What Not to Flush Down the Toilet
There’s perhaps no fixture in your home as important as your toilet. But when your toilet is not flushing well or when it gets clogged, you and your family are in for a rough time — and, if it’s bad enough, a big plumbing bill.
Fortunately, most clogs are preventable. It’s as easy as knowing what not to flush down the toilet. And, thankfully, the list of things you can flush down the toilet is short, and consists of just two things: human waste and toilet paper. Anything else is a no-go. Here’s a list of things you should never flush down the toilet, unless you want to find yourself frantically googling “how to unclog a toilet”.
Wet Wipes, Baby Wipes or Disposable Cleaning Pads
Can you flush baby wipes? No, you cannot. They might seem a lot like toilet paper, and the packaging might even claim that they’re flushable, but they can clog up your toilet or even your whole sewer line. Wet wipes — the adult kind — and hemorrhoid wipes or pads are a no-go, too.
Baby wipes, wet wipes and the like are not biodegradable, and they are not designed to break down on contact with water, the way toilet paper is. Even if they manage to make it past your home plumbing, wet wipes, baby wipes and even the disposable cleaning pads from your toilet-cleaning wand can build up in your city’s sewer system and cause serious problems. Don’t flush them.
Diapers
Diapers are designed to absorb moisture, so throwing them in a toilet bowl full of water is a really bad idea. What happens to a diaper when you toss it in the toilet? It immediately starts absorbing all the water in the bowl and swelling up. So, even if you can get it to flush, it’ll probably get stuck in the pipe right away.
Rubber Gloves, Masks or Other Disposables
It should go without saying that gloves and other household protective items made of latex, polyurethane, nitrile, or other plastic or rubber compounds are not biodegradable, and they’ll definitely clog your toilet if you flush them. Same goes for medical masks. Throw them away in the trash, and if you’re worried about sanitation, empty that trash every day.
Paper Towels
A paper towel might make a reasonable stand-in for toilet paper in a pinch, but that doesn’t mean you should flush it down the toilet. Paper towels are designed to clean up messes and sop up spills without tearing or breaking down — the opposite of toilet paper, which is designed to disintegrate as it gets wet. If you have to use a paper towel, throw it away instead of flushing it, and save yourself the headache of a toilet not flushing properly.