Ghost flushing, also known as phantom flushing, occurs when the toilet tank flapper is no longer creating a watertight seal with the flush valve, causing water to unnecessarily leak into the toilet bowl.

Is Ghost Flushing serious?

A ghost flushing toilet is a problem, but the occurrence is also a symptom. When the toilet ghost flushes, it is typically the sign of a loose flapper. The fact that it has flushed on its own once is cause enough to replace the flapper. However, you can run a conclusive test to make sure the flapper is the cause.

What causes ghost flushes?





Ghost flushing essentially happens when water leaks out of the tank over a long period of time. When the water level gets low enough in the tank, the float activates the fill valve and the tank abruptly refills, creating a noise that sounds like a proper flush.

Is a phantom flush a problem?

Don’t worry, no real phantoms are involved. A phantom flush is a fancy phrase for a leaking toilet tank. It occurs when water leaks out of the tank of your toilet (the back part), causing it to automatically refill with water.

How do I stop my toilet from ghost Flushing?

How To Stop Ghost Flushing

  1. Turn off the water supply valve near the base of the toilet.
  2. Flush the toilet and hold down handle until the water tank is empty.
  3. Remove the flapper by detaching the chain from the toilet handle and separating from the two posts on the flush valve.

How do I stop my toilet from making a flushing noise?

Quote from the video:
Quote from Youtube video: When you flush your toilet the water sucks it down it gets a nice vacuum. Once it starts to harden it starts to allow water to seep in through the sides. We place on the flapper is real simple.

How do you know if toilet is leaking?





Here is a simple Toilet Dye Test you can complete to see if your toilet is leaking.

  1. Drip 10 to 15 drops of food coloring into the toilet tank. …
  2. Wait 10 minutes.
  3. If colored water appears in the toilet bowl, you have a leak.
  4. Generally the leak is in or around the plunger ball or flapper valve at the bottom of the tank.