Just One Toilet Could Be Costing Your Building $20,000 a Year

Water waste rarely announces itself. There's no alarm, no emergency call, no visible damage. Just a toilet running quietly in a unit somewhere in your building, adding to your water bill every single day.

For property managers and building owners overseeing multifamily residential buildings, that silence is the problem. A single running toilet can waste hundreds of gallons a day. Multiply that across a portfolio of buildings with dozens or hundreds of units, and the financial exposure adds up fast, often before anyone realizes there's a problem to fix.

The Math: How the Costs of a Leak Can Add Up

In New York City, building owners pay $13.07 per 100 cubic feet (CCF) of water, roughly 748 gallons.1  Water costs in NYC have risen 26.62% since 2020, meaning the math on undetected waste is considerably worse than it was just a few years ago.

A large toilet leak, meanwhile, can waste up to 6,000 gallons per day.2 At current NYC rates, that's just over $100 a day and nearly $38,000 a year from a single toilet.

Even a single toilet with a moderate leak carries significant costs over time. An open fill valve wasting three to five gallons per minute runs to approximately $22,000 annually. Even smaller, silent leaks that are hard to detect and are the least likely to get reported, but can and do happen, still cost $1,500 to $2,000 per toilet per year. New York’s Multiple Dwelling Law requires every apartment to have at least one toilet, for around 25-40 toilets per building. If each toilet has a tiny leak, this could be costing between $37,500 and $80,000 a year!

Now put that across a 100-unit building where 10% of toilets are running at any given time. The annual exposure isn't a rounding error. It's a line item that belongs in every operating budget conversation.

Why Leaks Are Hard to Spot

Utility bills don't tell you which toilet is running. They tell you weeks later that something changed, and by then the waste has already been building for months. Pinpointing the source is even harder. Water usage shifts constantly, and there's no way to tell from a bill alone whether a spike came from a leaky toilet or just a busier-than-usual month.

Even when a spike is visible, tracking it to a specific unit means physically checking every toilet in the building. In a 50- or 100-unit property, that kind of manual sweep isn't a realistic part of anyone's maintenance workflow.

Tenants aren't a reliable signal either. A running toilet in a private unit is easy to overlook, especially when the building pays the water bill. Most leaks go unreported not because tenants are negligent, but because there's genuinely no financial reason for them to notice. Water usage fluctuates for all kinds of reasons:

  • Weather and temperature
  • Occupancy levels
  • Changing tenant habits

So even a tenant who notices something unusual may chalk it up to normal variation and move on.

The Causes of Leaky Toilets

Part of the issue is that toilets leak for all kinds of reasons. To make matters worse, the average person knows little about plumbing. So, unless a catastrophe occurs, toilet leaks are often ignored on the tenant side.

Some of the most likely causes of a leak include:3

  • Worn flappers. The rubber valve controlling water flow from the tank to the bowl degrades over time. Average lifespan is about three years. A worn flapper is one of the most frequent causes of a continuously running toilet.
  • Faulty fill valves. When the fill valve fails to shut off correctly, water runs continuously into the tank and overflows through the overflow tube.
  • Chain or strap misalignment. If the chain connecting the flush handle to the flapper is too long or too short, the flapper won't seal properly after a flush.
  • Supply line or wax ring failures. These tend to be more visible since water pools on the floor, but in low-traffic or vacant units they can go unnoticed for months.

The common thread: none of these failures create an obvious emergency. Water moves through the system quietly, usage climbs gradually, and the cost compounds until the bill arrives.

What You Can Do About It

The reality is that toilets leak. Parts break down over time, and there’s nothing you can do about that.

However, you can address the issue of leaky toilets with some proactive approaches.

Set Up Smart Toilet Monitoring

Smart toilet monitoring solves the core problem: you can't physically check every toilet in your building on a regular basis, but a sensor can keep watch around the clock. Modern running toilet detection systems help property teams identify leaks much sooner than traditional inspections or utility bill reviews.

The technology is straightforward. Our wireless sensors clip onto the toilet's water supply hose and detect the temperature differential created by continuous water flow. A running toilet keeps the hose cooler than the surrounding air, so when the sensor catches that signal it sends an alert directly to the property team with the exact unit location, meaning by the time the next water bill arrives, the leak has already been found and fixed.

Installation takes roughly 10 seconds per toilet with no plumbing work, no water shutoff, and no tenant coordination required, so most buildings are fully set up in a single visit. From there, the system runs continuously in the background, and catching one or two leaks typically covers the cost of the entire installation.

Replace Old Toilets

For buildings with toilets manufactured before 1994, a full replacement is worth putting on the capital planning radar. Modern high-efficiency toilets (HETs) use significantly less water per flush, and older units are simply more prone to the kinds of mechanical failures that cause running toilets in the first place, so the long-term savings can justify the upfront investment.

That said, replacing every toilet in a building before it fails is a major undertaking. The cost alone makes it a rare proactive move for most building owners, and the tenant disruption that comes with a full retrofit, including noise and temporary water shutoffs, adds another layer of complexity to the decision.

Hire a Plumber to Do Routine Checks

Scheduling regular plumbing checks is a reasonable way to catch running toilets between billing cycles. A plumber doing periodic rounds of the building can identify mechanical issues before they compound into a larger water bill, and it puts the detection process in professional hands rather than relying on tenants to report problems.

The tradeoff is cost and logistics. Routine plumbing visits add up quickly, and getting unit access means coordinating with tenants on a recurring basis, which gets complicated fast in larger buildings.

Educate Tenants on the Signs of a Leaky Toilet

Sharing guidance with tenants on what a running toilet looks and sounds like is a low-cost step that's worth taking. A notice in the elevator or a building-wide email can go a long way toward surfacing issues that might otherwise go unreported for months. Signs tenants should know to flag include:

  • Hearing noises from a toilet that's not in use
  • Having to wiggle the handle to stop the toilet from running
  • Seeing water trickling into the bowl long after a flush

The honest limitation is that this approach depends entirely on tenants paying attention and following through, and in buildings where the tenant pays nothing toward the water bill, that's a hard thing to count on. It works best as one layer of a broader strategy rather than a standalone solution.

Why Addressing a Leaky Toilet Is So Important

The financial case is straightforward, but the reasons to act go beyond the water bill. Running toilets that go undetected long enough tend to create problems that compound well beyond the original fault:

  • Property damage: A slow leak that goes unaddressed long enough can escalate from a worn flapper into sustained water damage across flooring, subfloor, and adjacent units, turning a minor repair into a significant capital event.
  • Compliance exposure: Some municipalities set water usage benchmarks or resource efficiency targets, and an undetected leak running for months can affect a building's usage profile in ways that show up in benchmarking reports and, in some cases, carry fines. As more cities focus on building performance, many owners are adopting smart building controls to gain better oversight of energy and water consumption across their portfolios.
  • Board accountability: For co-op and condo boards, rising water charges without a clear explanation are the kind of thing shareholders ask hard questions about at board meetings. Catching a problem early is a much easier conversation than explaining a spike after the fact.

Cut Down Your Water Bills with Runwise

A toilet that costs your building $20,000 a year doesn't announce itself. It just runs, quietly and continuously, until someone happens to find it or the water bill arrives with an unwelcome surprise.

Runwise Smart Toilet Monitoring gives property teams an earlier signal. Sensors install across an entire building in a single visit, run continuously in the background, and send an alert directly to your phone or dashboard the moment a toilet starts running. Most buildings find their first leak within 24 hours of going live, and in most cases that one find covers the cost of the entire system.

Get an estimate (in under 90 seconds) of how much our smart heating controls could save your building.

 

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