Honest diagnostics. Quality repairs or replacements. Work that lasts.
Most homeowners in Greater Eagle don't think much about their toilet until it stops doing its job.
That's fair. A working toilet is invisible. A failing one takes over your day.
At Ike Plumbing Services, we treat toilet work the way we'd want it handled at our own homes — with a real look at what's wrong, an honest answer about whether to repair or replace, and a fix that holds. Not a quick patch that brings the same problem back in six weeks. Not a replacement push when a thirty-dollar part would've solved it.
This is what we do every day in Eagle, and below is what that actually looks like.
Professional toilet installation, repair, and replacement performed with care and precision.
When you're putting in a new toilet — whether it's a remodel, a new build, or a like-for-like upgrade — the work that matters happens before the bowl ever touches the floor. Flange height has to be right. The seal has to seat clean. The supply line has to be solid. The mounting has to be true so the bowl doesn't rock once you sit on it.
We handle toilet installation in Greater Eagle as a documented sequence. Inspect the flange. Correct the height if needed. Set the wax ring or modern replacement properly. Tighten the closet bolts to the right tension — not so loose the seal leaks, not so tight you crack the porcelain. Connect supply and verify. Flush-test multiple cycles before we leave.
If your toilet is from the early 1990s or before, it's using somewhere around three to seven gallons per flush. Modern fixtures use 1.28 gallons. The water bill math alone usually justifies the replacement within a couple of years, and that's before you factor in performance and reliability.
Toilet replacement in Eagle starts with removing the old fixture, inspecting the flange and floor underneath, addressing any subfloor damage we find, and installing the new fixture properly. We don't leave hidden issues under a new toilet for you to discover later.
A toilet that keeps running is wasting water around the clock. A toilet leaking at the base is doing damage to your floor that you can't see until the damage is real.
Both have specific causes. Running is usually a flapper, fill valve, or flush valve issue. Base leaking is usually a wax seal failure, a flange problem, or — sometimes — a hairline crack in the bowl itself. We figure out which one and fix it. Not all three on principle.
Some clogs you can clear with a plunger. The ones that don't clear that way often signal something else: a partial obstruction in the trapway, a tree root in the line downstream, or a venting issue causing repeat clogs at the same fixture.
When we get called for a clogged toilet in Greater Eagle, we clear the immediate blockage and then ask the right question: is this likely to come back? If yes, we tell you why and what would actually resolve it.
Sometimes the bowl is fine and the tank's the trouble. Cracked tanks, persistent leaks at the tank-to-bowl connection, or worn-out internals that need a full rebuild. We handle tank-level work as its own scope and don't push a full replacement when only the tank needs attention.
A failing flange is the hidden cause behind a lot of toilet problems homeowners blame on the fixture itself. If your wax seal keeps failing, the flange is usually the culprit. If your toilet rocks when you sit, the flange or the bolts holding to it are involved. We handle flange repair and replacement as part of toilet work, with attention to whatever subfloor condition the original problem may have created.
A toilet that's overflowing is putting water on your floor every second it runs. We respond fast to overflow calls in Eagle, stop the source, and figure out why it happened.
Wall-mounted toilets have their own install requirements — a properly anchored carrier, the right rough-in for the carrier height, concealed connections done correctly. These aren't interchangeable with floor-mount installs and need someone who's actually done them. We have. Multiple times. In Greater Eagle homes and commercial properties alike.
Basement toilets often need ejector pumps or upflush systems because they're below the main sewer line. Installation and repair on these systems involves more than the toilet itself — the pump, the discharge line, and the venting all have to work together. We handle the whole system.
Tell us what's going on. We'll ask enough questions to figure out what we're walking into.
For non-emergency toilet work in Eagle, that's usually the same week. For overflows or active leaks, that's same-day.
If something delays us, you get a call — not silence.
Look at the fixture, the flange, the supply, the floor. Whatever's relevant.
Repair, replace, or do-nothing-for-now. Each one with a real number.
Flush. Check the seal. Confirm there's no leak at the supply. Make sure the bowl sits flat.
No surprise additions.
We don't trap you in a fixed quote that turns into a different number once we start the work. We don't add charges at the end without showing them to you first.
Running constantly, running occasionally, leaking at the base, leaking at the tank, weak flush, won't flush. Each one points us in a different direction.
There's usually a model number stamped inside the tank lid or on the back of the bowl. Helps with parts.
If you're planning a replacement, think about comfort height, standard height, round bowl or elongated, one-piece or two-piece.
The valve behind the toilet should turn cleanly. If it's stuck, that's something we'll need to address.
Don't pour chemicals down a clogged toilet right before we arrive.
A toilet that runs intermittently — every fifteen or twenty minutes, for a few seconds at a time — feels minor. It isn't.
A toilet that's running at that rate is wasting somewhere between 200 and 600 gallons of water a day, depending on the leak rate. Over a month, that's a meaningful jump on the water bill. Over a year, it's significant money down the drain. Literally.
The standard fix offered is flapper replacement... But not always.
A real diagnosis on a running toilet looks at the flush valve as a whole.
A straightforward replacement in Eagle usually runs one to two hours. If the flange needs work or the subfloor's compromised, plan on longer.
Yes. Many homeowners do. Just let us know the brand and model so we can verify any quirks before the visit.
Yes. That's the whole point of the diagnostic. We'll document both options when the math is close.
Either the fixture has an internal obstruction, the trap arm has a problem, or there's something downstream causing repeated backup. We diagnose where it's actually happening in Greater Eagle before guessing.
We back our labor for one year. The fixture itself has the manufacturer's warranty, which we walk you through at close-out.
If your toilet's running, leaking, weakly flushing, or just past its time, call Ike Plumbing Services and we'll get it handled in Eagle.
Click Here to Call (888) 466-2103Don't wait until a slow problem becomes a flooded floor — call now.