Comfort-Height & ADA Toilets

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Comfort-Height & ADA Toilets: full buyer's guide

"Comfort height," "chair height," "right height," "ADA-compliant" — all four terms appear on product boxes, sometimes interchangeably, sometimes not. Here's exactly what they mean and which one solves your problem.

The height numbers, decoded

  • Standard: seat sits 14–15 inches above the finished floor. Default since the 1950s. Easier on small children. Demands more knee flexion from adults.
  • Comfort / Chair / Right Height: seat sits 16.5–18 inches above the floor. Three brand names for essentially the same thing (Kohler uses "Comfort Height," American Standard uses "Right Height," TOTO uses no brand term and just specifies in inches). The 16.5–17" tier is sometimes called "transitional height."
  • ADA-compliant: the federal Americans with Disabilities Act standard for public restrooms — seat height 17–19 inches. Most "comfort height" residential toilets meet this when measured with the seat installed.
  • Extra-tall / Elevated: 19–21 inches, usually a residential model marketed for "tall users" or for bathrooms where mobility assistance is a daily need.

When comfort height is the right call

  • Anyone over 6 feet tall in the household
  • Adults over 60 — the most common reason for the upgrade
  • Anyone with knee replacements, hip replacements, or chronic back pain
  • Aging-in-place renovation — pair with grab-bar reinforcement in the wall behind
  • New construction since ~2015: builders almost universally spec comfort-height by default now

When standard height is still the right call

  • Households with toddlers and small children — comfort height makes their feet dangle and slows potty-training
  • Smaller adults (under 5'4") who find their thighs unsupported on a 17" seat
  • Physical-therapy guidance that emphasizes hip flexion for elimination posture (some pelvic-floor PTs recommend lower seats with a footstool — see the "Squatty Potty" rationale)

How much more does comfort height cost?

Almost nothing at the entry tier — Glacier Bay and Mansfield offer comfort height for $5–$15 above their standard-height equivalents. Mid-tier (Kohler Cimarron, American Standard Champion, TOTO Drake): typically $0 — the same model number is offered in both heights at the same price. Premium (TOTO Neorest, Kohler Memoirs): always comfort height by default; no standard-height option.

Top comfort-height picks

  • Kohler Cimarron — $250–$350. The Comfort Height version is the volume seller. Two-piece, elongated, 1.28 GPF.
  • American Standard Champion 4 — $300–$450. Right Height, strong flush, easy-to-clean glaze. The landlord favorite.
  • TOTO Drake II — $400–$550. Universal Height (TOTO's name for comfort height), CeFiONtect glaze, 1.28 GPF Double Cyclone flush.
  • Niagara Stealth Sabre — $250–$300. Comfort height + the lowest GPF on the market (0.8 GPF) for rebate-eligible buyers in CA/TX/AZ.

The handle / lever side matters when accessibility is the goal

If the user has limited dexterity on one side, check whether the model offers a left-side flush handle (American Standard, Kohler, and TOTO all do, but you usually have to specify at order). Push-button top-flush is the most accessible option and is standard on most one-piece and wall-hung designs. Foot-pedal flush retrofits exist (the StepFlush is the common aftermarket choice).