3 Quick Solutions To Fix Your Running Toilet

How To Fix Your Running Toilet Quickly

Let’s face it, no amount of banging and tapping your toilet is going to fix its intermittent running issue. Luckily, each of these quick and simple solutions takes the guesswork out of the equation and gets the job done.

Lower The Float

The number one cause for a running toilet is its float is too high. At the back of your toilet, you will locate its cistern and in there you will find the float. The float of a toilet will dictate its cistern’s water height. 

Lower The Float

When you flush your toilet, the cistern water drops out and cleans your toilet.  It will then be refilled by the water in the pipe. As this happens the float will rise with the water level until they both reach the correct fill level and the water will stop flowing.   

Lower The Float

The fill level should never be higher than the overflow tube and the fill valve of your toilet. If you have a water running issue, this excess water could be the problem. To set your toilet straight, all you have to do is lower the level of the float.

Replace The Flapper

Another common reason why your toilet is running is an old and crusty flapper. What is the flapper you ask? That’s a good question. The flapper is a small rubber stopper that is located at the bottom of your toilet’s cistern.

Replace The Flapper

The flapper is used and abused a lot because its job is to allow water to flow into the toilet bowl after a flush. The other part of its job is to stop water from escaping into the toilet bowl after the cistern has filled back up.

Replace The Flapper

If your flapper has been compromised from a hefty work schedule, over time, its seal won’t be able to stop water from leaking out and into your toilet bowl. 

Replace The Flapper

To replace the flapper, you will need to drain the cistern and close the water supply off to the toilet.

Shorten The Refill Tube

A refill tube that is too long may be able to suck water from the fill valve and straight into the toilet tank. The reason a too-long refill tube makes a toilet run is to do with the refill valve.

Shorten The Refill Tube

The refill valve will be able to suck water out from the fill valve and that is not a good thing. Rectifying this issue isn’t quite as easy a fix as the first two, but it is still very achievable for most people.

3 Quick Solutions To Fix Your Running Toilet