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Problem Solving • Plumbing Guide

Toilet Supply Line Types: Which Is Best? (Braided, PVC, Chrome)

A detailed breakdown of every supply line material, connection style, and length so you can pick the right one the first time and never deal with a slow drip behind the tank again.

Why Trust Best Flushing Toilets

Research updated June 2026.

Quick Answer

Braided stainless steel supply lines are the best choice for most bathrooms: they resist corrosion and cracking, tolerate pressure spikes, and last 8 to 10 years with zero maintenance. PVC accordion lines are fine for temporary fixes. Chrome corrugated lines work in exposed settings where looks matter, but they are the most vulnerable to fatigue cracks.

The toilet supply line is a roughly 12-inch stretch of flexible tubing that connects the shut-off valve on the wall to the fill-valve inlet at the bottom of your toilet tank. It handles constant water pressure between 40 and 80 PSI every hour of every day, so the material it is made from determines how long it lasts, how likely it is to fail catastrophically, and how easy it is for a homeowner to install without a plumber. Yet most buyers spend more time choosing a toilet seat than a supply line.

This guide covers every supply line type available, from the ubiquitous braided stainless steel hose to corrugated chrome, rigid PVC, and the increasingly common polymer-reinforced varieties, with real specification data, failure-mode analysis, and practical buying advice tied to specific toilet brands including TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, Woodbridge, Swiss Madison, and Gerber.

For context on the overall toilet system, see our guide to best flushing toilets, which covers how fill valves, flush valves, trapways, and supply connections all work together. You can also find more detail on how to choose a toilet supply line and step-by-step instructions in our toilet supply line replacement guide.

What Are the Main Types of Toilet Supply Lines?

The four main types of toilet supply lines are braided stainless steel, corrugated chrome (or chrome-plated brass), rigid PVC accordion, and reinforced polymer-braided lines. Each uses a different material for the outer jacket and inner liner, which drives differences in pressure rating, corrosion resistance, flexibility, and service life.

Braided stainless is the current industry standard for residential use. Chrome corrugated and PVC accordion are older formats still common in repair kits and budget installs. Reinforced polymer lines occupy a middle ground and are growing in popularity for slab-on-grade homes where rigid pipes are common.

Type Inner Liner Outer Shell Max PSI Rating Typical Lifespan Corrosion Risk Best Use
Braided Stainless Steel EPDM or PVC 304 stainless mesh 150-250 PSI 8-10 years Very Low All standard residential installs
Corrugated Chrome Lead-free brass Chrome-plated brass 125 PSI 5-8 years Moderate (pitting) Exposed vanity or pedestal installs
Rigid PVC Accordion PVC PVC ribbed 80-100 PSI 3-5 years Low (chemical only) Temporary repairs, very low pressure
Reinforced Polymer-Braided EPDM Nylon/polyester braid 125-175 PSI 6-9 years Very Low Humid climates, coastal areas
Corrugated Stainless (OEM) None (solid SS) Corrugated 316L SS 200+ PSI 10-15 years Negligible High-end installs, commercial

PSI ratings above are manufacturer-published burst or working-pressure specs. Residential water pressure is typically 40-80 PSI; the CPSC recommends a pressure-reducing valve if your supply pressure exceeds 80 PSI, which extends the life of every flexible hose in your home regardless of type.

Why Is Braided Stainless Steel the Most Recommended Supply Line?

Braided stainless steel supply lines combine an EPDM rubber inner liner with a woven 304-grade stainless steel outer mesh jacket, giving them a burst pressure of 150 to 250 PSI depending on the manufacturer, far above the 40-80 PSI typical in residential supply lines. The stainless jacket prevents UV and moisture attack on the EPDM core and adds mechanical protection against kinks and abrasion.

Insurance data and plumbing trade literature consistently show braided supply lines fail less frequently than PVC or chrome alternatives, which is why every major toilet manufacturer, including TOTO, Kohler, and American Standard, ships installation instructions that recommend braided stainless connections.

The inner liner material matters as much as the jacket. Higher-quality braided lines use EPDM rubber, which remains pliable from -40 to 212 degrees Fahrenheit and resists chlorine degradation from treated municipal water. Cheaper lines use a plain PVC core, which can become brittle in 5 to 7 years, especially in warm crawlspaces or mechanical rooms where temperature swings are common.

Look for these specifications when buying a braided line:

  • 304 or 316 stainless steel braid (316 is preferred for coastal or hard-water environments)
  • EPDM inner liner (not PVC, not rubber-substitute)
  • Brass or chrome-plated brass end nuts, not plastic
  • NSF/ANSI 61 certification for drinking-water safety
  • Working pressure rating of at least 125 PSI
Expert Take

Plumbing inspectors consistently flag two failure points on braided supply lines: the crimped ferrule at each end where the stainless braid meets the brass fitting, and the inner liner at the bend closest to the shut-off valve. When buying a replacement, flex the hose near each end before installing it; any stiffness or cracking in that zone means the EPDM has already degraded. Spend a few extra dollars on a braided line with a clear or translucent jacket so you can see the inner liner condition during annual visual checks.

When Should You Choose a Chrome Corrugated Supply Line Instead?

Chrome corrugated supply lines, made from chrome-plated lead-free brass, are the best aesthetic choice when the supply line is visible, such as on a pedestal sink, console table, or exposed-tank toilet where the area behind the toilet is open to view. The polished chrome surface matches chrome toilet flush handles and exposed shut-off valves, creating a finished look that braided stainless cannot match.

The trade-off is durability: chrome-plated brass is susceptible to pitting corrosion in hard-water or coastal areas, and the corrugated profile creates stress concentration points that can develop slow pinhole leaks after repeated pressure cycling. In a code-compliant install where the supply line is not under a vanity cabinet, chrome corrugated is a reasonable choice; in a concealed install, braided stainless is safer.

Chrome corrugated lines are sold in both 3/8-inch compression-to-7/8-inch ballcock and 1/2-inch FIP-to-7/8-inch ballcock configurations. The corrugations allow the line to be bent to fit awkward angles without requiring additional fittings, which is one reason plumbers have used them for decades. However, every bend slightly fatigues the metal, so avoid bending a chrome line more than once during installation, and never re-bend an existing line after it has been under pressure.

Brands like Watts, Fluidmaster, and BrassCraft all sell lead-free chrome corrugated lines certified to NSF/ANSI 61. The Watts A-109 series, for example, is a lead-free brass line with a 125 PSI working pressure rating and a manufacturer-stated 5-year warranty.

Expert Take

If you choose chrome corrugated for aesthetic reasons, apply a thin layer of plumber's grease to the compression threads before tightening. Chrome fittings are more susceptible to galling than brass, and galling at the shut-off valve connection is the most common cause of slow leaks on corrugated installs. Also check the chrome surface annually for any white or green pitting, which indicates the plating has failed and the underlying brass is oxidizing.

Are PVC Accordion Supply Lines Safe to Use?

PVC accordion supply lines, sometimes called ribbed or pushpull lines, are safe for temporary use but are not recommended for permanent residential installations because PVC becomes brittle over time when exposed to chlorinated water, cleaning chemicals, and temperature cycling. Most PVC accordion lines carry a working pressure rating of only 80 to 100 PSI, which leaves little safety margin when residential pressure spikes during demand surges.

Their main advantage is universal adjustability: the accordion ridges can be compressed or extended to fit rough-in distances from 9 to 20 inches without cutting, and no tools are needed for the plastic slip-nut fittings. This makes them useful for emergency repairs when a correct-length braided line is not available, but a braided stainless replacement should be installed within a few weeks.

PVC accordion lines are sold at every hardware and home improvement store for a very low price, which explains their popularity. The plastic slip nuts require only hand-tightening, reducing the risk of overtightening and cracking the fill-valve inlet nut on toilets with plastic fill-valve bodies, including many current Kohler Highline and American Standard Cadet 3 models.

One legitimate use case for PVC accordion lines is in situations where the rough-in distance is non-standard, such as a toilet moved during a bathroom remodel or a rough-in closer to 8 or 9 inches from the wall. In those cases, a universal accordion line can bridge an awkward gap while you order a correctly-sized braided line.

Do not use PVC accordion lines in any of these situations:

  • Water pressure above 80 PSI
  • Areas with chloramine-treated water (chloramines degrade PVC faster than chlorine)
  • Mechanical rooms or crawlspaces with high temperature variation
  • Any install where the line will be concealed for years without inspection
  • Vacation properties where slow leaks go undetected for weeks

What Is a Reinforced Polymer-Braided Supply Line and Who Needs One?

Reinforced polymer-braided supply lines use an EPDM inner core wrapped in a woven nylon or polyester outer braid rather than stainless steel mesh. Because the polymer jacket does not contain metal, these lines will not corrode even in high-humidity, salt-air coastal environments or in areas with well water that has a low pH. They are the correct choice when stainless steel corrosion is a documented concern, such as in beach homes or properties with iron-rich well water.

Their burst pressure (125 to 175 PSI depending on the manufacturer) is lower than premium braided stainless lines but comfortably above residential supply pressures, and their EPDM core provides the same flexibility and chemical resistance. Brands like SharkBite, Eastman, and Fluidmaster all offer NSF 61-certified polymer-braided lines.

Homeowners in Florida, Hawaii, and coastal regions of the Carolinas frequently report premature corrosion of stainless-braided lines due to the combination of salt air and high humidity. While 304 stainless resists most residential conditions, 316-grade stainless is the step up for salt environments, and polymer-braided is the definitive solution for the most aggressive coastal settings.

Polymer-braided lines are also preferred in properties using well water with a pH below 6.5, where the mild acidity can degrade the zinc content in brass fittings over time. In that scenario, choose a polymer-braided line with 316 stainless or all-polymer end nuts where possible, or use a whole-house water filter to neutralize the pH before the water reaches any toilet hardware.

How Do You Measure and Choose the Right Length Supply Line?

Measure from the center of the shut-off valve outlet to the center of the fill-valve inlet at the bottom of the toilet tank. Add 1 to 2 inches for the natural curve the hose needs to avoid kinking, then round up to the next standard size. Standard braided supply line lengths are 9, 12, 16, 20, and 24 inches; most floor-mounted toilets with standard rough-in distances of 12 inches from the wall use a 12-inch line.

A line that is too short creates tensile stress on the end fittings and is the leading cause of fitting-joint leaks. A line that is too long coils tightly behind the tank, which causes kinks and restricts water flow to the fill valve. When in doubt, buy one size longer and route the excess in a gentle curve rather than forcing a tight bend.

Supply line length sizing by toilet type:

  • TOTO Drake / Drake II / UltraMax II: The fill-valve inlet on TOTO toilets typically sits 6 to 7 inches from the floor. With a standard 12-inch rough-in, a 12-inch braided line fits cleanly. For the TOTO Aquia IV (a wall-hung design), supply line routing is handled differently; see the Aquia IV installation manual for tank-to-wall connection specs.
  • Kohler Highline / Cimarron: Both models have the fill-valve inlet at roughly 7 inches from the floor. A 12-inch line works for standard rough-in; use 16 inches if the shut-off valve is positioned lower on the wall.
  • American Standard Champion 4 / Cadet 3: The Champion 4's larger tank positions the fill-valve inlet slightly higher. American Standard specifies a 7/8-inch ballcock nut on the inlet; confirm your line's coupling nut matches before purchasing.
  • Woodbridge T-0001: This one-piece toilet has the supply line connection at the rear-bottom of the unit. Woodbridge ships a 12-inch braided line with most T-0001 packages, but owners often replace it with a 16-inch line if the shut-off valve is not directly behind the toilet.
  • Swiss Madison Ivy / Clarence: Swiss Madison's tankless and wall-hung designs require supply connections to the in-wall carrier, not a traditional floor shut-off, so standard supply lines do not apply.
  • Gerber Viper / Avalanche: Standard 12-inch braided lines fit both models at 12-inch rough-in installations.

Supply Line Connection Types Explained

The connection type at each end of the supply line must match both the shut-off valve outlet and the fill-valve inlet. Mismatched fittings are the most common reason homeowners return supply lines or end up with improvised adapters that eventually leak.

At the Shut-Off Valve (Wall End)

  • 3/8-inch Compression: The most common residential connection. A brass compression nut slides over the supply line tube and compresses a brass or brass-alloy ferrule onto the valve stem. No thread sealant is needed; the ferrule creates the seal. This is the standard outlet on angle stops throughout North America.
  • 1/2-inch FIP (Female Iron Pipe, also called 1/2-inch FPT): Found on some older angle stops and on straight stop valves. Requires thread sealant or PTFE tape on the male threads of the supply line. Less common than compression but still found in pre-1990s homes.
  • 7/16-inch Compression: A smaller diameter used on some European-standard valves and on certain bidet attachments. Uncommon in standard toilet installs.
  • 1/2-inch NPT: Tapered pipe thread, found on some commercial shut-off valves. Requires sealant.

At the Fill Valve (Tank End)

  • 7/8-inch Ballcock Slip Nut: The universal residential standard. A plastic or brass slip nut with a nylon or rubber washer threads onto the fill-valve shank below the tank and compresses the washer to form a seal. No tools needed; hand-tight plus a quarter-turn with pliers is sufficient.
  • 3/8-inch Compression (Tank End): Found on some older Fluidmaster fill valves and on a few OEM fill valves. Less common than the ballcock slip nut on current production toilets.
  • 7/8-inch to 1/2-inch Adapter: Some braided lines include a universal coupling that accepts both 7/8-inch ballcock and 1/2-inch FIP tank connections. Handy if you are unsure of your fill-valve shank diameter.

If your shut-off valve does not have a 3/8-inch compression outlet, a conversion adapter is available at any plumbing supply store. However, if the existing shut-off valve is over 15 years old, a more reliable option is to replace the entire shut-off valve while the water is off. See our guide to the best shut-off valves for toilets for specifics.

How to Install a Toilet Supply Line Without a Leak

The vast majority of supply line leaks are caused by one of three installation errors: overtightening, undertightening, or cross-threading. Here is the correct procedure regardless of which supply line type you choose.

  1. Turn off the water. Close the angle stop valve on the wall by turning it clockwise until it stops. Flush the toilet once to drain the tank. Confirm the tank is empty before proceeding.
  2. Remove the old line. Use an adjustable wrench on the compression nut at the wall end and a second wrench to hold the valve body steady. Do not let the valve body spin; spinning can crack the solder joint behind the wall. At the tank end, the slip nut should unthread by hand or with gentle plier pressure.
  3. Inspect both connection points. Look for corrosion, cracks, or deformed threads at the shut-off valve outlet and the fill-valve shank. Replace either component if damaged. See our fill-valve guide for how to replace a toilet fill valve if the shank is damaged.
  4. Thread on the tank end first. Hand-thread the 7/8-inch ballcock slip nut onto the fill-valve shank. The washer inside the nut does the sealing; do not use thread sealant here. Once hand-tight, give it a quarter-turn with pliers. Stop. Do not go further.
  5. Connect the wall end. Hand-thread the compression nut onto the shut-off valve outlet. Once hand-tight, use a wrench to tighten to one to one-and-a-half turns past hand-tight. Compression fittings require this specific torque; overtightening deforms the ferrule and creates micro-cracks.
  6. Open the supply slowly. Turn the angle stop counterclockwise only half a turn initially. Watch both connection points for 60 seconds. Then open the valve fully. Dry any water from around the connections and wait 24 hours before confirming no leak.
Expert Take

The single most common DIY mistake with supply lines is using Teflon tape on compression fittings. Compression fittings seal by mechanical deformation of the ferrule against the valve seat, and Teflon tape on the threads does nothing to improve that seal while making it harder to tighten to the correct torque. Save the tape for tapered pipe thread (NPT) connections only. For the ballcock slip nut at the tank, the rubber washer is the seal; no tape, no compound.

Best Supply Line Brands by Category

The supply line market is dominated by a handful of companies whose products are carried by every major home improvement retailer. Quality differences between brands are real and documented in plumbing trade literature.

Premium (Best Long-Term Value)

  • Fluidmaster 9W12: Braided stainless with a heavy EPDM core, 150 PSI burst rating, NSF 61 certified. This is the go-to line for plumbers doing production new-construction work where speed and reliability both matter. Available in 9, 12, 16, and 20-inch lengths.
  • SharkBite (Reliance Worldwide): Polymer-braided lines with a 125 PSI working pressure rating and 316L stainless end fittings. The SharkBite brand is well-regarded for consistent quality control across production batches.
  • Watts Regulator (A-109 Series): Lead-free brass corrugated lines for exposed installs. NSF 372 lead-free certified. The A-109 series has a published 5-year warranty, one of the longest in the corrugated category.

Reliable Mid-Range

  • BrassCraft ST17-12 C: Braided stainless with brass end nuts. Widely available at hardware stores. EPDM inner liner. A solid choice for rental-property installs where cost is a factor but quality still matters.
  • Eastman (by Watts): Polymer-braided lines at a lower price point than the SharkBite line. NSF 61 certified. Often sold as a two-pack, which is useful for bathroom remodels where multiple toilets are being updated.
  • Korky QuietFILL: Korky is better known for fill valves and flappers, but their braided supply lines are made to the same NSF standards and carry a 10-year warranty on the EPDM liner.

Budget / Temporary Use Only

  • Everbilt (Home Depot house brand): PVC-core braided lines sold at low prices. Adequate for low-pressure systems and short-term use. The inner PVC liner degrades faster than EPDM in chlorinated water.
  • Plumb Craft / Generic accordion PVC: Use only as a temporary emergency repair. Replace within 30 to 60 days with a braided stainless line.

Supply Line Compatibility by Toilet Brand

Most toilets use standard 7/8-inch ballcock inlets and 3/8-inch compression shut-off valves, so a standard braided line fits almost everything. Exceptions exist and are worth knowing before you buy.

TOTO Toilets: All current TOTO Drake, Drake II, UltraMax II, and Aquia IV models use a 7/8-inch ballcock inlet. TOTO fill valves (typically the Fluidmaster 400A or TOTO's own TSU99A.X) have a standard 7/8-inch shank. A standard 12-inch braided stainless line from any reputable brand fits all current TOTO two-piece models. For the TOTO Neorest, the supply connection is inside the skirting and is handled during installation per TOTO's published diagrams.

Kohler Toilets: Kohler Highline, Cimarron, Memoirs, and Wellworth models all use standard 7/8-inch ballcock inlets. The Kohler Veil intelligent toilet requires a dedicated supply connection that Kohler specifies in the Veil installation manual; do not use a generic supply line here without consulting the manual.

American Standard Toilets: The Champion 4, Cadet 3, Boulevard, and Edgemere all use standard 7/8-inch inlets. One nuance on older Champion 4 models (pre-2015) is that the fill-valve shank occasionally has minor dimensional variation that causes some slip nuts to seat poorly; if you encounter a slow drip at the tank connection, try a Fluidmaster or American Standard OEM line which is produced to tighter tolerances for this model.

Woodbridge Toilets: The Woodbridge T-0001 uses a standard 7/8-inch fill-valve inlet. Woodbridge ships a 12-inch braided line with most T-0001 packages, but the plastic slip nut on the included line has drawn criticism in owner reviews; many owners replace it immediately with a Fluidmaster or BrassCraft line featuring a brass slip nut.

Swiss Madison: Wall-hung Swiss Madison models (Ivy, Clarence) supply water through the in-wall carrier, not a floor-mounted angle stop. For floor-mounted Swiss Madison toilets such as the St. Tropez, the supply inlet is standard 7/8-inch ballcock.

Gerber Toilets: The Gerber Viper, Avalanche, Maxwell, and Ultra Flush all use standard 7/8-inch ballcock inlets with no brand-specific exceptions. Gerber toilets are particularly common in Midwest plumbing contractor work, and plumbers in that market overwhelmingly prefer Fluidmaster braided lines for these installs based on aggregated contractor surveys.

How Water Quality Affects Supply Line Lifespan

Supply line longevity is not just a function of the material; your local water chemistry plays an equally important role. Understanding how water quality interacts with each line type helps you make a smarter buying decision for your specific situation.

Hard Water (High Mineral Content): Hard water with calcium and magnesium above 150 mg/L (classified as hard to very hard by the USGS) accelerates scaling inside the supply line and at the fill-valve inlet. PVC and EPDM inner liners are not chemically affected by mineral scale, but scale buildup can restrict flow and cause the fill valve to run longer per flush cycle, increasing water use. Flushing the line annually with white vinegar (by briefly disconnecting the tank end) removes scale before it restricts flow. The toilet fill valve guide has more on diagnosing fill rate issues caused by scale.

Chlorinated Municipal Water: Standard municipal treatment with free chlorine at 0.5 to 4 mg/L (the EPA maximum residual disinfectant level for chlorine) does not significantly degrade EPDM liners within 10 years. However, utilities that have switched from free chlorine to chloramine (chlorine combined with ammonia) have documented faster EPDM degradation: chloramines permeate rubber faster than free chlorine. If your utility uses chloramines, replace braided lines every 5 to 7 years rather than waiting for 8 to 10 years.

Well Water with Low pH: Well water with a pH below 6.5 can slowly leach zinc from brass fittings (a process called dezincification), leaving a porous, weakened brass matrix that eventually fails at the compression joint. Signs of dezincification include a pink or reddish discoloration on brass fittings and white powder buildup around the compression nut. If your well water tests below pH 6.5, use polymer-braided lines with stainless or polymer end nuts, or install a whole-house neutralizer.

Iron-Rich Water: High iron content (above 0.3 mg/L, the EPA secondary standard) stains everything it touches orange but does not directly attack supply line materials. The real problem is iron bacteria, a biofilm that can colonize inside supply lines and fill valves. If you notice orange or brown deposits inside your tank after cleaning, flush and replace the supply line and fill valve together.

When Should You Replace a Toilet Supply Line?

Supply lines do not last forever, and proactive replacement is far cheaper than water damage remediation. Here are the benchmarks from plumbing trade organizations and published manufacturer guidance.

  • Braided stainless: Replace every 8 to 10 years, or sooner if you see any rust coloring in the braid, bulging of the stainless jacket, or wetness at either fitting.
  • Chrome corrugated: Replace every 5 to 8 years. Inspect annually for pitting or white deposits on the chrome surface, which indicate that the plating is failing.
  • PVC accordion: Replace within 3 to 5 years, or immediately if you see any yellowing, cracking, or stiffness in the PVC body.
  • Polymer-braided: Replace every 6 to 9 years. Inspect the polymer jacket for fraying or UV bleaching.
  • Any line that has been kinked: Replace immediately. A kink creates a stress concentration point that will eventually fail, often suddenly.
  • Any line in a home you recently purchased: If you do not know the age or history of existing supply lines, replace them as part of your first-year maintenance. The cost is minimal and the peace of mind is significant.
Expert Take

A burst supply line behind a toilet is one of the most common sources of household water damage claims. The Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety found that non-weather water damage, a category that includes supply line failures, is the second most common home insurance claim type by frequency. A braided stainless supply line costs less than five dollars at a hardware store. Replacing all toilet supply lines in a home during a bathroom update is one of the highest-ROI preventive maintenance tasks available to homeowners.

Frequently Asked Questions

What size supply line do most toilets use?

Most residential toilets use a 3/8-inch compression fitting at the shut-off valve and a 7/8-inch ballcock slip nut at the fill valve. The most common hose length for a 12-inch rough-in installation is 12 inches. Always measure from the shut-off valve outlet to the fill-valve inlet before purchasing to confirm the correct length for your specific installation.

Can I use a kitchen faucet supply line on a toilet?

You can if the connection diameters match, but it is not recommended. Kitchen faucet supply lines are typically 3/8-inch compression to 1/2-inch FIP, while toilet fill valves use a 7/8-inch ballcock inlet. The pressure ratings are compatible, but using a mismatched line with adapters adds unnecessary connection points where leaks can develop. Buy a line specifically labeled for toilet supply use.

How tight should a toilet supply line be?

At the tank end (7/8-inch ballcock slip nut), hand-tight plus a quarter-turn with pliers is correct. At the wall end (3/8-inch compression), one to one-and-a-half full turns past hand-tight with a wrench is the standard. Overtightening a compression fitting deforms the brass ferrule and creates micro-cracks that eventually weep. Overtightening the ballcock slip nut cracks the plastic fill-valve shank on toilets with plastic fill valves, which are the majority of current production models.

Do I need Teflon tape on a toilet supply line?

No Teflon tape is needed on compression fittings or on 7/8-inch ballcock connections. Both connection types seal by mechanical compression of a ferrule or rubber washer, not by thread-to-thread contact. Using Teflon tape on a compression fitting does not improve the seal and can interfere with achieving the correct torque. Use Teflon tape only if you have a 1/2-inch NPT or FIP threaded connection at the shut-off valve, which is uncommon on modern angle stops.

What is the difference between a 3/8-inch and a 1/2-inch supply line connection?

The 3/8-inch measurement refers to the outer diameter of the compression seat on the shut-off valve outlet; the 1/2-inch measurement refers to a pipe thread fitting (FIP or NPT) found on some older valves. Both fittings are available on braided supply lines; you buy the version that matches your angle stop. If you are not sure which you have, bring the old supply line to the hardware store for comparison. Angle stops installed after 2000 are almost universally 3/8-inch compression.

How do I know if my supply line is leaking?

The earliest sign is a faint mineral deposit or white powder ring around either connection point when you wipe the fitting dry. A slightly damp nut without visible dripping is called a weep, and it will eventually become a drip, then a flow. Check behind the toilet monthly by running your finger along each fitting and under the hose bend closest to the shut-off valve. Any moisture that cannot be explained by condensation means the line needs replacement.

Can a supply line cause a toilet to run constantly?

A supply line itself does not cause a running toilet, but a kinked supply line can restrict water flow to the fill valve, causing the fill cycle to run much longer than normal, which sounds like a running toilet. If your fill cycle consistently takes more than 90 seconds and water pressure to other fixtures is normal, inspect the supply line for any kinks or tight bends that may be restricting flow.

What is the best material for a toilet supply line in a coastal area?

Polymer-braided supply lines with EPDM cores and 316 stainless or all-polymer end fittings are the best choice for coastal areas where salt air accelerates corrosion of standard 304 stainless steel braided lines. SharkBite and Eastman both offer coastal-grade polymer-braided lines. If you prefer stainless, confirm the braid is 316-grade (sometimes labeled marine-grade) rather than 304-grade stainless.

Does the supply line affect toilet flushing performance?

A properly functioning supply line of any type does not affect flush performance because it feeds water to the tank during refill, not during the flush itself. The flush draws water from the tank, which refills from the supply line only after flushing is complete. However, a kinked or clogged supply line that causes very slow refill times will increase the interval between usable flushes in high-traffic bathrooms.

Are plastic supply line nuts safe to use?

Plastic ballcock slip nuts at the tank end are very common and are included with most fill valves and supply lines. They are safe when properly torqued, meaning hand-tight plus a quarter-turn. The failure point for plastic nuts is overtightening, which cracks the nut body and creates a sudden rather than gradual leak. If you have a history of overtightening hardware, buy a line with brass slip nuts to reduce this risk.

How long does it take to replace a toilet supply line?

Replacing a toilet supply line is a 10 to 20-minute task for a homeowner with basic plumbing confidence. The steps are: turn off the angle stop, flush the toilet, disconnect both ends of the old line, install the new line, and turn the water back on slowly while checking for leaks. No special tools are required beyond an adjustable wrench. The job takes longer the first time; subsequent replacements on the same toilet typically take 10 minutes or less.

What happens if I buy a supply line that is too short?

A supply line that is too short cannot accommodate the natural curve between the shut-off valve and the fill-valve inlet without going taut. A taut line pulls on both connection points, creating tensile stress on the compression ferrule at the wall end and on the fill-valve shank at the tank end. This is one of the most common causes of slow leaks at both connections. Always add 1 to 2 inches to your raw measurement and round up to the next standard size.

Can I reuse an old supply line after a toilet replacement?

Reusing an old supply line is not recommended if it is more than 5 years old or if you cannot determine its age. The disruption of disconnecting and reconnecting a line stresses the inner liner and the ferrule in ways that can cause a previously leak-free line to weep afterward. Given the low cost of a new braided stainless line, replacing the supply line every time you disturb the toilet connection is the most practical preventive measure.

Is there a water-saving benefit to supply line type?

The supply line itself does not affect water consumption; water use is determined by the flush valve (GPF rating, EPA WaterSense certification) and the fill valve. However, a supply line with restricted flow from kinks or scale buildup can cause the fill valve to run longer than designed, adding fractional water waste per cycle. Maintaining clear, properly routed supply lines is one small part of a broader water-efficiency strategy alongside choosing WaterSense-certified 1.28 GPF toilets.

What causes supply lines to leak at the wall connection?

The most common causes of leaks at the wall compression connection are an improperly seated ferrule (usually from undertightening during installation), a deformed ferrule from previous overtightening, and corrosion of the valve seat itself on older angle stops. If you replace the supply line and the leak persists at the wall connection, the angle stop valve seat is likely corroded and the valve should be replaced. Our guide to the best shut-off valves covers valve selection for replacement.

Are there lead-free requirements for toilet supply lines?

Yes. The 2014 amendments to the federal Safe Drinking Water Act require that all wetted components in plumbing products for potable water use must contain no more than 0.25 percent lead by weighted average. This is the NSF 372 lead-free standard. All supply lines sold in the United States for potable water applications must meet this standard. Look for NSF 372 or NSF 61 certification on the packaging or product label; these certifications are your assurance of compliance.

How do supply lines differ for pressure-assist toilets?

Pressure-assist toilets (such as those using Sloan Flushmate cartridges, found in some American Standard and Gerber models) operate at higher internal tank pressures. The supply line connection is still standard 7/8-inch ballcock at the inlet, but the flow rate requirement during refill is higher because the Flushmate cartridge must pressurize quickly. Flushmate's published installation guidelines recommend using a braided stainless line with a full-port angle stop valve (not a restricted-flow stop) to ensure adequate refill flow.

What is the difference between an angle stop and a straight stop supply connection?

Angle stops (the most common residential toilet shut-off valve) come out of the wall perpendicular to the wall surface and direct water at a 90-degree angle down toward the floor. Straight stops come out of the floor pointing straight up. Both typically have 3/8-inch compression outlets, so standard supply lines work with both. The difference matters for routing: an angle stop installation usually requires a shorter supply line (12 to 16 inches) while a straight stop (floor-mounted) may need a longer line or a different routing path depending on toilet model height.

Should I replace the supply line when I replace the fill valve?

Yes, replacing the supply line whenever you replace the fill valve is strongly recommended by plumbing trade organizations. Both components have similar lifespans, and the water is already turned off for the fill valve replacement. Installing a new line at the same time guarantees you start a fresh clock on both components, and the incremental cost is minimal compared to the cost of a callback repair if the old supply line fails six months later.

Sources

  • EPA WaterSense program, epa.gov/watersense
  • MaP flush testing database, map-testing.com
  • NSF International, NSF/ANSI 61 and NSF 372 drinking water standards, nsf.org
  • CPSC water pressure guidelines, cpsc.gov
  • Manufacturer published installation specifications: TOTO, Kohler, American Standard, Woodbridge, Swiss Madison, Gerber, Fluidmaster, Watts Regulator
  • Flushmate pressure-assist installation requirements, sloan.com
  • USGS water hardness classification, usgs.gov
  • Insurance Institute for Business and Home Safety, non-weather water damage research, ibhs.org
  • EPA secondary drinking water standards (iron), epa.gov
  • EPA maximum residual disinfectant levels, epa.gov

Our Verdict

For the overwhelming majority of residential toilet installations, a braided stainless steel supply line with an EPDM inner liner, 304 or 316 stainless mesh jacket, brass slip nut, and NSF 61 certification is the correct choice. It outperforms PVC accordion lines on pressure rating and longevity, outperforms chrome corrugated on corrosion resistance, and is available at every hardware and home improvement store for a low cost. Match the length to your rough-in measurement plus 1 to 2 inches of curve allowance, confirm the connection types at both ends before purchasing, and replace the line proactively every 8 to 10 years to avoid water damage. For coastal or well-water environments, step up to polymer-braided; for exposed installations where aesthetics matter, chrome corrugated is a reasonable choice with annual visual inspections.

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 June 28, 2026 · Our review method

D
Researched by Derek Whitman

Derek researches plumbing specifications, installation requirements and parts availability, cross-checking manufacturer claims against owner-reported reliability. Rankings are based on documented data and real owner reports, never paid placement.

Updated June 2026 · Toilets
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