Walk away for 30 minutes. Let chemistry and physics do their job. When you return, the plug will likely have dissolved into a slurry. Flush gently. When The Paper Isn't The Real Problem Here is the dark conclusion: If a toilet blocks exclusively on toilet paper, with no solids and no foreign objects, your toilet might be dying.
Ultra-soft, quilted, or "rippled" toilet paper has more surface area and air pockets. While that feels great on your posterior, it acts like a sponge in the pipe. It absorbs water faster, expands larger, and holds its shape longer than cheap, single-ply, see-through sandpaper from a gas station bathroom. blocked toilet with toilet paper
If you flush again (as panicked humans always do), you add turbulence. That turbulence doesn't break the paper apart; it felts it. You are essentially creating a low-grade paper mache plug. The fibers intertwine, creating a semi-permeable dam. Water can seep through slowly, but the solid mass cannot pass the bend. Walk away for 30 minutes