Kohler Toilet Repair in Apex
Element Service Group provides expert Kohler toilet repair in Apex. Our certified technicians specialize in Kohler equipment for reliable, lasting results.
Kohler Toilet Repair: What You Need to Know
A running toilet is almost always caused by one of three parts inside the tank: the flapper, the fill valve, or the overflow tube. These are inexpensive parts, but a toilet that won't stop running wastes a staggering amount of water — and money.
The 3 Parts That Cause a Running Toilet
The Flapper
This is the rubber seal at the bottom of the tank that lifts when you flush and drops back down to seal the tank. Over time, flappers warp, crack, or develop mineral buildup that prevents a tight seal. Water slowly leaks from the tank into the bowl, the fill valve detects the drop in water level, and it refills the tank. This cycle repeats endlessly. Flappers cost $5-10 at any hardware store and take about five minutes to replace. It's the most common cause by far.
The Fill Valve
The fill valve controls water flowing into the tank after a flush. When it fails, it may not shut off properly — so water keeps running into the tank and down the overflow tube. You'll hear constant hissing or water trickling. Fill valves are a bit more involved to replace than flappers, but still a manageable repair.
The Overflow Tube
If the water level in the tank is set too high, water continuously spills into the overflow tube and drains into the bowl. This usually means the float (attached to the fill valve) needs adjusting. On older ball-float models, you bend the metal arm down slightly. On newer fill valves, there's an adjustment screw or clip. If the overflow tube itself is cracked, the whole flush valve assembly needs replacing.
How Much Water (and Money) a Running Toilet Wastes
A running toilet can waste 200 gallons per day or more. That's over 6,000 gallons per month.
On Town of Apex utility rates, that translates to roughly $50-100 per month in extra water and sewer charges — and that's a conservative estimate depending on the severity of the leak. Wake County water and sewer rates have gone up over 15% in recent years, so that wasted water costs more than it used to.
Here's an easy test: drop a few drops of food coloring into the tank (not the bowl). Wait 15 minutes without flushing. If the color appears in the bowl, your flapper is leaking.
Other Common Toilet Problems
A running toilet is the most frequent call we get, but it's not the only issue homeowners deal with.
Toilet rocks or wobbles. The wax ring seal between the toilet base and the floor flange has failed, or the flange bolts are loose. A wobbly toilet will eventually leak at the base — and that water is sewer water. Don't ignore this one. Tightening the bolts sometimes fixes it, but if the wax ring is compromised, the toilet needs to be pulled, the old wax ring scraped off, and a new one set.
Weak or incomplete flush. Mineral deposits can clog the rim jets (the small holes under the rim of the bowl). Hard water accelerates this. You can clean them with vinegar and a small brush. If cleaning doesn't help, the problem may be a partially blocked trapway or a failing flush valve.
Toilet leaks at the base. This almost always means a failed wax ring. Water seeps out with each flush. Left alone, it damages the subfloor and can cause mold. This isn't a wait-and-see repair.
Phantom flushing. The toilet seems to flush on its own or you hear it randomly refill. This is just a slow flapper leak — the tank drains enough that the fill valve kicks on to refill. Same fix as a running toilet: replace the flapper.
Constant clogs. If you're plunging the same toilet regularly, the issue might be a partially blocked drain line further downstream, tree root intrusion in older sewer lines, or a first-generation low-flow toilet (early 1.6 GPF models from the mid-90s were notorious for poor flush performance). A drain camera inspection can tell you exactly what's going on.
Repair vs. Replace
Toilet internals — flappers, fill valves, flush valves, wax rings — are all repairable and relatively affordable. Replacing these parts can keep a good toilet running for years.
Consider replacing the whole toilet when:
- The porcelain is cracked (this can't be reliably repaired)
- It's an older model using 3.5-5 gallons per flush (modern toilets use 1.28 GPF and flush better)
- You're making repairs frequently on a 20+ year old unit
- You want to upgrade to a comfort-height or elongated bowl
Element Service Group offers a free plumbing inspection ($89 value) and same-day toilet repair with flat-rate pricing — you know the cost before we start. Our plumbers handle everything from a simple flapper swap to full toilet replacements and drain line diagnostics.
We serve Apex, Cary, Holly Springs, Fuquay-Varina, Raleigh, and Durham. Veteran-owned, 700+ five-star reviews, and no surprises on the bill.
What's Included with Kohler Toilet Repair
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Kohler Toilet Repair FAQ
Is ESG a Kohler authorized dealer?
No. We are an independent service provider, not a factory-authorized Kohler dealer. We install, service, and repair Kohler fixtures and use genuine Kohler parts, but we are not affiliated with the manufacturer. For warranty questions specific to your fixture, we are glad to point you to Kohler's documentation.
Can you fix a Kohler faucet that drips even after I replaced the washer?
Most modern Kohler faucets use a ceramic-disc cartridge rather than a rubber washer, so a persistent drip usually means the cartridge needs replacing. We carry genuine Kohler cartridges and can identify the right one for your model and finish during the visit.
My Kohler toilet keeps running. What is the likely cause?
Many Kohler toilets use an AquaPiston canister flush valve. When a toilet runs continuously, the canister seal or the fill valve is usually the culprit. We replace the canister flush valve and fill components with genuine Kohler parts to stop the running and restore a clean flush.
Will hard water in the Triangle damage my Kohler fixtures?
Hard water mainly causes mineral scale that clogs aerators, dulls shower sprayfaces, and builds up on valve seats over time. It rarely ruins a quality fixture outright, but it does reduce flow and performance. Routine cleaning and periodic professional service keep your Kohler fixtures performing well.
Do you install Kohler fixtures I purchased myself?
Yes. If you have already bought a Kohler faucet, shower system, toilet, or sink, our NC-licensed master plumbers can install it correctly, set it to spec, and pressure-test the connections before we finish.
Is it worth repairing an old toilet or should I replace it?
If your toilet is less than 15 years old and the issue is a running mechanism or minor leak, repair is usually the smart choice. For toilets older than 20 years, especially 3.5 or 5-gallon models, replacement with a modern 1.28-gallon high-efficiency toilet saves water, improves flush performance, and costs less over time.
Kohler Toilet Repair Near You
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