You can save 11,000 gallons a year by updating your bathroom with a WaterSense labeled toilet.
Learn moreWhat You Can Do
Use Your WaterSense!
By making just a few small changes to your daily routine, you can save a significant amount of water, save money and preserve water supplies for future generations. The WaterSense label will help you identify high-efficiency products and programs. These water-efficienct products provide the same performance and quality you've come to expect, but with the added benefit of water savings.
Along with using WaterSense labeled products, adopt the following water-efficient practices to save money and protect the environment:
- Don't Flush Your Money Down the Drain!
- Fix That Leak!
- Make It a Full Load
- Shower Power
- Turn It Off!
- Water Wisely
Fix That Leak!
Challenge: Leaky faucets that drip at the rate
of one drip per second can waste more than 3,000 gallons of water
each year.
Solution: If you're unsure whether you have a leak,
read your water meter before and after a two-hour period when no
water is being used. If the meter does not read exactly the same,
you probably have a leak.
Challenge: A leaky toilet can waste about 200
gallons of water every day.
Solution: To tell if your toilet has a leak, place
a drop of food coloring in the tank; if the color shows in the bowl
without flushing, you have a leak.
For more information, read about WaterSense's annual Fix a Leak Week.
Shower Power
Challenge: A full bath tub requires about 70 gallons
of water, while taking a five-minute shower uses 10 to 25 gallons.
Solution: If you take a bath, stopper the drain
immediately and adjust the temperature as you fill the tub.
Turn It Off!
Challenge: The average bathroom faucet flows at
a rate of two gallons per minute.
Solution: Turning off the tap while brushing your
teeth in the morning and at bedtime can save up to 8 gallons of
water per day, which equals 240 gallons a month!
Water Wisely
Challenge: The typical single-family suburban
household uses at least 30 percent of their water outdoors for irrigation.
Some experts estimate that more than 50 percent of landscape water
use goes to waste due to evaporation or runoff caused by overwatering.
Solution: Drip irrigation systems use between 20
to 50 percent less water than conventional in-ground sprinkler systems.
They are also much more efficient than conventional sprinklers because
no water is lost to wind, runoff, and evaporation. If your in-ground
system uses 100,000 gallons annually, you could potentially save
more than 200,000 gallons over the lifetime of a drip irrigation
should you choose to install it. That adds up to savings of at least
$1,150!
Make It a Full Load
Challenge: The average washing machine uses about
41 gallons of water per load.
Solution: High-efficiency washing machines use
less than 28 gallons of water per load. To achieve even greater
savings, wash only full loads of laundry or use the appropriate
load size selection on the washing machine.
Don't Flush Your Money Down the Drain!
Challenge: If your toilet is from 1992 or earlier,
you probably have an inefficient model that uses at least 3.5 gallons
per flush.
Solution: New and improved high-efficiency models
use less than 1.3 gallons per flushthat's at least 60 percent
less than their older, less efficient counterparts. Compared to
a 3.5 gallons per flush toilet, a WaterSense labeled toilet could
save a family of four more than $90 annually on their water bill,
and $2,000 over the lifetime of the toilet.
