Upstairs Toilet Blocked -

If I flush again, will it overflow onto the bathroom floor, soak through the ceiling, and drip onto the new rug downstairs? Yes. Yes it will. So we don’t flush.

In every home, there’s a fixture waiting to humble you. For us, it’s the upstairs toilet. For you? Don’t wait until it’s gurgling to find out. Would you like a more troubleshooting-focused version (checklist, tools needed, DIY steps) instead of a story style? upstairs toilet blocked

Twenty minutes of twisting metal, praying for a “thunk” that means hair or a toy soldier. Instead, just wet toilet paper and regret. If I flush again, will it overflow onto

There’s a special kind of dread that comes from hearing the words “upstairs toilet blocked.” Not the downstairs loo. Not the guest powder room. The upstairs toilet. The one that sits directly above the living room sofa. So we don’t flush

It started like any other Tuesday morning. Coffee, kids’ shoes missing, the usual chaos. Then my spouse called up the stairs: “Did you flush something you shouldn’t have?”

I hadn’t. But there it was: water rising slowly in the bowl, threatening to breach the rim like a miniature, disgusting tide.

The classic red rubber friend. A few good pumps. Nothing. A few aggressive, life-questioning pumps. Water level drops an inch, then climbs back. The gurgle it makes sounds almost sarcastic.