EPA WaterSense Certified Toilets
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Gerber Maxwell Two-Piece Round-Front 1.6 GPF Toilet
Gerber Viper Two-Piece Compact Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
Gerber Wicker Park One-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Designer Toilet
Saniflo Saniaccess 3 Upflush Toilet System with Macerator
Saniflo Sanibest Pro Heavy-Duty Upflush Toilet with Grinder
Saniflo Saniplus Compact Upflush Toilet System
Duravit Starck 3 Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
Duravit ME by Starck Wall-Hung Toilet
Geberit Sigma Concealed In-Wall Toilet Tank Carrier
Geberit Sigma 60 Actuator Plate Chrome Finish
Swiss Madison Concorde One-Piece Dual-Flush Elongated 1.28/0.8 GPF Toilet
Swiss Madison Sublime One-Piece Elongated Skirted 1.28 GPF Toilet
Woodbridge T-0001 One-Piece Dual-Flush Elongated Toilet
Woodbridge T-0008 Smart Toilet with Integrated Bidet Seat
Horow HWMT-8733 One-Piece Dual-Flush Toilet
Horow HWMT-8755 Smart Toilet with Heated Seat
DeerValley DV-1F52102 One-Piece Dual-Flush Elongated Toilet
DeerValley DV-1F0026 Compact One-Piece Toilet
Delta Foundations Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
Delta Riosa One-Piece Compact 1.28 GPF Toilet
Jacuzzi Vesi Two-Piece Elongated 1.28 GPF Toilet
Jacuzzi Aurora One-Piece Skirted 1.28 GPF Toilet
Swiss Madison Calice One-Piece Compact Dual-Flush 1.28/0.8 GPF Toilet
EPA WaterSense Certified Toilets: full buyer's guide
EPA WaterSense is the federal voluntary water-efficiency certification program. A WaterSense-certified toilet uses 1.28 gallons per flush or less AND meets a minimum flush performance threshold (MaP score 350g+). Buying WaterSense-certified is the simplest way to ensure you're getting a real high-efficiency toilet, not just a label.
Why WaterSense matters more than the GPF number alone
A 1.28 GPF toilet that won't reliably flush solid waste isn't actually water-saving — owners double-flush, defeating the savings. WaterSense certification requires the toilet to pass the MaP (Maximum Performance) test, which measures how much simulated solid waste the toilet clears in a single flush. The minimum threshold is 350g; most WaterSense-certified toilets test at 600–1,000g, well above the threshold.
This is the difference between "1.28 GPF marketed water-saving" (could be a poorly-flushing budget toilet) and "1.28 GPF WaterSense-certified" (verified to flush as well as a 1.6 GPF traditional toilet).
What WaterSense certification means in practice
- 1.28 GPF or lower flush volume
- MaP score ≥ 350g (single-flush waste clearance)
- Approved testing laboratory verification (CSA Group, IAPMO R&T, NSF)
- Annual sample testing by the manufacturer to maintain certification
WaterSense vs WaterSense Most Efficient
Within the WaterSense program, there's a higher tier: WaterSense Most Efficient. To qualify, a toilet must be 1.1 GPF or lower while still meeting the 350g MaP threshold. Models on the Most Efficient list typically include:
- Niagara Stealth Sabre (0.8 GPF)
- Niagara Stealth (1.0 GPF)
- Kohler Pressure Lite (1.0 GPF)
- Some TOTO ultra-low-flow variants
The Most Efficient certification often qualifies for higher utility rebates than standard WaterSense.
How to verify WaterSense certification on a specific toilet
Look for the blue WaterSense label on the box, in the product description, or on the manufacturer's website. The label is a circular blue logo with a water-drop and the words "WaterSense." If you don't see the label, the toilet isn't certified — regardless of the GPF spec on the box.
What's NOT WaterSense
- 1.6 GPF toilets (above the threshold)
- Some entry-tier dual-flush toilets where the "full flush" is 1.6 GPF (e.g., Kohler Persuade at 1.0/1.6 — not WaterSense at full flush)
- Toilets that don't carry the certification testing (some Amazon-only off-brand toilets)