Overview
Add food coloring to the tank. If color appears in the bowl without flushing, the flapper needs replacing. A leaky toilet can waste over 200 gallons per day.
Step-by-Step Guide
Check the base for water
Inspect the floor around the toilet base for standing water, discoloration, or soft spots. Dry the floor completely with a towel and lay down paper towels to detect new moisture. Water at the base may indicate a failed wax ring seal.
Perform the food coloring test
Remove the tank lid and add 5-10 drops of dark food coloring (red or blue works best) into the tank water. Do not flush. Wait 15-30 minutes and check the bowl. If colored water appears in the bowl, the flapper valve is leaking.
Inspect the flapper valve
With the tank lid off, examine the rubber flapper at the bottom of the tank. Feel it for warping, cracks, or mineral deposits. A healthy flapper is flexible and forms a tight seal. If it feels stiff, slimy, or deformed, it needs replacing.
Check the fill valve and float
Flush the toilet and watch the fill valve operate. The water level should stop about 1 inch below the top of the overflow tube. If water continuously trickles into the overflow tube, the fill valve or float needs adjustment or replacement.
Listen for running water
After the tank finishes filling, listen carefully. A properly functioning toilet should be completely silent. Any hissing, trickling, or periodic refilling (phantom flushes) indicates a leak somewhere in the tank assembly.
Inspect the supply line connection
Trace the braided or chrome supply line from the shut-off valve on the wall to the bottom of the tank. Run your finger along the connections at both ends feeling for moisture. Tighten hand-tight if you find drips — do not over-tighten or you may crack the tank fitting.
Check the tank-to-bowl bolts
Look at the two or three bolts underneath the tank where it connects to the bowl. If you see mineral deposits, rust stains, or moisture, the rubber washers on those bolts may have deteriorated. Gently tighten with a wrench — a quarter turn at most — alternating sides to keep even pressure.
What You'll Need
Tools
- - Food coloring (any dark color)
- - Paper towels or dry rags
- - Adjustable wrench
- - Flashlight
Materials
- - Replacement flapper valve (if leak is confirmed, $3-$8 at any hardware store)
Cost Estimates
DIY Cost
$0 - $8
Professional Cost
$75 - $250
Safety Tips
- Tank water is clean but may contain cleaning chemical residue — wear gloves if you use drop-in tablets.
- Do not over-tighten tank bolts — porcelain cracks easily and a cracked tank cannot be repaired.
- If you detect water under the base, avoid rocking the toilet — this can break the wax ring seal further.
When to Call a Professional
Call a plumber if you find water seeping from under the toilet base (wax ring replacement requires removing the toilet), if the porcelain tank or bowl is cracked, or if the shut-off valve behind the toilet is corroded and won't close.
Pro Tip
Perform the food coloring test on every toilet in your home every 6 months. A silently leaking flapper can waste 200+ gallons per day — that is $50-$100 per month on your water bill for a $5 fix.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Flushing the toilet during the food coloring test, which invalidates the result.
- Assuming a quiet toilet means no leak — slow flapper leaks are often completely silent.
- Over-tightening tank bolts and cracking the porcelain.
- Ignoring water stains at the base, which may indicate a wax ring failure or subfloor damage.
- Using bleach drop-in tablets that degrade the flapper rubber faster.
Local Plumbers in Tifton

Tifton Housing Market
Homes for Sale
1
Median Household Income
$44,324
Median Home Value
$161,700
Median Rent
$793/mo
Homeownership Rate
38.1%
Population
17,140
Median Year Built
1978
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, ACS 2023 5-Year Estimates
Fair Market Rents — Tifton
Studio
$766/mo
1 Bedroom
$821/mo
2 Bedroom
$973/mo
3 Bedroom
$1,174/mo
4 Bedroom
$1,462/mo
Source: HUD FY2026 Fair Market Rents — Tift County, GA
This Task Appears On
Related How-To Guides
How to Flush a Water Heater Tank
Attach a hose to the drain valve and flush until water runs clear. Removes sediment that reduces efficiency and shortens tank life.
How to Clean Faucet Aerators
Unscrew faucet aerators and soak in vinegar to remove mineral buildup. Restores water pressure and improves flow consistency.
How to Locate and Test Your Main Water Shut-Off Valve
Know where your main shut-off valve is and test that it turns. A stuck valve during an emergency means a flooded house and thousands in damage.
