Category: Plumbing

Toilet tank replacement

The tank is the top part of the toilet that holds water. The bowl (bottom porcelain) usually serves for decades, while the tank ages faster: cracks from temperature swings, mechanism loosens, valves stick, it starts leaking. Replacing only the tank is a sensible economy vs. swapping the whole toilet: ILS 300–800 against 2,000+ for a full kit.

When a tank replacement is needed

  • A crack in the porcelain — the tank leaks externally or through the crack continuously.
  • Water keeps running into the bowl, even after all seals are replaced — the valve body is worn out.
  • The tank won't hold water — the level drops without anyone pressing the button.
  • Broken lid with no spare part available for your model.
  • "Visual aging" — yellowing, darkening, lime stains you can't remove.
  • Upgrade to a "silent" tank or one with a more efficient flush.

Compatibility for replacement

Tanks are sold separately but must match your bowl. Check three parameters:

  • Distance between mounting holes. Usually 80, 120, or 150 mm — measure it.
  • Tank outlet height. Must align with the inlet port on the bowl.
  • Rear wall shape — fit against the wall.

Easiest is to bring the old tank to the store or photograph and measure it. "One model, one tank" isn't always true in Israel — different manufacturers can share compatible mounts.

Universal tanks (fit most bowls)

So-called "universal" tanks with adjustable mountings and adapters exist. They fit 70–80% of close-coupled toilets.

  • Cersanit, Jika — budget universals.
  • Chromagen, Kleopatra — Israeli universals.

Premium brands (Villeroy & Boch, Duravit) — OEM tanks only.

Replacement stages

  1. Shut off water at the angle valve.
  2. Drain the tank — press the button, let the water go. Bail out residue or send it into the bowl manually.
  3. Disconnect the supply line from the tank inlet valve.
  4. Unscrew the bolts connecting the tank to the bowl (from above). Often seized, lubricant needed.
  5. Lift off the old tank. Carefully — can be heavy (up to 10 kg when full).
  6. Remove the old gasket between tank and bowl.
  7. Inspect the bowl — the mating surface must be intact, no chips.
  8. Assemble the new tank — install the mechanism (usually included) and verify operation BEFORE mounting on the toilet.
  9. New gasket on the bowl's seat.
  10. Mount the tank on the bowl, secure with new bolts and rubber washers.
  11. Connect the supply line. Better with a new flex hose.
  12. Turn water on, fill the tank. Check level and valve operation.
  13. Test flush 5–10 times. Verify tightness of every joint.
  14. Adjust water level in the tank (1 cm below the overflow).

How much it costs in Israel

  • Budget tank (hardware) — ILS 200–400
  • Mid-range tank (Chromagen, Cersanit) — ILS 350–700
  • Premium tank (Villeroy, Duravit, Roca) — ILS 700–1,800
  • Replacement labor — ILS 300–500
  • New gasket and bolts (consumables) — +ILS 50–100
  • New supply line and angle valve — +ILS 100–200
  • If the tank fits your existing mechanism (you keep your working one) — -ILS 100

Alternatives to a full tank replacement

Sometimes a replacement isn't needed and the problem is solved by servicing the internals:

  • Water keeps running into the bowl — flush valve replacement (ILS 30–50 part, ILS 150–300 labor).
  • Tank fills poorly — fill valve replacement (ILS 40–80 + ILS 150–300).
  • Leaks between tank and bowl — gasket replacement (ILS 20 + ILS 150–250).
  • Button flushes only one mode — button unit replacement (ILS 50–150 + ILS 100–200).

If the internals are 5+ years old and problems stack up — it's simpler to replace the whole tank.

Pitfalls

  • Bolts seized in the bowl. Common after 10+ years. Needs WD-40, patience, sometimes an angle grinder.
  • Over-tightened new bolts. Porcelain cracks under force. Tighten gradually, crosswise, to firm contact only.
  • Wrong gasket. Comes standard in the kit, but some models need a specific one. Verify.
  • Wet bolts after install. Means the washer seated unevenly — water leaks from under the washer into the bowl. Redo.
  • Skipped inline shutoff valve in the tank. A filterless fill valve clogs with stack debris within half a year.

FAQ

Can the tank be replaced without swapping the bowl?

Yes, it's a standard job. The key is mount and outlet compatibility. For most close-coupled toilets universal tanks are available and fit without issue. The bowl porcelain can last another 20 years after a tank swap.

Why does a tank crack?

Most often — water hammer (sudden pressure spikes) and temperature swings (hot water on the outer wall when the shower runs, cold water inside). Sometimes a manufacturing defect (internal stress in the porcelain). Risk goes down with a pressure reducer and water-hammer arrestor.

For a one-piece unit (monobloc) — can just the upper part be replaced?

No. A monobloc is a single porcelain piece where tank and bowl are cast together. A cracked tank = replacing the whole monobloc. That's why monobloc is scarier for repair — but tends to live longer thanks to the monolithic build.

Should the plumber bring the tank?

Usually not. You buy the tank yourself (need the model or mounting dimensions), the plumber comes and installs. If unsure of compatibility — book a diagnostic visit (ILS 200–300), he'll tell you what to buy and come back for installation.