A toilet that bubbles or gurgles – either on its own or when you run a nearby sink, tub, or washing machine – is trying to tell you something. That sound is air being pulled backward through the water in the trap, and it almost always points to a drainage or venting problem, not the toilet itself. As a licensed plumber, here is how to read the gurgle and find the real cause.

What the gurgle actually means

Your drains rely on a vent system that lets air in so water can flow out smoothly, like the second hole you punch in a juice can. When a partial blockage or a blocked vent disturbs that airflow, the draining water pulls a vacuum and sucks air up through the nearest trap – the toilet – making it bubble. So gurgling = disrupted airflow somewhere in the system.

Cause 1: A partial clog near the toilet

The most common cause is a partial blockage in the toilet trap or its branch drain. Water gets past it but turbulently, pulling air. Try clearing it first – work through how to unclog a toilet with a flange plunger and a closet auger. If gurgling stops, that was it.

Cause 2: A blocked vent stack

If the vent pipe on your roof is blocked – by a bird nest, leaves, or ice in winter – air cannot enter the system normally, so drains gurgle and may drain slowly even when nothing is clogged inside. This is common in fall and after storms. Clearing a roof vent is a careful job; if you are not comfortable on a roof, this is a reasonable one to hand to a plumber.

Cause 3: A developing main-line clog

This is the one to take seriously. If the toilet gurgles whenever you run the washing machine, shower, or another toilet – or if multiple fixtures gurgle and drain slowly together – the blockage is in the main line that serves the whole house. Caught early it is a routine snaking; ignored, it becomes a sewage backup. See cost to unclog a main drain for what that involves.

Cause 4: Sewer gas and odor with the gurgle

If you also smell sewer gas, the gurgling and the smell usually share a cause – a venting problem or a dry/failing trap letting gas escape. Pair this article with why your house smells like sewer to track it down.

Diagnose it yourself in two minutes

When it gurgles Most likely cause First move
Only this toilet, on its own Partial clog in toilet/branch Plunge and auger the toilet
When you run a nearby sink or tub Shared branch clog or vent issue Clear the branch; check the vent
When you run the washer or another toilet Main-line blockage Stop heavy water use; call for a main-line snake
Several fixtures gurgle and drain slow Main line or vent Plumber – do not wait

When to call a plumber

Clear a simple toilet clog yourself first. But if gurgling happens across multiple fixtures, returns right after you clear it, or comes with slow drains and odor, that is a main-line or vent problem – call a plumber before it turns into a backup. If the toilet also keeps clogging, see why your toilet keeps clogging.

Frequently asked questions

Why does my toilet gurgle when I run the sink or shower?

Because they share a drain or vent. When the sink or shower drains, it pulls air through the system, and if there is a partial blockage or a venting problem, that air gets sucked up through the toilet trap and bubbles. If it only happens with a nearby fixture, the issue is usually in the shared branch drain or the vent.

Is a gurgling toilet an emergency?

Not always, but it can be an early warning. A single toilet gurgling on its own is usually a minor clog. But if several fixtures gurgle together, or the toilet gurgles when you run the washing machine, that points to a main-line blockage that can become a sewage backup – address it promptly rather than waiting.

Can I fix a gurgling toilet myself?

Often yes. Start by plunging and augering the toilet to clear a partial clog, which solves most single-toilet gurgles. If the gurgle is from a blocked roof vent or a main-line blockage, those usually need a plumber – especially anything involving multiple fixtures or roof work.

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🔧 Plumbing Picks Assistant
Hi! I am the Plumbing Picks assistant. Ask me about toilets, faucets, drains, leaks, water heaters, hard water, tools — anything plumbing — and I will point you to the fix. What is going on?