted to a toilet model meeting the 1.28 GPF maximum; the label is valid for all rough-in variants of that model unless a specific variant has a different tank volume (which is rare and would be disclosed in the spec sheet).
If flush performance is a priority alongside rough-in compatibility, look for models with MaP scores of 800 grams or higher, a fully glazed trapway with at least 2-inch diameter, and EPA WaterSense certification. The TOTO Drake II, Kohler Highline Classic, and American Standard Champion 4 all meet those benchmarks in their 10-inch and 12-inch variants. For a deeper look at how flush systems are rated and compared, our MaP score guide explains the methodology.
A wrong toilet rough-in size is one of the most fixable problems in bathroom renovation. In the vast majority of cases, returning the toilet and ordering the correct rough-in variant from the same brand costs less time, money, and stress than any mechanical workaround. For the cases where returning is not possible, an offset closet flange handles a 2-inch mismatch reliably when installed by a plumber. Avoid improvised wax ring solutions; the sealing failure that follows is always more expensive than the proper fix done once. Check the rough-in before you buy, and this problem never arises.
12 inches is the standard rough-in for the vast majority of U.S. homes built after 1950. If you do not know your rough-in and your home was built between 1960 and the present, 12 inches is the most statistically likely measurement, but always verify before buying.
Not correctly. A 12-inch toilet on a 10-inch rough-in results in the tank pressing against the wall and the toilet being unable to seat flat on the flange. You need either a 10-inch rough-in toilet or an offset flange that shifts the drain 2 inches forward.
Technically the toilet will mount on the flange, but there will be a 2-inch gap between the tank and the wall. Most homeowners find this gap visually unacceptable and plumbers consider it a non-standard installation. The correct solution is a 12-inch toilet.
On a toilet spec sheet, rough-in refers to the distance from the finished wall to the center of the floor drain. Manufacturers list this as "rough-in: 12 in" or similar. It is different from the toilet's overall depth or footprint.
Measure from the finished wall to the center of the two hold-down (closet) bolts at the base of the toilet. These bolts align with the center of the floor flange beneath. This measurement is accurate to within a quarter inch in most installations.
Yes. Measure from the wall surface, not from the face of the baseboard. Baseboard typically adds 0.5 to 0.75 inch. If you measure to the baseboard, you will get a rough-in that reads smaller than it actually is, which may lead you to order the wrong toilet.
An offset closet flange is a replacement floor flange with its drain inlet shifted 2 inches from center. It is used to reposition the bolt pattern when the existing flange location does not match the toilet's required rough-in by approximately 2 inches. It requires cutting out the old flange and gluing in the new one over the existing drain pipe.
No. Wax rings compensate for vertical height variations (a flange that sits slightly below floor level), not horizontal rough-in distance. Using a thicker wax ring on a rough-in mismatch will result in an uneven seal and eventual leakage. It is not a safe or code-compliant fix.
Yes. TOTO is one of the most complete manufacturers for non-standard rough-ins. The TOTO Drake and Drake II are available in 10-inch, 12-inch, and 14-inch rough-in variants. TOTO designates these with model suffixes such as ".10" for the 10-inch version. Verify the complete SKU when ordering.
Kohler offers the Highline Classic (K-3493) and several other Wellworth-family models in a 10-inch rough-in. However, Kohler's 14-inch rough-in selection has narrowed significantly in recent years. Check the Kohler website directly to confirm current availability for the specific model you want.
Yes. American Standard produces 10-inch rough-in versions of the Cadet 3 and Champion 4. The Cadet 3 in 10-inch rough-in is a widely available, budget-friendly option. The Champion 4 in 10-inch delivers a 4-inch flushing valve and MaP score of 1,000 grams in that same footprint.
No gap is ideal. A toilet installed on its correct rough-in sits with the tank touching or nearly touching the wall, with just enough clearance for tank hardware. Any gap larger than 0.5 inch typically indicates a rough-in mismatch or a toilet model not designed for your floor flange position.
Relocating a floor flange is an intermediate-to-advanced plumbing task requiring proper cuts into the drain line, correct pipe grade, and PVC solvent welding. Many states require a licensed plumber for any work involving drain, waste, and vent systems. Consult local code before attempting this as a DIY project.
No, that is a flange height problem, not a rough-in problem. A flange extender ring (a PVC or rubber sleeve that raises the sealing surface) corrects this. They are inexpensive and install without cutting the drain line. The rough-in distance from the wall is unaffected by flange height.
Most toilet manufacturers including TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, and Gerber specify in their warranty terms that the toilet must be installed per their installation instructions, which include the correct rough-in. Installing a toilet on an incorrect rough-in dimension may void the warranty, particularly if a leak results from the misaligned wax seal.
Most manufactured homes built to HUD standards use a 10-inch rough-in. This is one of the most common sources of rough-in mismatch confusion because homeowners assume 12 inches is universal. If you are replacing a toilet in a manufactured or mobile home, measure first and expect 10 inches.
No. Bowl shape (round or elongated) is an independent dimension describing the front-to-back projection of the bowl from the flange center. It does not affect rough-in. You can have an elongated bowl in a 10-inch rough-in configuration; TOTO Drake II elongated in 10-inch rough-in is one example.
Always check the full specifications table on the product listing, not just the title or main description. Look for "rough-in" or "rough-in size" listed as a specification in inches. If you cannot find that field, look up the model number directly on the manufacturer's website where rough-in is always listed under installation specifications.
No. The rough-in is the distance from the wall to the drain center. The toilet's depth (or overall length) is the front-to-back measurement of the entire toilet, from the wall behind the tank to the front of the bowl. These are different measurements; rough-in is about plumbing; depth is about physical space.
Your options are an offset flange to shift the drain 2 inches (covers most 10-inch or 14-inch to 12-inch conversions), or drain relocation for larger adjustments. Before paying for plumbing work, verify availability across all major brands. TOTO, Kohler, and American Standard together cover most design preferences in 10-inch rough-in. The 14-inch option is genuinely limited; an offset flange pulling back to 12 inches often opens the widest selection.
How we rank & our data sources
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 March 26, 2026 · Our review method

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