Articles Why We Don’t Provide Incinerating Toilets at Waterless Toilet Shop
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Eemeli Palo

Waterless Toilet Expert
📱(702) 328 0689
✉ info@waterlesstoiletshop.com

Why We Don’t Provide Incinerating Toilets at Waterless Toilet Shop

Incinerating toilets are marketed as high-tech, waterless solutions that turn human waste into clean ash using high temperatures. In theory, it sounds ideal: insert a paper liner, use the toilet, push a button, and later dispose of a small amount of sterile ash. Understandably, from time-to-time people contact us asking why we don’t offer these systems in our store.

Here’s why.

High Energy Consumption

The majority of human waste—liquid and solid—is made up of water (around 80–90%). Burning that water away requires a surprising amount of electricity. Most incinerating toilets on the market consume between 1,500 and 2,500 watts while running. That’s as much or more than an average space heater—and usage adds up quickly. The energy demands increase further if the ash pan isn’t emptied regularly.

High Energy Consumption

Odor and Venting Issues

It might come as a surprise, but burning human waste doesn’t exactly smell good. These systems require a properly installed vent pipe to channel smoke and odor outdoors—but even then, the exhaust doesn’t always disappear harmlessly into the air.
Depending on wind direction, that odor might head straight to your patio, garden, or your neighbor’s yard. We’ve heard stories where this led to tension in close-knit cabin communities. It’s a point worth considering before making a purchase.

Odor and Venting Issues

Complex Maintenance and Repairs

Today’s incinerating toilets are packed with electronics: sensors, timers, heating elements, and safety systems. That means regular servicing, error codes to interpret, and sometimes the need to ship the unit off for repairs.
If your cabin or off-grid home is hours away from the nearest technician, this can quickly turn into a real headache. And during a power outage—when a simpler waterless toilet would still work—you’re left with no functioning toilet at all.

Complex Maintenance and Repairs

 

Environmental Concerns

This was the biggest reason for our decision.

When waste is incinerated, it’s gone—including all the nutrients. Valuable elements like phosphorus, which is in limited supply worldwide and essential for food production, are lost forever. Composting toilets, on the other hand, preserve these nutrients and return them to the soil in a safe and responsible way.

If sustainability is important to you—as it is to us—this matters.

Environmental Concerns

What to Choose Instead?

There are excellent alternatives. Depending on your setup, you might consider:

We offer options that are odor-free, off-grid–ready, and require very little electricity—or none at all. In fact, modern composting toilets look just like regular ones, and you’d be surprised how comfortable and easy they are to use and maintain.

waterless toilet pedestal inside bathroom house

Excellent alternatives

gl 90 batch composting toilet package

GL 90

Batch composting toilet

$1,439.00
CF 4 waterless composting toilet system with porcelain toilet

CF 4

Continuous Composting Toilet

$1,989.00
Oz-e-pod waterless composting toilet waterless toilet shop

Oz-e-Pod

Composting Toilet

$1,590.00
waterless toilet shop Urine diverting porcelain pedestal

Urine-Diverting Porcelain Toilet Pedestal

$529.00
GL 55 batch composting toilet

GL 55

Batch Composting Toilet

$1,249.00
Green Toilet Lux 120 Composting toilet with spare container package black bins updated

Green Toilet Lux 120

Composting Toilet

$1,849.00
Green Toilet Lux 330 Composting toilet with spare container package Waterless Toilet Shop USA

Green Toilet Lux 330

Batch composting toilet

$1,989.00
$1,000 Off
Rota-Loo 650 Split-system Batch Composting Toilet

Rota Loo 650

Batch Composting Toilet

$3,980.00

Final Thoughts

Because we work with off-grid toilet systems every day, we feel a responsibility to provide honest guidance. If you still feel that an incinerating toilet is right for your situation, we simply recommend keeping a backup plan—such as a composting outhouse or dry toilet—especially in case of power failure or increased use during peak seasons.

We’re here to help you find the right solution for your needs—and the planet.

📱(702) 328 0689
✉ info@waterlesstoiletshop.com

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Our Customer Service team is currently closed on Thursday, June 11th, 2026 and will be back on Friday, June 12th, 2026.

In urgent matters, please email us at info@waterlesstoiletshop.com

Thank you for your patience and support.

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Choose how you want to pay — all at once or with flexible installments that fit your budget.

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CF 8 Composting Toilet – Estimated Daily Capacity

The CF 8 is a continuous composting toilet system featuring a single large 250-gallon container. Like the CF 4, it is designed for gradual emptying rather than batch-style use. Solids are typically removed in thirds or sections, allowing earlier deposits time to fully compost inside the tank.

This setup allows for either:


🔁 Continuous Use: Gradual Emptying in Thirds

When used year-round, the CF 8 is typically emptied one-third at a time, effectively composting in three rotating “piles” within the container.

Because the CF 8 is more than twice as large as the CF 4, each pile can hold approximately 480–960 poops, depending on composting conditions and how much bulking material is used.

Service Interval (per pile) Estimated #2 Visits per Day
30 days (1 month) ~17–32 visits/day
60 days (2 months) ~8–16 visits/day
90 days (3 months) ~5–11 visits/day
180 days (6 months) ~3–5 visits/day
365 days (1 year) ~1.2–2.6 visits/day

💡 These figures assume that one-third of the tank is in active use at a time, with older waste given time to compost before removal.


🌤 Seasonal Use: Full-Tank Emptying After Inactive Period

For cabins, cottages, or other sites used seasonally, the CF 8 can be used for a few months and then left idle to allow full composting. In such cases, the entire tank may be emptied once a year.

Full-tank capacity estimate: ~1,440–2,880 poops

Example: 120 days of use (approx. 4 months):
→ ~12–24 solid visits per day on average


⚠️ Disclaimer

These numbers are rough estimates based on typical use and conditions. Actual capacity will vary depending on:

For best performance, ensure proper aeration, regular bulking material use, and consistent emptying of composted portions.


💡 Want to Maximize Capacity? Consider a Urine-Diverting Toilet — With Some Important Considerations

upgrade to a urine diverting toilet pedestal

If you’re looking to maximize the capacity of the CF 8 system — aiming for 960+ poops per composting “pile” — we recommend using a urine-diverting (UD) toilet pedestal.

✅ Benefits of Urine Separation:

By diverting urine out of the solids container, the volume taken up by absorbent material (like peat or wood shavings) is significantly reduced. This can make a big difference in how often the system needs to be emptied.


⚠️ Downsides to Consider:

Urine-diverting toilets can take some time to get used to. Users need to sit or aim correctly to ensure proper separation, which might not happen consistently without experience or guidance.

For this reason, UD toilets are generally not ideal for public or commercial settings where the toilet is used by guests, tourists, or other first-time users. In these cases, misuse can reduce the effectiveness of the system and may even lead to unpleasant maintenance issues.


In short: A UD toilet is an excellent choice for maximizing capacity in private or family use, but for guest or public access composting toilets, a standard non-diverting model may be more practical and user-friendly.

Green Toilet 100 Easy – Estimated Daily Capacity

The Green Toilet 100 Easy is a compact and user-friendly batch composting toilet with a 26-gallon composting container. Its design makes it well-suited for outhouses, cabins, and even indoor use. A spare container is available to expand capacity and simplify servicing.


🔢 Estimated Solid-Waste Capacity per Bin:

Note: Due to the shape and internal structure of the container, the actual composting capacity is slightly lower than its raw volume might suggest, if you compare with Green Toilet 120 Family composting toilet for example.


📆 Average Daily Capacity per Bin

Service Interval Estimated #2 Visits per Day
30 days (1 month) ~6–7 visits/day
60 days (2 months) ~3–4 visits/day
90 days (3 months) ~2.2 visits/day
180 days (6 months) ~1.1 visits/day
365 days (1 year) ~0.5 visits/day

Notes & Recommendations:


⚠️ Disclaimer:
These estimates are intended as general guidance. Real-world performance may vary depending on:

CF 4 Composting Toilet – Estimated Daily Capacity

The CF 4 is a continuous composting toilet system featuring a single large 105-gallon container. Unlike batch composting systems (such as the Green Toilet models), the CF 4 is designed for gradual emptying — solids are typically removed in thirds or sections, allowing earlier deposits time to fully compost inside the tank.

This setup allows for either:


🔁 Continuous Use: Gradual Emptying in Thirds

When used year-round, the CF 4 is typically emptied one-third at a time, effectively composting in three rotating “piles” within the container. Depending on composting conditions and how much bulking material is used, each pile can hold approximately 200–400 poops.

Service Interval (per pile) Estimated #2 Visits per Day
30 days (1 month) ~7–13 visits/day
60 days (2 months) ~3–7 visits/day
90 days (3 months) ~2–4 visits/day
180 days (6 months) ~1–2 visits/day
365 days (1 year) ~0.5–1.1 visits/day

💡 These figures assume that one third of the tank is in active use at a time, with older waste given time to compost before removal.


🌤 Seasonal Use: Full-Tank Emptying After Inactive Period

For cabins, cottages, or other sites used seasonally, the CF 4 can be used for a few months and then left idle to allow full composting. In such cases, the entire tank may be emptied once a year.


⚠️ Disclaimer

These numbers are rough estimates based on typical use and conditions. Actual capacity will vary depending on:

For best performance, ensure proper aeration, regular bulking material use, and consistent emptying of composted portions.


💡 Want to Maximize Capacity? Consider a Urine-Diverting Toilet — With Some Important Considerations

upgrade to a urine diverting toilet pedestal

If you’re looking to maximize the capacity of the CF 4 system — aiming for 400+ poops per composting “pile” — we recommend using a urine-diverting (UD) toilet pedestal.

✅ Benefits of Urine Separation:

By diverting urine out of the solids container, the volume taken up by absorbent material (like peat or wood shavings) is significantly reduced. This can make a noticeable difference in how often the system needs to be emptied.

⚠️ Downsides to Consider:


In short: A UD toilet is an excellent choice for maximizing capacity in private or family use, but for guest or public access composting toilets, a standard non-diverting model may be more practical and user-friendly.

Green Toilet 120 Family

💩 Average Daily Capacity per 31-Gallon Composting Bin

(Based on approx. 356 uses involving a #2 — i.e., poop) – only the solids count!

Service Interval #2 Visits per Day (involving a #2)
30 days (1 month) ~11.9 visits/day
60 days (2 months) ~5.9 visits/day
90 days (3 months) ~4.0 visits/day
180 days (6 months) ~2.0 visits/day
365 days (1 year) ~1.0 visits/day

🟢 What counts as a “#2 visit”?
Only visits that involve pooping (i.e., going number two) — urine-only visits don’t contribute to filling the composting bin and are not included in the estimate.

⚠️ Disclaimer:
These estimates are approximations. The actual number of solid uses per bin may vary significantly depending on climate, temperature, ventilation, user habits, and the amount of dry bulking material (e.g., wood shavings or peat) added after each use.

Green Toilet 330

💩 Average Daily Capacity per 87-Gallon Composting Bin

(Based on approx. 1,000 uses involving a #2 — i.e., poop) – only the solids count!

Service Interval #2 Visits per Day (involving pooping)
30 days (1 month) ~33 visits/day
60 days (2 months) ~17 visits/day
90 days (3 months) ~11 visits/day
180 days (6 months) ~5.6 visits/day
365 days (1 year) ~2.7 visits/day

🟢 What counts as a “#2 visit”?
Only visits that involve defecation (pooping) — urine-only visits don’t fill up the composting bin and are not included in the 1,000-use estimate.

⚠️ Disclaimer:
These estimates are based on typical, steady use. The actual number of solid uses a composting bin can handle may vary significantly depending on climate, temperature, humidity, ventilation, and how much dry bulking material (like wood shavings) is added after each use.

Composting toilet waste pipe extension

💧 Liquid waste (urine) estimate

Average person produces about:

So for 100 people:


🚽 Flush water use estimate

Average flush volume in the U.S. is about:

Average person flushes ~5 times per day, so:

So for 100 people:


✅ Summary in gallons

Type Per person For 100 people
Urine (liquid waste) ≈0.4 gal/day ≈40 gal/day
Flush water (toilet only) ≈7.5 gal/day ≈750 gal/day
Product Image Product Clearance Requirement
CF 4 continuous composting toilet with porcelain pedestal green background CF 4 Continuous composting toilet 13″ (when partially buried)
gl 90 batch composting toilet package GL 90 Batch composting toilet 18″
CF 8 continuous composting toilet with non separating porcelain pedestal blue background CF 8 Continuous composting toilet 18″ (when partially buried)
Rota-Loo 650 Split-system Batch Composting Toilet Rota Loo 650 Batch composting toilet 26″
Green Toilet Lux 120 Composting toilet with spare container package Green Toilet Lux 120 Batch composting toilet 28″
Green Toilet Lux 330 Composting toilet with spare container package Green Toilet Lux 330 Batch composting toilet 37″
Rota Loo 950 batch composting toilet blue background Rota Loo 950 Batch composting toilet 38″

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Urine Separation in Composting Toilet Article

outhouse next to winter cottage (1)

outhouse next to winter cottage

 

open compost bin outdoors

open back bench-type-of seat
Installation principle of Green Toilet 120 and 330

Green Toilet 120 Family composting toilet installed

Green Toilet 120 Family installed underneath outhouse seat

Green Toilet 330 outhouse inside flat seat

Green Toilet 330 ventilation pipes

Green Toilet features ventilation pipes.

On top of the vent pipe stack here is a Whirlybird

Green Toilet double base from below

Green Toilet’s double base from below

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