plumbing troubleshooting
Replace bathroom faucet
Common symptoms: replace bathroom faucet; install lavatory faucet; bathroom faucet swap; pop-up drain replacement; vanity faucet
Stop and call a pro if:
- pop-up drain linkage may be brittle
- thin sink material can crack under wrench torque
Step-by-step diagnostic flow
Step 1
Did you shut off both hot and cold angle stops under the vanity, then open the old faucet to confirm no flow?
Step 2
Measure (or look up) the hole configuration on your sink. Does it match the new faucet?
Common bathroom configs: single-hole, 4" centerset (3 holes, 4" center-to-center on the outer handles), 8" widespread (3 holes, 6–16" apart).
Step 3
Look at the sink around the mounting holes. Any cracks, chips, or hairline fractures in the porcelain / china?
Bathroom sinks are thin and brittle. A pre-existing crack will spread when you torque mounting nuts.
Step 4
Are you also replacing the pop-up drain assembly (lift rod, linkage, and tailpiece), and what is the existing tailpiece made of?
Most new faucets come with a new pop-up assembly. The existing tailpiece threads into the sink from below; cast iron / brass tailpieces in old sinks can seize.
Step 5
What do the supply lines look like between the angle stops and the old faucet?
Step 6
Do you have basin wrench, channel locks, plumber's putty (or the silicone gasket the faucet supplies), PTFE tape, new braided supply lines, towels, and a small bucket?
Possible outcomes
You're ready — proceed with the swap
high confidenceWater is controlled, hole pattern matches, the sink is sound, the drain and supplies are workable.
- Disconnect the supplies at the faucet shanks, then unhook the lift-rod linkage from the pop-up clevis
- Unscrew the slip nut on the tailpiece (P-trap connection) and the locknut holding the pop-up flange; lift the old faucet out
- Clean the deck, set the new faucet (silicone gasket or a thin bead of plumber's putty if specified), and tighten mounting nuts evenly
- Install the new pop-up: putty under the flange, locknut and washer from below, thread in the pivot rod, hook to the clevis with the lift rod
- Connect new braided supplies, hand-tight plus a quarter turn
- Open the angle stops slowly, run hot and cold, fill and drain the basin to check the pop-up seal and the P-trap joint
Stop — fix the angle stops first
high confidenceA shutoff that won't close means you can't safely disconnect the supply.
- Run the angle-stop-replacement workflow, or shut off the house main and replace the stops now
Pause — buy a deck plate / escutcheon
high confidenceExposed holes look bad and let water and toothpaste drip into the vanity.
- Order the matching escutcheon from the faucet maker, or buy hole covers in the same finish
Stop — faucet doesn't fit this sink
high confidenceA widespread faucet won't reach across a centerset sink, and a single-hole faucet won't cover a 3-hole sink without a deck plate.
- Exchange the faucet for one that matches your sink's hole spacing
Stop — cracked sink risk
high confidenceTightening mounting nuts on a cracked porcelain sink usually finishes the crack and turns a $200 faucet job into a $400+ sink replacement.
- Photograph the cracks for reference
- Decide whether to replace the sink now (often the right call) or have a pro evaluate the crack
Stop — call a pro for the seized drain
medium confidenceAn old painted or seized tailpiece can crack the sink when you force it. This is a common pro service call.
- Photograph the underside of the sink and the tailpiece
- Leave it in place for the plumber
- Photo of pop-up assembly and tailpiece
- Sink material (china, cast iron, stone)
Stop — legacy supply line
medium confidenceLead or unknown legacy metal supplies should be assessed by a pro before being disturbed.
- Photograph the supply line and angle stop
- Leave the existing connections alone until evaluated
- Photo of supply line and angle stop
- House age if known
Pause — gather tools first
high confidenceYou don't want to be elbow-deep in the vanity realizing you're missing a basin wrench.
- Buy: basin wrench, PTFE tape, new braided 3/8" comp × 1/2" FIP supply lines, plumber's putty
- Stage towels, a small bucket, and a headlamp
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