Those two buttons on your toilet aren’t decorative. They have a real purpose. Modern dual-flush toilets use a simple system: the larger button handles solid waste and uses six to nine liters of water. The smaller button handles liquid waste and uses only three to four point five liters. Most people don’t know the difference. Some press both at once. Others guess. Neither is ideal.
The idea came from Australia in 1980. Water was scarce. Someone realized that flushing liquid waste with the same force as solid waste made no sense. So they designed a toilet with options. It took time to catch on, but now dual-flush systems are standard in many countries. They save water without sacrificing performance. You just have to use them correctly.
When used properly, these toilets save a household up to 20,000 liters of water per year compared to older single-flush systems. That’s not a small number. That’s real conservation. Over time, the water savings add up. The toilet pays for itself. And the environment takes less of a hit. Not bad for a bathroom fixture.
So next time you reach for those buttons, pause. Small flush for liquid. Big flush for solid. It’s not complicated. But millions of people still get it wrong. A little mindfulness at the toilet saves thousands of gallons a year. That’s the kind of habit that doesn’t feel like sacrifice—it just feels like paying attention. And your wallet will notice too.