Calculate annual water and cost savings from upgrading to a low-flow or high-efficiency toilet. Compare gallons per flush to see your savings.
Toilets are the single largest water consumer inside the home, accounting for nearly 24% of all indoor use. Older toilets use 3.5 to 7 gallons per flush (GPF), while modern WaterSense-certified high-efficiency toilets (HETs) use just 1.28 GPF or less. The savings potential is enormous — a family of four flushing 20 times per day can save over 16,000 gallons annually by switching from a 3.5 GPF model to a 1.28 GPF unit.
This calculator compares your current toilet's GPF to a replacement model and calculates the annual water savings and dollar value. Enter the number of daily flushes, both GPF ratings, and your water rate to get an instant estimate. The results help you evaluate whether a toilet replacement makes financial sense and how quickly the investment pays back.
Many water utilities offer rebates of $50–$200 for replacing old toilets with WaterSense models, further shortening the payback period. Combined with reduced sewer charges and lower water heating costs (for warm-flush bidets), the total savings make toilet upgrades one of the best conservation investments available.
Toilets account for the most indoor water use, and the gap between old and new models is dramatic. This calculator quantifies the savings so you can compare toilet models, apply for rebates, and prioritize replacements. Precise quantification supports regulatory compliance and sustainability reporting, ensuring that energy data meets the standards required by auditors and industry certification bodies.
Annual Savings (gal) = (Old GPF − New GPF) × flushes/day × 365 Cost Savings ($) = Gallons Saved × Rate per Gallon
Result: $81.03/year
Savings = (3.5 − 1.28) × 20 × 365 = 16,206 gallons/year. At $5 per 1,000 gallons, cost savings = 16.206 × $5 = $81.03/year. A $200 toilet pays for itself in under 2.5 years from water savings alone.
Toilets manufactured before 1980 used 5–7 GPF. The 1992 Energy Policy Act mandated 1.6 GPF. WaterSense introduced the 1.28 GPF standard in 2006. Today, some ultra-high-efficiency models use as little as 0.8 GPF for liquid flushes. If your toilet predates 1994, replacing it could save thousands of gallons per year.
Many water utilities, municipalities, and state programs offer rebates for toilet replacements. Rebates typically range from $50 to $200 per toilet and require proof of WaterSense certification. Check your utility's website or the EPA's WaterSense rebate finder.
Reducing toilet water use decreases the volume of wastewater entering treatment plants, lowering energy consumption and chemical use in treatment processes. Each gallon saved also reduces the strain on local water sources, particularly during drought conditions.
An HET uses 1.28 GPF or less — 20% less than the federal maximum of 1.6 GPF. WaterSense-certified HETs are independently tested for both efficiency and flush performance.
The average person flushes about 5 times per day. A household of four would average 20 flushes daily. Adjust based on your family size and whether anyone works from home.
Yes. Modern HETs use improved bowl design, glazing, and flush mechanisms to clear waste effectively with less water. Look for MaP (Maximum Performance) test scores of 600+ grams.
Add a few drops of food coloring to the tank. Wait 15 minutes without flushing. If color appears in the bowl, the flapper is leaking. A running toilet can waste 200 gallons per day.
No. Since sewer is typically charged based on water usage, your actual savings could be nearly double the water-only figure shown here.
Dual-flush models offer even greater savings by using a lower volume (0.8 GPF) for liquid waste, which accounts for about 75% of flushes. Use our dual-flush toilet calculator for a detailed comparison.