A corner toilet has a triangular tank that nestles into the corner of a bathroom rather than sitting against a flat back wall. It's a niche product — solving the specific problem of how to fit a toilet in an awkwardly-shaped powder room where wall space is limited but corner space is available.
When a corner toilet is the right answer
- Under-staircase powder rooms with angled walls
- L-shaped bathroom additions where the toilet would otherwise block a doorway
- Bathrooms where a traditional rectangular-tank toilet creates a tight clearance
- Very small powder rooms (<30 sq ft) where every square inch of floor space matters
Corner toilet availability — limited brand selection
- American Standard Cornel ($380) — discontinued in 2018 but available from Replacements.com and eBay. The historical US standard corner toilet.
- Mansfield 137-160 corner ($280) — US-cast triangular-tank corner toilet. Limited distribution.
- Woodbridge BTS-0002 corner ($380–$480) — newer Amazon/Wayfair-distributed corner toilet. Modern silhouette.
- Generic Asian imports ($180–$280) — limited quality, parts availability poor
The install consideration
Corner toilets need a corner-fit floor flange. Most existing residential floor flanges are positioned for traditional rectangular-tank toilets. Switching to a corner toilet often requires:
- Re-positioning the floor flange (plumber labor: $400–$800)
- Re-routing the drain line
- Potentially relocating the supply line shutoff valve
Total install cost for a corner toilet retrofit (including the toilet): $700–$1,600.
The downside owners report
- Limited parts availability — when the flapper or fill valve fails on a corner toilet, finding replacement parts can take weeks
- The triangular tank holds less water than a traditional tank — flush performance can be marginal on some models
- No premium aesthetic options — corner toilets are functional, not designer pieces
- Resale concern — buyers expecting standard fixtures sometimes view a corner toilet as "weird"