Eco-Toilets… Now There’s an iPhone App!
When Doug and I went to Home Depot last month for our last-minute HRTC shopping spree, we had 2 new toilets on our list. (I don’t know about you, but having to use a plunger for all major “activity” for years is kind of a turnoff).
Of course, per usual, we weren’t about to grab just any toilets: we needed to get ones that the government helps pay for!

One of the many pieces of paperwork that came with our Home Energy Audit was a bright-yellow sheet titled “Required Documentation for Grant Eligibility.” We almost forgot about it, but at the last minute, came across it and saw written there:
“TOILETS must appear on the list of ecoENERGY-eligible toilets available at www.veritec.ca. You must show the advisor:
- a receipt that lists the model numbers for both the tank and the bowl; OR
- cut the model numbers from the toilet boxes and give those to your Advisor
Many low-flush toilets do not meet the flush performance requirements. We are required to verify that new toilets are on the list of eligible toilets. If the model numbers are not made available to the advisor, there can be no grant.“
So, we surfed to veritec.ca – the website recommended in the Home Audit Report, to see which brands qualify for ecoEnergy-eligible toilets.
Government-Approved List in our Cellphone
This website is a really bad user experience. Save yourself the headache; just click on the link we provide in paragraph above – it will take you to the right web page to download the report.
My husband Doug downloaded the large spreadsheet (about 15 pages long) from this website. The list breaks down the toilets by Retail Store name.
He highlighted the toilets listed under “Home Depot” and emailed those to his cellphone. Then we took his phone to Home Depot and showed the toilet model names to the customer service dude in the orange apron, who helped us locate them. (We got the brand, Pegasus, dual-flush, shown in the photo above.)
Oh, and as a sidenote: I heard a hilarious conversation between my husband and another male toilet shopper discussing the merits of longer toilet seats; apparently, standard size isn’t quite sufficient for their umm, manliness!! Who knew!?

Heather and Doug, parents of 3 teens, live in a 1950s drafty house in Dundas, Ontario. Through eco renovations, they are seeking to move their home from a 61 EnerGuide rating to the 82 points required to get government ecoENERGY retrofit grants.