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What is a high efficiency toilet?

If you're looking for immediate water savings, replacing the toilets is one of the best options for property owners, especially if you currently have older, high water-use models.

In the 1950s, toilets typically used 7 gallons or more for each flush. From the 1960s to the 1970s, toilets used only 5.5 gallons, and in the 1980s, the new toilets were designed to use 3.5 gallons. Since 1995, any new toilet has to use a maximum of 1.6 gallons of water per flush.

High efficiency toilets consume at least 20% below the standard per flush model (1.6 gallons).

Are low flow shower heads as good?

Showering represents approximately 17 percent of residential indoor water use in the United States—more than 1.2 trillion gallons of water consumed each year.
Source: www.epa.gov

Our shower heads do not compromise performance for efficiency. Our shower heads have been tried and tested (by Little Green House) and have met the challenge to both conserve and offer a satisfying shower by engineering the movement of water, controling the size of the droplet, and focusing the water stream.