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Drain Cleaner For Blocked — Toilet

Save the chemicals for the sink. Save your porcelain (and your plumber’s good graces). Grab the plunger, buy an auger, or pick up the phone. Your bathroom will thank you. Have you ever made the mistake of using drain cleaner in a toilet? Tell us about the aftermath in the comments below.

Your eyes then wander to the cabinet under the sink. You see it: the bottle of industrial drain cleaner. The label promises to “melt hair,” “dissolve grease,” and “clear clogs fast.” It seems like the logical next step. drain cleaner for blocked toilet

For $20-$30 at a hardware store, you can buy a toilet auger. It is a flexible rod with a protective rubber sleeve that won't scratch the porcelain. You crank it into the trap way to physically grab or push the clog through. This is the gold standard for DIY toilet repair. Save the chemicals for the sink

Toilet clogs are usually (and sometimes "flushable" wipes, which are a lie). Drain cleaners are designed to dissolve hair and grease . They are not particularly good at dissolving a wad of wet paper or a foreign object like a toy or a cotton swab. Your bathroom will thank you

We’ve all been there. You flush the toilet, and instead of the satisfying swirl of water disappearing, the bowl fills to the brim. Panic sets in. You grab the plunger, give it a few good pumps, but nothing happens.

Save the chemicals for the sink. Save your porcelain (and your plumber’s good graces). Grab the plunger, buy an auger, or pick up the phone. Your bathroom will thank you. Have you ever made the mistake of using drain cleaner in a toilet? Tell us about the aftermath in the comments below.

Your eyes then wander to the cabinet under the sink. You see it: the bottle of industrial drain cleaner. The label promises to “melt hair,” “dissolve grease,” and “clear clogs fast.” It seems like the logical next step.

For $20-$30 at a hardware store, you can buy a toilet auger. It is a flexible rod with a protective rubber sleeve that won't scratch the porcelain. You crank it into the trap way to physically grab or push the clog through. This is the gold standard for DIY toilet repair.

Toilet clogs are usually (and sometimes "flushable" wipes, which are a lie). Drain cleaners are designed to dissolve hair and grease . They are not particularly good at dissolving a wad of wet paper or a foreign object like a toy or a cotton swab.

We’ve all been there. You flush the toilet, and instead of the satisfying swirl of water disappearing, the bowl fills to the brim. Panic sets in. You grab the plunger, give it a few good pumps, but nothing happens.