Toilet Installation Cost (2026)

Toilet Installation costs most homeowners between$635 and $1,151 per toilet, per May 2026, homewyse.com. Your price depends mostly on job size, location, and local labor rates.

National — per toilet

$635 $1,151

Typical average: $893

Cost per toilet. Reference range reorganized from homewyse.com (May 2026); not a quote.

Quick estimate

Pick your location for a local estimate:

Estimated cost

$635 – $1,151

Illustrative estimate. Get local written quotes before hiring.

Cost breakdown

Where your money goes on a typical job (May 2026).

Cost componentTypical rangeShare
Toilet Cost$269–$68359%
Toilet Installation Labor, Basic$241–$31227%
Toilet Installation Job Supplies$12–$151%
Option: Remove Toilet$56–$726%
Toilet Debris Disposal$57–$696%

Toilet Installation cost by city

Local labor and disposal rates move the price up or down. Tap a city for local detail.

CityTypical rangevs. national
New York, NY$791–$1,376+21%
San Jose, CA$757–$1,326+17%
San Francisco, CA$757–$1,326+17%
Seattle, WA$739–$1,301+14%
Chicago, IL$722–$1,276+12%
Boston, MA$722–$1,276+12%
Los Angeles, CA$705–$1,251+10%
Philadelphia, PA$687–$1,226+7%
San Diego, CA$687–$1,226+7%
Minneapolis, MN$687–$1,226+7%
Columbus, OH$625–$1,136-1%
Phoenix, AZ$618–$1,126-2%
Denver, CO$618–$1,126-2%
Atlanta, GA$600–$1,101-5%
Houston, TX$593–$1,091-6%
Dallas, TX$593–$1,091-6%
Jacksonville, FL$590–$1,086-6%
Miami, FL$590–$1,086-6%
San Antonio, TX$586–$1,081-7%
Austin, TX$583–$1,076-7%

Frequently asked questions

How much does toilet installation cost?

Nationally, toilet installation typically costs $635–$1,151 per toilet, per May 2026 homewyse.com data.

What's included in toilet installation cost?

A typical job breaks down into toilet cost, toilet installation labor, basic, toilet installation job supplies, option: remove toilet, toilet debris disposal. The exact mix and totals vary by market.

Does toilet installation cost vary by city?

Yes. It runs highest in New York, NY ($791–$1,376) and lowest in Austin, TX ($583–$1,076), driven by local labor and disposal rates.