Toilets Under $200

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Showing 49–72 of 183 under $200 products
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Toilets Under $200: full buyer's guide

Toilets under $200 are the rebuild-grade, landlord-friendly, secondary-bathroom segment. You're not getting CeFiONtect glaze, soft-close seats, or designer styling. You're getting a working toilet that meets the EPA WaterSense 1.28 GPF spec, lasts 15–20 years, and uses universal aftermarket parts when something fails.

Who buys toilets under $200

  • Landlords and property managers doing turnover rebuilds where tenant use means a 7–10 year expected service life is acceptable
  • Single-family homeowners replacing a toilet in a secondary bathroom (basement, garage conversion, in-law suite)
  • Property flippers who need presentable installations at lowest cost
  • Construction temporary installations where the final spec will be upgraded later

What you get at this price tier

  • 1.28 or 1.6 GPF gravity flush (WaterSense at 1.28 only)
  • Standard ceramic glaze (no hydrophobic technology)
  • Standard mounting hardware (no concealed bolts, no skirted trapway)
  • Soft-close seat NOT included (separate $30–$50 purchase)
  • Two-piece design (one-piece at this price is rare)

The top picks under $200

  • Glacier Bay Power Flush ($130–$180) — Home Depot house brand. Two-piece elongated, 1.28 GPF, comfort height available. Volume seller.
  • American Standard Mainstream ($150–$190) — AmStd entry tier. 1.6 GPF (note: not WaterSense), two-piece round.
  • Mansfield Pro-Fit 1 / Pro-Fit 3 ($150–$220) — US-cast porcelain plumber-trade favorite. Comfort height variants available.
  • Kohler Wellworth Classic K-3987 ($168–$210) — entry-tier Kohler. Round-front, 1.28 GPF, standard height. Comfort-height variant K-3988 is +$50 — worth it.
  • Glacier Bay All-in-One ($89–$130) — the absolute floor. Round or elongated, soft-close seat included. Quality varies year-to-year.

What to skip at this price tier

Off-brand Amazon toilets under $130 that aren't from established brands. Quality is genuinely worse, parts are unavailable, and the bowl glaze degrades within 2–3 years. The $30–$50 you'd save vs a Glacier Bay All-in-One isn't worth the trade-off.