In this guide, I’ll walk you through draining without a mess, diagnosing and correcting flange height, choosing the right wax ring, securing the bowl so it never rocks, upgrading the shutoff and supply, and finishing the job so it looks sharp and stays leak‑free for years.
What a “Perfect” Toilet Install Looks Like
Before touching a wrench, it helps to define success. A proper install meets four standards:
- Zero leaks at the base, tank bolts, and supply connections.
- Zero wobble—the bowl is firmly supported and transfers load into the floor, not the bolts.
- Correct flange height—flush with the finished floor or up to 1/4 in. higher.
- Clean finish—square to the wall, tidy bolt caps, a neat escutcheon at the supply, and a sanitary seal at the base.
Hit those four, and you’ve done the job like a real plumber.
Tools and Materials I Actually Use
- 5‑gal bucket (filled before shutting the water off)
- Wet/dry vacuum with a narrow nozzle
- Adjustable wrench and/or two good crescent wrenches
- Mini hacksaw or oscillating tool (for trimming closet bolts)
- Flat and Phillips screwdrivers
- Utility knife and a handful of paper towels or rags
- Nitrile gloves and safety glasses
- Plastic cup or removable test plug (to block sewer gas)
- Closet bolts (I prefer 5/16 in. over 1/4 in.), with brass washers and caps
- Wax ring(s): standard height and/or extra‑thick; consider hornless for full bore
- Plastic bolt retainers (the little “keepers” that hold bolts upright)
- Flange extender or a twist‑and‑set/repair flange (used judiciously; more on that below)
- Stainless or brass screws and anchors to secure the flange
- Plastic toilet shims (and optional sanded grout for final lock‑in)
- 1/4‑turn angle stop (if the existing shutoff is old), escutcheon, and a new braided supply line
- 100% silicone for the perimeter bead at the base
Step 1: Kill the Water and Empty Without the Mess
A toilet holds more water than most people realize—both in the tank and down in the bowl’s trapway. Two quick pro moves prevent drips into the room below:
- Shock‑flush the bowl. Fill your bucket while water is still on. Then close the angle stop, flush the toilet, and immediately pour the bucket rapidly into the bowl. That surge overpowers the trapway and clears most of the water.
- Vacuum the rest. Use a wet/dry vac to remove the remaining water from the tank and bowl. Tank water is generally clean. Emptying both parts now cuts the weight, the smell, and the mess.
Pro tip: Put down towels and a large trash bag where you’ll set the old toilet. The bag makes wax cleanup painless.
Step 2: Lighten the Load—Separate the Tank
On most two‑piece units, the tank detaches via two or three bolts. Back the nuts off, support the tank with one hand, and lift it straight up. Set it aside on a towel. The bowl alone is roughly 50 lbs—much easier to maneuver through a doorway without bumping trim.
Step 3: Pull the Bowl and Protect the Home
Remove the caps and nuts from the closet bolts. Rock the bowl gently side‑to‑side to break the wax seal, then lift with your legs and set it on the prepared bag. Remember: there’s a hole through the floor around the flange. Any leftover water can run into the ceiling below if you slosh it, so keep things controlled.
Step 4: Block Sewer Gas (and Don’t Forget to Remove It)
Drop a plastic cup or a soft test plug into the opening. The goal is to stop sewer gas while you work—and to be sure you can retrieve the plug later. Avoid stuffing rags deep into the pipe; they’re easy to lose. Leave a bright reminder note near your bolts so you don’t forget to pull the cup before setting the new bowl.
Step 5: Inspect the Flange, Ring, and Floor
This is where many installs go wrong.
- Flange height: The top of the flange must be flush with the finished floor or up to 1/4 in. higher. If a remodel added tile or leveling compound, that flange might now be “below grade,” and no amount of wishful thinking will save a low flange from leaks.
- Flange integrity: Look for cracks, missing bolt ears, or corroded metal rings that won’t hold closet bolts securely.
- Floor condition: Swollen subfloor and “waterproof” laminate that swells at the edges tell a story—there’s no such thing as truly waterproof wood‑based laminate. If the floor is soft, address that first. A toilet anchors into the structure; it can’t fix a spongy floor.
Step 6: Choose the Right Flange Fix (Be Picky)
When the flange sits too low, you’ve got two broad options:
- Extender rings that stack on top of the existing flange to bring it up to finished floor height. These maintain full pipe diameter when done right and can be sealed with silicone between layers.
- Twist‑and‑set repair flanges with a rubber gasket that expands inside the pipe. These are fast, but they reduce the inside diameter a bit. That reduction can be fine in some cases, but I’m deliberate about where I use them. If your line is already 3 in. and you add a thick funnel‑style wax ring, you can choke the opening further. If you choose a twist‑and‑set style, align it perfectly, expand evenly, and verify bolt alignment at the 9 and 3 o’clock positions.
Whichever method you pick, the repair must finish flush to 1/4 in. proud. That single rule prevents a huge percentage of base leaks.
Step 7: Lock the Flange to the Floor
Movement breaks seals. After your flange height is corrected:
- Anchor it. Pre‑drill through the flange and into the subfloor or concrete and use stainless/brass screws and proper anchors.
- Set the closet bolts. Slide each bolt into its slot and use the small plastic keepers to hold them upright. I like installing the keeper on the bolt before sliding the bolt into the slot; it forces the keeper down into the channel and locks the bolt more rigidly.
- Size up the hardware. Upgrading to 5/16‑in. closet bolts adds strength and makes it easier to snug the bowl down without stripping threads.
Step 8: Upgrade the Shutoff and Supply (If It’s Old)
If your angle stop is decades old, this is the time to replace it. Most toilet supplies are compression connections:
- Back off the old compression nut while holding the valve body with a second wrench.
- Remove the old nut and ferrule if you can; a gentle ferrule puller is ideal. If you can’t pull it, carefully score the ferrule and pop it free without nicking the copper.
- Slide on a new nut and ferrule and install a modern 1/4‑turn shutoff. I prefer crescent wrenches over toothy pliers to avoid scarring chrome.
- Finish with a clean escutcheon at the wall or floor penetration—it’s a small part that makes the install look professional.
Leave the new valve closed for now.
Step 9: Pick the Correct Seal: Wax, Height, and Horns
Wax rings come in two main heights and with or without a plastic funnel (horn):
- Standard vs. extra‑thick: If your flange is exactly where it should be (flush to +1/4 in.), a standard ring is usually perfect. If the flange is slightly low even after repairs, an extra‑thick ring can compensate—but don’t use wax to “solve” a seriously low flange. Fix the flange first.
- Horn vs. hornless: A horn can help centering, but it also narrows the passage at the flange. On 3‑in. lines—especially if you used an inside‑expanding repair flange—I often choose hornless to preserve full bore.
Lay the wax ring on the toilet outlet, not on the flange. It’s easier to aim, and the ring doesn’t get knocked out of position.
Step 10: Set the Bowl the Pro Way
Time to land the plane:
- Dry‑fit once. Hover the bowl over the bolts, line up the holes, and visualize the descent.
- Commit. Lower straight down in one shot, dropping the bowl onto the wax without twisting.
- Seat the wax. Sit on the bowl and shift your weight front to back, side to side. This compresses the wax evenly.
- Eliminate wobble before tightening. If the floor isn’t perfectly flat, use plastic shims at the low points until the bowl is stable. Only then snug the nuts—alternating sides, a few turns at a time. Tight is good; overtight cracks porcelain.
- Trim and cap. When snug, mark the bolts just above the nuts, remove the nuts, trim the bolts with a mini hacksaw, reinstall washers and nuts, then press on the caps.
If you feel bounce or rock after snugging, stop, back off the nuts, adjust shims, and try again. Bolts are not there to pull a crooked floor true; they’re there to hold a stable bowl in place.
Step 11: Tank, Seat, and Water Connection
If you’re working with a two‑piece toilet:
- Tank-to-bowl: Install the rubber gasket on the flush valve nut, drop tank bolts with rubber washers inside the tank, and draw the tank down evenly. The goal is level and stable—not to crush the rubber into oblivion.
- Supply line: Connect the braided line to the fill valve and the new angle stop, snug both ends, open the valve slowly, and let the tank fill.
Check three places with a dry paper towel: the angle stop compression joint, the supply line connections, and the tank bolts. If the towel stays dry, you’re winning.
Step 12: Stabilize and Finish the Base
Two approaches keep the base rock‑solid long‑term:
- Shims only: Tap shims just until the bowl is immovable, then cut them flush.
- Grout assist (optional): In spots with minor gaps, a bit of sanded grout tucked under the skirt can create a structural cradle once cured. After it sets, a neat bead of clear or color‑matched silicone around the front and sides keeps cleaning simple and discourages “mystery mopping” from sneaking under the base. I leave a small gap at the back; if a leak ever happens, that gap can reveal it.
Troubleshooting the Common “Why Is It Doing That?” Issues
- Persistent wobble: The floor isn’t flat or the flange isn’t anchored. Add/adjust shims and verify the flange screws are tight. Do not keep tightening the closet nuts; porcelain loses every time in a strength contest.
- Weeping at the base: Most often a low flange or a mis‑set ring. Pull it, fix the height to spec, use fresh wax, and reset.
- Supply drip: Snug the compression nut another quarter‑turn while supporting the valve body. If it still weeps, replace the ferrule and nut.
- Fill valve chatter or slow fill: Clean or replace the fill valve. Modern quiet valves are inexpensive and worth every penny.
- Ghost flushing: The flapper is leaking. Replace it and clean the seat.
- Poor flush: Confirm the tank water level is set to the manufacturer’s mark and the rim jets and siphon jet are clear of mineral buildup.
Myths to Ignore (That Waste Time or Create Leaks)
- “Waterproof laminate can handle bathroom spills.” Wood‑based laminates swell at the edges and telegraph subfloor issues. Manage water at the source: secure the toilet, seal the perimeter, and fix leaks promptly.
- “Two wax rings stacked is fine.” It’s a band‑aid. If you’re stacking wax just to reach the bowl, the flange is too low. Correct the height, then use a single appropriate ring.
- “Cranking the bolts stops rocking.” No—shims stop rocking. Over‑tightening cracks bases and pulls bolts through weak flanges.
- “It’s okay if the flange sits below the tile; wax fills the gap.” Wax is a seal, not a structural spacer. Flange height matters.
Pro Moves That Make the Job Easier
- Plastic bolt keepers save you three hands when setting the bowl.
- 5/16‑in. closet bolts are less fussy and more durable.
- Escutcheon at the supply gives the install a finished look.
- Two wrenches on compression fittings—one to hold the valve, one to turn the nut—prevent twisting the pipe.
- Hornless wax on tight ID setups preserves flow and reduces the chance of catching debris at the flange.
- Paper‑towel test at every joint confirms you’re dry.
- Mark and cut bolts after snugging so your caps seat nicely.
Quick Checklist: One‑Look Confidence Before First Flush
- Flange repaired to flush to +1/4 in. and anchored with proper screws
- Closet bolts upright at 9 and 3 o’clock with retainers
- Angle stop operates smoothly; new braided supply installed
- Single, correct‑height wax ring installed on the bowl outlet
- Bowl set straight, shimmed solid, nuts alternated to snug, bolts trimmed and capped
- Tank drawn down evenly; waterline set; no drips at any connection
- Perimeter sealed neatly (gap at back optional for leak detection)
Conclusion
A toilet reset isn’t difficult—it’s deliberate. Do the diagnosis at the flange, correct the height, lock everything to the structure, and only then rely on the wax to do what it does best: seal. Upgrade tired shutoffs, use stout hardware, set the bowl once and square, and stabilize it so people can lean, sit, and stand for years without movement. Real Plumber Breaks Down DIY Toilet Install isn’t about tricks—it’s about understanding why each step matters. Follow the order above and you’ll end with a quiet fill, a solid seat, a dry floor, and a clean, professional finish you’ll be proud to claim.