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The world ditched wasteful toilets, the US stayed behind

DW English · May 6, 2026, 3:00 AM

Key takeaways

  • US toilets use far more water than many of their global counterparts.
  • In Europe, on the other hand, the process looks much different.
  • All this potty talk isn't just impolite dinner table conversation.

Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.

US toilets use far more water than many of their global counterparts. President Donald Trump is pushing to loosen water pressure standards, a move critics say would increase waste.

https://p.dw.com/p/5BZNo Since the 1992 water efficiency law, new American toilets must use less water per flush Image: Frank Hoermann/Sven Simon/picture alliance Advertisement If you're flushing a toilet in the US, you're probably accustomed to that characteristic whoosh as a jet of water fills the bowl and then siphons down the contents with a dramatic gulp.

In Europe, on the other hand, the process looks much different. There's almost always an option for a lighter or stronger flush, depending on what you need. And the water doesn't suction, but instead simply shoves the waste down. For a true contrast, in Germany and the Netherlands, sometimes the waste lands on a ceramic shelf that sits directly above a pool of water.

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