American Standard Incinerator & Incinolet Toilets

American Standard filters Active: Incinerator Toilets · 2 categories
Showing 1–21 of 21 American Standard incinerator toilets models
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American Standard Incinerator & Incinolet Toilets: buyer's guide

American Standard offers 21 incinerator toilets toilets models in the lineup we track. This page is the American Standard-specific cut of the broader Incinerator & Incinolet Toilets toilets category — same product class, narrowed to the American Standard catalog only.

About American Standard

<p>If you've been researching water heaters, American Standard has almost certainly come up. Their catalog spans the full price tier from value picks to flagship models, and their warranty terms are among the most generous in the category. This page is built to help you navigate the American Standard water heaters lineup specifically — which model belongs in which use case, where American Standard wins against its closest competitors, and where you should consider an alternative.</p> <h2 id="brand-overview">About American Standard in water heaters</h2> <p>On warranty length, build quality, a...

For the complete American Standard lineup across all sub-types and capacities, see the American Standard Toilets hub.

American Standard Incinerator & Incinolet Toilets models we track

Other Incinerator Toilets toilets brands

If you're cross-shopping incinerator toilets toilets beyond American Standard, the following brands also ship in this category:

About Incinerator & Incinolet Toilets toilets

An incinerator toilet uses no water, no holding tank, and no plumbing connection. After each use, an electric heating element (or in some models, a propane burner) raises the contents of a removable bowl liner to 1,200–1,400°F over a 60–90 minute cycle, reducing everything to a small amount of sterile ash that's emptied into the trash. Two brands — Incinolet (US, electric) and Cinderella (Norwegian, propane) — dominate the segment.