Japanese-Style Toilets & Washlets
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Kohler Wellworth Compact Two-Piece Compact-Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Champion 4 Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Champion PRO Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Cadet 3 FloWise Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Edgemere Compact-Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Titan Pro Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Boulevard One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Heritage VorMax One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard H2Option Dual-Flush Two-Piece Elongated 0.92/1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Mainstream Two-Piece Round-Front 1.6 GPF Toilet
American Standard Reliant Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Cadet Pro Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Glenwall Commercial Wall-Hung Pressure-Assist Toilet
American Standard 4215A Two-Piece Elongated 1.6 GPF Toilet (Legacy)
American Standard Studio S One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Yorkville Two-Piece Round-Front 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Townsend VorMax One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Champion 4 Pressure-Assisted Two-Piece Elongated 1.6 GPF Toilet
American Standard Cadet 3 Compact-Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Cadet 3 FloWise Round-Front 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard Champion 4 Round-Front 1.28 GPF Toilet
American Standard VorMax Compact-Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
Niagara Stealth Sabre 0.8 GPF Two-Piece Elongated Vacuum-Assist Toilet
Japanese-Style Toilets & Washlets: full buyer's guide
If you've stayed in a Tokyo hotel, you know exactly what brought you to this page: a TOTO Washlet. The most famous of the "Japanese toilet" category, but not the only one. Here's how the category breaks down and what you can actually buy in the US.
What "Japanese toilet" usually means to a US searcher
In Japan, virtually every modern toilet is a "smart toilet" by US definitions — heated seat, integrated washlet (bidet), often auto-flush and auto-lid. The feature set is so universal that there's no Japanese term for "smart toilet"; it's just a toilet. When a US shopper searches "japanese toilet," they almost always mean one of three things:
- The full integrated combo — bowl, tank or tankless, with built-in cleansing wash, heated seat, dryer, deodorizer. TOTO Neorest is the segment-defining product.
- The replacement seat (Washlet) — the TOTO Washlet S550e, C5, K300 are seats you install on an existing US toilet. This is the more accessible product — see our bidet seat category. Adding a Washlet seat to a Drake bowl gets you 80% of the Neorest experience for $700–$1,500.
- The Toto Drake series itself — a tank-style two-piece toilet famous for its Tornado flush. Sold as the entry to the TOTO brand experience.
The three Japanese brands you can actually buy in the US
- TOTO — by far the most distributed. Manufacturers in Morrow, Georgia for the US market. Drake, Drake II, UltraMax II, Aquia, Carlyle II, Neorest, Washlet S550e/C5/K300. Available at Home Depot, Lowes, Ferguson, Build.com.
- INAX — historically the #2 Japanese fixture brand; now owned by Lixil (also owns American Standard). Limited US distribution; some models appear under the American Standard umbrella with re-engineered specs for US plumbing.
- Panasonic Washlet — exists in the US market through architectural-specifications channels but rarely at retail. Premium hospitality and high-end residential specifications.
What's culturally different about the Japanese spec
- Front nozzle vs rear: Japanese washlets typically default to a rear-wash position. Front-wash ("feminine wash") is a second button. Most US-translated UIs have these labeled clearly now.
- Oscillating wash: the nozzle moves back and forth slightly during wash to broaden the cleansed area. A TOTO signature.
- Power-saver / heated seat timer: Japanese models default to lower-temperature heated-seat to save energy; US models often run hotter by default.
- Auto-deodorizer: a carbon filter behind the seat with a fan. Almost universal on Japanese-spec models; only on premium US-spec equivalents.
- Lower flush GPF: Japanese homes have run sub-1.0 GPF for decades. The US technical floor (1.28 GPF, sub-1.0 with WaterSense) is catching up.
How to get the Japanese experience in a US bathroom
Two paths: (a) install a complete Japanese-style integrated combo (TOTO Neorest at $5k+, or a TOTO Drake bowl + Washlet S550e+ seat for $2,500), or (b) add a Washlet seat to your existing toilet for $700–$1,500 — same brand DNA, fraction of the price, install in 30 minutes. The Washlet seat needs a GFCI outlet within reach; if your bathroom doesn't have one, an electrician adds it for $150–$400. See our bidet category for the seat-only path.