⚡ Quick Summary
- Do the bucket test first — pour a gallon of water quickly into the bowl; strong evacuation = tank problem; weak evacuation = drain or vent problem
- Flapper closes too early = weak flush; hold flapper open during a flush to confirm
- Clogged rim jets = weak bowl wash; look under the rim with a mirror for blocked holes
- Bowl rises and drains slowly = trapway or drain restriction — not a tank problem
- Other fixtures also slow or gurgling = vent or main-line issue — call a plumber
A toilet flush is a hydraulic event — it relies on a precise surge of water from the tank entering the bowl fast enough to initiate siphon action in the trapway. When that siphon doesn't form, or forms and collapses early, waste remains. The cause is either that the tank isn't delivering enough water fast enough, or the drain line can't move water away quickly enough. Those are different problems with different solutions — and the bucket test separates them in 30 seconds.
The Bucket Test — Do This First
Fill a gallon bucket (or a pot) with water and pour it rapidly — in one quick motion — directly into the toilet bowl. Do not use the flush handle. Observe what happens.
If the Bucket Test Is Strong — Tank Diagnostics
Symptom Quick Reference
| What You Observe | Most Likely Cause | First Action |
|---|---|---|
| Bucket test: strong; normal flush: weak | Tank not delivering enough water — water level, flapper, or jets | Check water level; do flapper lift test; inspect rim jets |
| Bucket test: weak; slow bowl drainage | Trapway blockage or drain restriction | Toilet auger for trapway; call plumber if clears but recurs |
| Flush stronger when flapper is held open | Flapper closing too early; chain too slack | Adjust chain; replace flapper if chain adjustment doesn't fix it |
| Bowl swirls but waste doesn't evacuate fully | Weak jet velocity; rim jets partially blocked | Inspect rim jets with mirror; descale with vinegar through overflow tube |
| Bowl rises toward rim during flush | Drain or trapway significantly restricted | Stop flushing; do bucket test; auger or call plumber |
| Flush inconsistent — strong one time, weak next | Flapper not seating consistently; debris near valve seat | Inspect flapper and chain; check for debris on valve seat |
| Other drains also slow or gurgling during flush | Vent stack blockage or main-line restriction | Call a plumber — systemic DWV issue, not a toilet problem |
| Flush normal, tank takes 5+ minutes to refill | Fill valve failing or supply valve partially closed | Open supply valve fully; replace fill valve if refill remains slow |
How Serious Is It?
What You Can Fix vs. When to Call
- The bucket test to determine tank vs. drain cause
- Adjust float to raise tank water level to fill line
- Adjust chain length (move clip to correct link)
- Perform flapper lift test during a flush
- Replace the flapper
- Clean rim jets and siphon jet with descaling solution or wire
- Open the supply shutoff valve fully if partially closed
- Replace fill valve if refill is very slow after supply valve confirmed open
- Use a toilet auger for a trapway blockage
- Bucket test weak — drain restriction confirmed — auger finds nothing in trapway
- Multiple fixtures slow or gurgling — systemic DWV issue
- Bowl rises to near-rim during flushing — risk of overflow
- Sewer odor during weak flushing — water level in trap dropping
- Vent stack suspected — do not go on the roof
- Do not insert coat hangers or rigid tools into trapway
Frequently Asked Questions
Key Takeaways
- Do the bucket test first. Strong evacuation with a bucket = tank problem. Weak evacuation with a bucket = drain or vent restriction. These have completely different fixes.
- For tank problems: check water level, chain length, and do the flapper lift test before buying any parts. Many weak flushes are a chain adjustment or float adjustment away from being fixed.
- Rim jets under the bowl rim are a frequently overlooked cause of gradual flush weakening in hard-water areas — cleaning them often restores full flush power without any part replacement.
- Bowl rising toward the rim = drain restriction. Stop flushing, let it drain, auger the trapway. If other fixtures are also affected, call a plumber today.
- Bleach tablet tank cleaners accelerate flapper deterioration. If you use them and your flush has weakened, replace the flapper first.