The carrier frame is the "skeleton" of a wall-hung toilet. Its quality and correct installation decide whether the toilet stands for 20 years or wobbles within two. In Israel the market leaders are Swiss Geberit and German Grohe and Viega. The job is a plumber plus a tiler, together over 1–2 days.
What a carrier frame is made of
- Steel frame — galvanized profile with height-adjustable legs.
- Tank — plastic or metal with internal protection, with fill and flush valves.
- Flush mechanism — dual-mode (6/3 L or 4.5/3 L).
- Button — separate, installed on the wall after finishing.
- Toilet mounting studs — two threaded rods the bowl hangs from.
- Sewer outlet flange — connection between the tank and the main stack.
- Service panel — manufacturer-designed access to the internal mechanism.
Where and how it is mounted
To a load-bearing wall
The ideal option. The frame is anchored to a concrete or brick wall, plus fixed to the floor. Loads go into capital structure.
Inside a framed partition
A steel-profile wall is built specifically, reinforced where the frame sits. Backing is required — a steel plate or timber inside the profile. This approach has to be planned at the design stage, not bolted on later.
In a corner
A special corner frame model. Used in non-standard layouts when there is no room on a straight wall.
Floor-only, not against a wall
Floor-only models exist that fix to the floor and don't need a strong wall behind (the wall only covers them cosmetically). A bit pricier but universal.
Frame installation stages
- Site prep. 1/2" water supply for the tank. 90 mm sewer outlet at the right height. If not in place — chasing and pipework.
- Frame assembly. Per manufacturer instructions: sound-dampening pads glued on, tank mounted on the frame, studs fitted.
- Leveling. Frame set horizontally and vertically. Legs adjusted.
- Marking and drilling. Anchor points on the wall and floor. Hammer drill to 60–80 mm depth.
- Anchoring the frame. Anchors tightened to spec (usually M10 or M12 to the wall, 2–4 points).
- Water connection. Flexible line from the angle valve to the tank inlet.
- Drain connection. Via a 90 mm flange with a gasket.
- First run. Fill the tank, check valves, confirm there's no leak.
- Pressure test at 10 bar for 24 hours — for the whole connected system.
- Hand off to finishing. The tiler closes up the frame with drywall and tile, leaving an opening for the button and service access.
- After finishing — bowl mounting. A separate plumber visit.
Timing
- Frame assembly and install (no finishing) — 3–5 hours.
- With water and drain prep — one day.
- Pressure test — 24 hours.
- Finishing (drywall, tile) — 2–5 days.
- Bowl hanging — 1–2 hours.
- Total: 5–10 days from start to usable toilet.
How much it costs in Israel
- Geberit Duofix base frame — ILS 900–1,500
- Geberit Duofix Sigma — ILS 1,400–2,200
- Grohe Rapid SL — ILS 1,200–1,800
- Viega Prevista, TECE Profil — ILS 1,500–2,800
- Budget (Cersanit, Jika) — ILS 500–900
- Frame installation labor — ILS 800–1,800
- Flush button — ILS 150–1,200
- Bowl hanging (separately) — ILS 400–700
- Old frame removal — ILS 500–1,200
- Finishing (drywall + tile) — separate, usually ILS 1,200–3,500
Key considerations when choosing a frame
- Wall depth (frame thickness). Standard is 12–15 cm + 5–10 cm for finishing. When space is tight — slim 8 cm models exist.
- Spare parts availability. Geberit and Grohe — always in stock, everywhere. No-name — may not be available after 5 years.
- Button type. Mechanical, pneumatic, touch (electronic). Touch requires an electrical hookup.
- Sound insulation. Double-walled tanks (Geberit Silent) are materially quieter. If a bedroom is next to the bathroom — important.
- Compatibility. Toilet and frame can be different brands, but mounting dimensions must match (ISO 6707 — met in 95% of cases today).
Typical mistakes
- No pressure test. Walled up, leak a week later — have to open the wall.
- No access to the button. A service panel is mandatory — otherwise a valve failure means breaking tile.
- Over-tightened studs. Too tight and the bowl cracks on first use.
- Misaligned drain. The 90 mm flange must sit centered on the frame, no offset — otherwise the internal pipe won't line up.
- Cheap frame with a premium bowl. You buy a budget frame plus an expensive bowl — seven years later the valve dies and there are no spares. You replace the whole system along with the tile. Saving on the frame is the most expensive saving.
FAQ
Is Geberit really better than a Chinese frame?
The mechanism looks identical, but the difference is in valve life (plastic/rubber) and in spare parts availability 15–20 years on. Geberit keeps parts for 30+ years; Chinese no-name for 3–5. If this frame is going into a major renovation meant to last 20+ years — pick Geberit, Grohe, or Viega.
Can the bowl be swapped later without removing the frame?
Yes, if the new bowl is compatible with the ISO mounting standard (most modern bowls are). Unscrew from the studs, disconnect the outlet, remove — hang the new one. ILS 500–800 and an hour of work.
Is the frame noisy when flushing?
Mechanical noise is minimal in premium models (Geberit Silent, Viega). Water noise in the tank depends on the walls — budget frames "rattle." For bedrooms behind the wall — add sound insulation, it runs ILS 200–400 extra.
Can the button be on the side of the toilet rather than in front?
Yes, there are frames with side-mounted mechanisms. Less standard but possible — useful when the front wall is a window or a mirror. Confirm when choosing the model.