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Closet bend

Short definition

A closet bend is the long-sweep 90-degree elbow that connects a toilet’s closet flange to the horizontal branch drain or soil stack below the floor. The long radius is the point: it prevents waste from hanging up at the bend.

What it is

Every gravity-fed toilet sits on a closet flange, and just below the flange is a 3- or 4-inch elbow that turns the vertical discharge into the horizontal drain underneath. That elbow is the closet bend. Modern installations use a long-sweep ¼ bend (in either ABS, PVC, or cast iron) rather than a short-radius elbow, because the gentler curve carries solids through without catching them.

In pre-1970 cast-iron systems, the closet bend was often poured in lead at the flange union. In modern PVC or ABS work, it’s a glued slip-on fitting.

Why it matters to a homeowner

You’ll usually only hear the term from a plumber, but it explains some expensive surprises. When a toilet leaks at the base, the wax ring is the most common culprit — but a cracked closet bend underneath behaves identically and can’t be diagnosed without pulling the toilet. If a second-floor toilet is leaking into the kitchen below in a pre-1970 home, the closet bend is one of the prime suspects, and replacing it usually means opening the floor.

When you’ll encounter this term

  • A plumber pulls your toilet, looks down, and says “the closet bend is cracked.”
  • A pre-1970 second-story toilet leaks into the room below and the repair quote includes flooring work.
  • During a bathroom remodel, the contractor specifies a new long-sweep closet bend in PVC.

Common variants / not the same as

  • Closet bend vs. closet flange. The flange is the round fitting that bolts to the floor and accepts the wax ring. The bend is the elbow below it.
  • Closet bend vs. ¼ bend long-sweep. Same shape, but “closet bend” is reserved for under-toilet use in 3- or 4-inch sizes.