This is the simple tool that makes painting behind a toilet easy and doable for everyone. You should now have 6 inches of paint brushed in along the trim and around the water line.
You’ll also want to use your brush and brush a coat of paint along the trim, going up roughly 6 inches again. I like to brush out about 6 inches in every direction. So, you’ll want to get out your 2″ cutting brush and brush around the water inlet pipe that is coming out of your wall and goes to the toilet. Rollers cannot get in close enough to edges, corners, and pipes to look good. This will protect your water tank even better than a few strips of tape. Next, wrap a couple of strips of tape around the entire tank to tighten up the bag (so it doesn’t hang off an into the paint). NOTE: Another option for prepping off the toilet’s water tank is to take a garbage bag and place it over the tank from the top down. When painting the wall above the toilet, I like to place a small drop cloth over the entire toilet to protect it from splatter.įinally, run a strip of tape on the trim behind the toilet and press it firmly into place with a 5-in-1 tool or small mud knife. No tape is needed on top of the toilet if you removed the water tank lid. Make sure the first strip of tape wraps slightly behind the back edge of the water tank. Next, run three strips of 1.5″ painters tape along both sides of the toilets water tank. The tank its self should have plenty of clearance between it and the wall you are about the paint.
Plus the lid easily lifts off the toilet, no point in not removing it. The tank lid actually hangs over the tank by about an inch and usually doesn’t have enough clearance between it and the wall. I like to remove the water tank lid when I paint behind toilets. All trim in your house gets dirty, and if it isn’t perfectly clean your tape won’t stick to it perfectly. Note: Make sure to clean off the trim behind the toilet during this process as well or your tape will not stick to it. It’s safe for kids and pets, which I like in our house. I’ve started using Better Life Natural Cleaner. You’re going to want to completely wipe down that toilet because you are going to be on your hands and knees reaching around the toilet (basically bear hugging it) and the only way this is going to be tolerable is if the toilet is perfectly clean. I can’t tell you how many homeowners don’t even bother to clean up their bathroom before I come in to paint it (ewww).
I’ve been painting for nearly 20 years and have painted hundreds of bathrooms. It takes less than 5 minutes, uses common painting tools, and leaves your bathroom wall behind your toilet with a similar texture to the rest of the walls.
The mini roller method is the easiest and in my opinion, best way to approach when wondering how to paint behind a toilet. How To Paint Behind A Toilet Method #1: The Mini Roller Method Tools Needed For Painting Behind A Toilet I’m going to show you how a little bit of prep, a brush, and mini roller will get the wall behind your toilet painted perfectly without missing any wall space or getting paint all over your toilet. Painting behind your toilet requires only a few basic tools, a little bit of prep, and just a few minutes of work. Well, it’s easy and I’m going to tell you how! How To Paint Behind A Toilet So how can you easily and effectively get the wall painted behind your toilet? You’re not going to remove the toilet, that’s out of the question. No matter how you look at it, you can’t figure out a good way to get in behind your big smelly toilet. You’ve bought your paint, drop cloths are in place, roller and brush are ready to go, but you’ve got one big problem…