A chipped toilet might seem like a minor issue, but porcelain damage exposes the porous vitreous china beneath, creating a breeding ground for bacteria and making proper cleaning difficult. Professional toilet chip repair restores the surface quickly and cost-effectively — for a fraction of the cost of replacement.
How Do Toilets Get Chipped?
- Dropped items — cleaning bottles, tools, the toilet seat lid
- Seat hinges striking the bowl rim
- Impact during bathroom renovation or plumbing work
- Moving or repositioning during installation
- Children’s toys dropped in or around the toilet
Can a Chipped Toilet Be Repaired?
Yes — in most cases, chips on toilet bowls and cisterns can be repaired professionally to a very high standard. The repair uses a specialist vitreous china or porcelain repair compound that is colour-matched to the toilet, filled into the chip, cured, and then finished to match the surrounding glaze. Most white toilet repairs are virtually invisible once complete.
What About the Glaze?
The glaze on a toilet is a very hard, high-gloss vitreous surface. The repair compound is applied to match this gloss level, and the finished repair is sealed to create a hygienic, non-porous surface over the previously exposed area. While a DIY repair kit may not achieve this standard, a professional repair restores both the appearance and the hygiene properties of the surface.
Colour Matching
The vast majority of toilets in UK homes are white — but not all whites are the same. Toilet whites vary from pure bright white to cream, ivory, almond, linen and biscuit tones depending on the manufacturer and age of the suite. Our technicians mix tones on-site to match your specific toilet colour, including aged or vintage suites that have yellowed slightly over time.
Cistern Chips
Chips on toilet cisterns are repaired using the same techniques as bowl chips. The cistern lid and the cistern body are both repairable — chips to the lid are particularly common from being lifted and dropped.
Repair vs Replacement
A replacement toilet suite typically costs £150–£600 plus plumbing costs of £100–£300 to remove and refit. For a single chip on an otherwise sound toilet, professional repair costing a fraction of that is almost always the more sensible option.
Get a Free Toilet Chip Repair Quote
Send a close-up photograph of the chip and a wider shot of the toilet for a free, no-obligation estimate.
Request a free toilet repair quote →
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