Jacuzzi Tucana Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Premium Comfort Height Toilet
Jacuzzi Tucana Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Premium Comfort Height Toilet Review
Jacuzzi Tucana Two-Piece Elongated Premium Comfort Height
The Jacuzzi Tucana Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Premium Comfort Height Toilet is Jacuzzi's entry-level two-piece — positioned below the brand's flagship Estasi, Niova, and Pomarico models at $179-$239 retail. The Tucana is what you specify when Jacuzzi brand recognition matters but the renovation budget can't justify the premium Jacuzzi models. The feature set is functional rather than decorative: traditional two-piece profile, 1.28 GPF water-saving flush, ADA comfort height, FluidMaster-licensed flush mechanism, and Jacuzzi's standard 5-year china warranty.
Tucana's Position in the Jacuzzi Two-Piece Catalog
- Tucana (this model): $179-$239 — entry-level Jacuzzi two-piece
- Estasi: $199-$269 — transitional design with Biscuit and Bone variants
- Pomarico: $269-$329 — decorative-premium design
- Niova: $219-$279 — refined transitional
- Bellevista: $249-$309 — decorative comfort height
The Tucana exists as the brand-entry option — Jacuzzi name recognition at the lowest possible price for buyers who want a known brand without paying for the decorative refinement of Estasi or Pomarico.
Round-Front Bowl Configuration
Tucana ships in round-front bowl shape (~16.5" length) as standard. Round-front bowls fit compact bathrooms where elongated bowls don't have adequate floor depth — appropriate for powder rooms, half-baths, apartment bathrooms, and tight floor plans. For most modern bathroom installations with adequate space, elongated bowl shape is preferred for comfort.
1.28 GPF Single-Flush
Standard 1.28 GPF — WaterSense certified. FluidMaster-licensed flush mechanism provides reliable performance with universal parts availability at any hardware store.
ADA Comfort Height
Seat height ~17 inches floor-to-rim.
Specifications
- Form factor: Two-piece floor-mount, traditional
- Bowl shape: Round-front (compact)
- Material: Vitreous china
- Flush volume: 1.28 GPF single-flush
- Rough-in: 12 inches
- Seat height: ~17 inches (ADA comfort height)
- Seat: Sold separately ($15-$45)
- Color: Glossy White
- Warranty: 5 years vitreous china, 1 year mechanical
- MaP rating: 800g
- Certifications: WaterSense, ADA compliant
Installation
- Standard 12-inch rough-in
- Cold water supply
- Wax ring + flange bolts ($15-$25)
- Seat purchased separately
- Two-piece installation: 1.5-2 hours, $150-$350
Care
- Standard porcelain cleaners safe
- Pumice stones safe for mineral deposits
- Bleach soaks safe
- Avoid steel wool
Pros
- Entry-level Jacuzzi brand at $179-$239
- FluidMaster internals — universal parts availability
- WaterSense 1.28 GPF water savings
- ADA comfort height
- Compact round-front bowl fits tight bathrooms
- Jacuzzi brand recognition adds slight resale appeal vs. generic alternatives
- Available at Home Depot, Lowe's, Wayfair
Cons
- Round-front bowl less comfortable than elongated for extended seating
- Traditional utilitarian aesthetic — not designed for modern renovations
- Seat sold separately
- 5-year china + 1-year mechanical warranty short vs. Delta lifetime china at similar price
- Only Glossy White available — no Biscuit or Bone variants (those are Estasi-only)
- Less aesthetic refinement than Estasi or Pomarico at $30-$130 premium
Who Should Buy
- Budget-conscious Jacuzzi brand-loyalty buyers
- Rental properties wanting branded toilet at minimum cost
- Spa-themed bathrooms with Jacuzzi tub coordination on a tight budget
- Secondary bathrooms with low aesthetic priority
- Compact bathroom installations needing round-front bowl fit
Upgrade Considerations
- For $20-$90 more: Estasi adds Biscuit and Bone color options and slightly more refined design language
- For $40-$140 more: Niova adds more refined transitional design
- For $90-$190 more: Pomarico adds decorative premium design language
- For $30-$80 more: Delta Hatcher ($149-$199) offers lifetime china warranty and more refined design
Frequently Asked Questions
- Will this fit my bathroom? Standard 12-inch rough-in fits most US homes built after 1970. Measure from the finished wall (not stud) to the center of the closet flange before ordering. For unusual rough-ins (10" or 14") or non-standard floor depths, verify dimensions against the product spec sheet before ordering.
- How long does installation take? Typical installation runs 1.5-2 hours for an experienced installer. Add 30-60 minutes if the closet flange needs replacement or repair, and 1-2 hours if the existing supply line stop valve needs to be replaced.
- Is the toilet seat included? Some configurations include a soft-close seat; others sell it separately for $20-$60. Check the SKU listing before purchase to confirm.
- How much will this save vs. my existing toilet? At 1.28 GPF, this two-piece toilet uses meaningfully less water than older designs. Replacing a pre-1992 3.5 GPF toilet typically saves $130-$180 per year in water utility costs, depending on local water rates and household flush volume — payback on the toilet purchase price within 2-4 years is realistic for most households.
- What's the realistic service life? Expect 20+ years for the vitreous china (lifetime warranty backs this expectation) under normal residential use. Internal flush components (fill valve, flush valve, flapper) typically need replacement around year 7-10 — these are universal hardware-store parts costing $15-$45 total.
- Can I install this myself? Most experienced DIYers can complete installation in 1-2 hours with basic plumbing tools. Hire a licensed plumber if you're uncomfortable with closet flange work, supply line connections, or if your plumbing is older than 1980s and may need flange replacement.
- What's the return policy if it doesn't work for my space? Most retailers accept unused toilet returns within 30-90 days (Home Depot 90, Amazon 30, specialty plumbing 30). Installed toilets are NOT returnable — measure twice, install once.
Step-by-Step Installation Overview
- Turn off the water supply at the toilet stop valve (the small valve behind/beside the toilet). Flush the tank to drain residual water, then sponge out any water remaining in the tank and bowl.
- Disconnect the supply line from the bottom of the tank. Have a small bucket and towel ready for any drips.
- Remove the old toilet: unscrew the two closet flange bolts at the base, rock the toilet gently side-to-side to break the wax ring seal, and lift it off the flange. Have a second person help with the lift — the bowl alone weighs 50-90 lbs.
- Clean the closet flange thoroughly. Scrape off old wax residue with a putty knife. If the flange is cracked or below the finished floor surface, replace it before proceeding (flange replacement adds ~$25 in parts and 30-60 minutes of labor).
- Install new closet flange bolts in the flange slots (most kits include these; verify before starting). Place the new wax ring on top of the flange (or on the bottom of the new bowl, depending on installer preference).
- Set the new bowl over the flange, aligning the bolts through the bowl mounting holes. Press down firmly with even pressure to seat the wax ring. Don't twist or rock the bowl after seating — that breaks the seal.
- Tighten the closet flange bolts alternately (a few turns on each side, then back to the other) until the bowl is firmly seated. Don't over-tighten — porcelain cracks from excessive bolt torque.
- Place the tank-to-bowl gasket on the bowl. Set the tank on the bowl, aligning the mounting holes. Insert the tank bolts from inside the tank and tighten alternately until the tank is snug against the bowl (don't over-tighten).
- Connect the supply line to the bottom of the tank. Turn on the water supply, let the tank fill, and test the flush. Check all connections for leaks.
- Install the toilet seat (if not pre-installed) by inserting the seat bolts through the bowl mounting holes and tightening the nuts from underneath.
- Final leak check: flush several times, run a tissue paper test around the base for any seepage, and verify the toilet sits firmly without rocking.
Tools you'll need: adjustable wrench, channel-lock pliers, putty knife, sponge, small bucket, towels, and a level. If you don't have these, expect to spend $40-$60 at a hardware store on a basic install kit.
10-Year Total Cost of Ownership Estimate
- Initial purchase + installation supplies: typical $15-$30 in wax ring, supply line, and flange bolts on top of the toilet price.
- Plumber labor (if not DIY): $150-$350 for standard floor-mount install, $250-$500 for smart toilet, $1,000-$2,000 for wall-hung.
- Replacement seat at year 6-8: $25-$50 for a Bemis or branded replacement.
- Replacement flush internals at year 7-10: $15-$45 total in parts (fill valve, flapper) — universal Fluidmaster/Korky parts at any hardware store.
- Water utility cost (1.28 GPF average, 5,000 flushes/year): $400-$600 over 10 years depending on local water rates.
- Annual savings vs. replacing a pre-1992 3.5 GPF toilet: $130-$180/year ≈ $1,300-$1,800 over 10 years — frequently exceeding the entire toilet purchase + install cost.
Warranty Registration and Care Best Practices
Register this two-piece toilet with Jacuzzi within 30 days of purchase to ensure warranty coverage — most brands require online registration plus original receipt for any future warranty claim. Save the receipt as a PDF and email it to yourself for cloud backup; physical receipts fade and get lost. Photograph the model number sticker (typically inside the tank or under the tank lid for one-piece designs) as part of your warranty documentation.
Common warranty exclusions across all toilet brands:
- Impact damage from dropped tools or items falling on the bowl/tank lid
- Freeze damage in unheated vacation properties or unheated bathrooms in cold climates
- Installation damage from over-tightened bolts (cracks at the flange mount), uneven floors causing rocking, or missing wax ring seals
- Damage from in-tank cleaning tablets (these chemically degrade rubber flapper seals and stain the porcelain)
- Hard water staining (cosmetic, not structural)
- Cosmetic scratches from abrasive cleaning products (especially on matte finishes)
Routine cleaning best practices: Use standard porcelain bowl cleaners (Lysol, Clorox, Soft Scrub with Bleach) for the bowl interior. Microfiber + mild dish soap for the exterior, lid, and seat. Avoid steel wool, abrasive scrub pads, and powdered scrub cleaners (Comet, Ajax) that scratch the glaze over years of use. For hard water mineral deposits, apply CLR or Lime-Away with a 10-15 minute dwell time, scrub with a bowl brush, then flush — repeat for stubborn buildup. Wipe water spots on the rim and seat hinge promptly to prevent permanent mineral etching, especially on matte black or matte gray finishes where mineral staining shows visibly faster than on glossy white.
If a warranty claim becomes necessary, contact Jacuzzi customer service with: photographs of the defect from multiple angles, the model and serial number, your purchase receipt, and the installation date. Expect 5-10 business days for initial review and 15-30 days for claim resolution if approved.
- Premium Jacuzzi two-piece with full Comfort Height (17.0")
- WaterSense 1.28 GPF + elongated bowl
- Universal Korky/Fluidmaster aftermarket parts
- Limited Lifetime porcelain warranty
- Jacuzzi brand-extension for premium bathroom suite installations
- MaP 800g bulk-waste evacuation
- Two-piece serviceability
- Plumbing-supply channel availability
- SoftClose seat NOT included
- Plumbing-supply primary (limited big-box availability)
- Standard vitreous glaze
- Single-flush only
- Mid-tier price ($280-$380) vs budget Vesi ($240-$340)
- Jacuzzi brand recognition lower in toilet segment than faucet/whirlpool segments