Toilet Finishes — Black, White, Gold, Custom
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Kohler Cimarron Comfort Height Elongated Toilet
TOTO Drake Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO UltraMax II One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO Aquia IV Dual-Flush Two-Piece Elongated Toilet
TOTO Vespin II Two-Piece Skirted Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
Kohler Highline Classic Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
Kohler Memoirs Stately One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
Kohler Wellworth Classic Two-Piece Round 1.28 GPF Toilet
Kohler Maxton One-Piece Elongated Skirted Trapway Toilet
TOTO Carlyle II One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO Neorest 700H Integrated Smart Toilet with Washlet
TOTO Neorest 750H Integrated Smart Toilet with ACTILIGHT
TOTO Eco Drake Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO Promenade Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO Connelly Two-Piece Dual-Flush Elongated 1.28/0.9 GPF Toilet
TOTO Soiree One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO Aimes One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO Legato One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO Nexus Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO Entrada Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO Eco UltraMax One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
TOTO Maris Dual-Flush Two-Piece Elongated 1.28/0.9 GPF Toilet
TOTO Neorest NX1 Luxury Integrated Smart Toilet
Toilet Finishes — Black, White, Gold, Custom: full buyer's guide
Most US toilets ship in one of three near-identical whites: white, biscuit, and bone. The differences are smaller than the catalog photos make them look. Beyond those three, the actual color universe is narrow — and the toilet-color choices you have are partly driven by which brand you're buying.
The eight color codes you'll actually see at retail
- White — the default; matches nearly every fixture. Universal.
- Biscuit (sometimes called "ivory" or "linen") — a warm off-white. Reads slightly creamy under warm lighting.
- Bone — between biscuit and white. Modern, less yellow than biscuit, less stark than white.
- Almond — discontinued by most brands by 2015 but still available special-order from American Standard and Kohler. The "honey" tone common in 1980s-1990s remodels.
- Black — high-gloss black. Available from Kohler (Black Black), TOTO (Ebony), Swiss Madison, Woodbridge. Premium finishes only — typically a $200–$600 upcharge over white.
- Matte black — newer, mostly Swiss Madison, Woodbridge, Horow, and Kohler (the Veil line). Trend-driven; appears in design magazines but hard-water mineral spots show much more than gloss.
- Brushed gold / brass — available on flush actuators and accents (Geberit Sigma, TOTO actuators), not on the whole bowl. A gold-finished porcelain toilet is a custom-order item only.
- Custom commercial colors — Kohler offers a designer color program for commercial orders with 30+ shades (Sandbar, Cashmere, Thunder Grey, etc.). Lead time 8–12 weeks. Markup typically 40–60% over white.
The brand-specific color naming reference
| Color | Kohler | TOTO | American Standard |
|---|---|---|---|
| White | White (0) | Cotton White (#01) | White |
| Cream/biscuit | Biscuit (96) | Sedona Beige (#12) | Linen |
| Bone | Almond (47) | Bone (#03) | Bone |
| Black | Black Black (7) | Ebony (#51) | Black |
Match-color reality: a Kohler tub in Biscuit (96) will not exactly match a TOTO toilet in Sedona Beige (12). They're close — but in the same room, side by side, the human eye picks up the difference. If color-matching across fixtures matters, buy everything from one brand.
What shows hard-water staining
Ranked from best to worst at hiding mineral spots:
- Bone / biscuit / cream — the warm tones blend with limescale and iron-stain orange.
- White (gloss) — high-gloss glaze shows water spots but they wipe off easily.
- Almond — somewhat shows yellow-iron stains; reasonable.
- Black (gloss) — limescale shows as white powder visible from across the room. Requires more frequent cleaning.
- Black (matte) — worst combination. Limescale visible AND the matte texture grips it, requiring acidic cleaners to remove. Beautiful for the first 3 months; high-maintenance after.
Practical advice
For 95% of US residential bathrooms, plain white is the correct answer. It matches every other fixture you'll ever buy, hides hard water, doesn't go out of style, and costs $200–$600 less than colored alternatives. Black toilets photograph beautifully and look like a hotel; living with them in a hard-water area is a real maintenance commitment. If color matters, go biscuit or bone — those age well and hide everything.