How to Fix a Running Toilet Yourself (And Save on a Plumber)
Slug: how-to-fix-a-running-toilet-yourselfPillar: Practical Living > Home ImprovementKeyword: how to fix a running toilet yourselfTagline: Save time, water, and money with one fixExcerpt: A running toilet wastes up to 200 gallons of water daily. Here's how to diagnose and fix it yourself in under 30 minutes.
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Why Your Toilet Won't Stop Running
A running toilet is almost always caused by one of three things: a worn flapper, a faulty fill valve, or a float that's set too high. The good news? All three are cheap to fix, easy to find at any hardware store, and take under 30 minutes to sort — no plumber required.
Before you do anything, drop 3–4 drops of food colouring into the tank and wait 10 minutes without flushing. If colour appears in the bowl, your flapper is leaking. If the bowl stays clear but the tank keeps filling, your float or fill valve is the culprit.
What You'll Need
You don't need much: an adjustable wrench, a replacement flapper (usually £4–£8), and a sponge to mop up the remaining tank water. Take your old flapper to the hardware store to match the size — most toilets use a 2-inch or 3-inch flapper, but they're not interchangeable.
Step 1: Shut Off the Water
Find the shut-off valve on the wall behind the toilet — it's the oval handle on the supply line. Turn it clockwise until it stops. Flush the toilet to empty the tank, then sponge out whatever's left at the bottom. Dry workspace means no mess when you remove parts.
Step 2: Replace a Leaking Flapper
The flapper is the rubber disc sitting at the bottom of the tank. Unhook its ears from the pegs on either side of the overflow tube and disconnect the chain from the flush lever. If the rubber feels slimy, cracked, or has warped edges, that's your problem right there.
Snap the new flapper onto the same pegs and reattach the chain with about half an inch of slack. Too short and the flapper won't seat properly. Too long and the chain gets caught under it — same result, constant running.
Turn the water back on, let the tank fill, then wait five minutes. Still leaking? Check the chain slack again before anything else.
Step 3: Adjust a High Float
If the food colouring test came back clean but the toilet still runs, your fill valve is letting water rise too high — then it trickles down the overflow tube endlessly. The water level should sit about half an inch below the top of the overflow tube.
On older ball-float toilets, gently bend the float arm downward so the valve shuts off earlier. On newer cup-float models, there's usually a clip or screw on the side — turn it counterclockwise to lower the shutoff point. Flush and watch where the water settles. Repeat until it stops an inch below the tube.
Step 4: Replace a Faulty Fill Valve
If adjusting the float doesn't fix it, the fill valve itself has worn out. Replacement valves cost around £10–£15 and come with instructions. Turn off the supply, flush, and sponge the tank dry. Disconnect the supply line under the tank, unscrew the locknut that holds the fill valve in place, and lift it out. Drop the new one in, hand-tighten the locknut, reconnect the supply line, and you're done.
Honestly, replacing a fill valve is the job most people avoid because it sounds complicated. It takes about 15 minutes and the part costs less than a pint. Worth it.
When to Actually Call a Plumber
If you spot a crack — even a hairline one — on the porcelain tank or bowl, stop. A cracked toilet is a water damage risk. Same goes for persistent leaks around the base after trying these fixes, which usually points to a failing wax ring. Those are worth paying someone for. Everything else? You've got this.
For more home maintenance guides, visit our Practical Living hub and our Home Improvement guides.
FAQ
How much water does a running toilet waste?
A running toilet can waste up to 200 gallons of water per day — roughly 6,000 gallons a month. On a metered supply, that adds up fast.
How long does it take to fix a running toilet yourself?
Most fixes take 15–30 minutes. Replacing a flapper is closer to 10 minutes once you have the right part.
How do I know if my flapper needs replacing?
Do the food colouring test: add a few drops to the tank. If colour appears in the bowl within 10 minutes without flushing, the flapper is leaking.
Can a running toilet fix itself?
No. Running toilets get worse over time. The rubber degrades further, and a failing float or valve can eventually cause an overflow.
What does a replacement flapper cost?
A standard flapper costs £4–£8 at any hardware store. A full fill valve assembly runs £10–£15. Either way, you're spending less than 10% of a plumber call-out fee.










