





Buy anything from 5,000+ international stores. One checkout price. No surprise fees. Join 2M+ shoppers on Desertcart.
Desertcart purchases this item on your behalf and handles shipping, customs, and support to Colombia.
🚿 Upgrade your faucet game with Grohe’s flawless flow!
The Grohe 46092000 LadyLux Hose is a premium 59-inch replacement hose crafted with durable chrome and precision-engineered brass O-ring ends. Designed exclusively for LadyLux Plus and Europlus faucets, it offers a quick, leak-proof installation using a simple 13mm wrench. Backed by Grohe’s limited lifetime warranty, this OEM part guarantees a perfect fit and long-lasting performance, elevating your bathroom’s functionality and style.





| ASIN | B002ZLPTX0 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #121,676 in Tools & Home Improvement ( See Top 100 in Tools & Home Improvement ) #83 in Faucet Spray Hoses |
| Brand | GROHE |
| Brand Name | GROHE |
| Color | StarLight Chrome |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 1,595 Reviews |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 04005176057755 |
| Included Components | Product Only |
| Item Dimensions L x W | 1"L x 1"W |
| Item Length | 1500 Inches |
| Item Type Name | bathroom-sink-faucet-replacement-parts |
| Item Weight | 0.24 Kilograms |
| Manufacturer | Grohe |
| Manufacturer Warranty Description | “*1 year Limited warranty from date of purchase” |
| Material | chrome |
| Material Type | chrome |
| Nominal Wall Thickness | 0.01225 inches |
| Outside Diameter | 0.51 Inches |
| Product Dimensions | 1"L x 1"W |
| Unit Count | 4.9167 Feet |
M**T
Great Psychic Rewards Come With Having The Right OEM Part, 50% Off, and Driplessly Installed In Less Than 10 Minutes!!
I was initially extremely concerned because all the generic photos online of this 46-092-000 replacement part didn't look in detail like the O-ringed brass end and threaded quick-release end of my old broken flex-hose. So, semi-freaked out, I decided I'd trust the other Amazon reviews that said this was in fact the real deal. Wow! Was I ever glad I did! Other reviews said it would take 10 minutes to install my new replacement hose on my 8 year-old Grohe Lady Lux faucet. A gross exaggeration! It took no more than five (excluding under the sink clean-up prep) and fit perfectly, with not a drop of leakage! Only tool needed is a 13mm open-end wrench to unthread the old hose end from the quick-release coupling at the water line and later tighten the new one back onto that coupling. Slip-joints, Vise Grip, small crescent wrench, or similar tools would probably work just as well. Note: a 1/2" open-end will NOT fit the flats - too small by a smidgen. Installation is a total no-brainer. My old hose broke at about 1" before the spray-head, so the weight of old hose had then caused it to slip back down the faucet neck into the cupboard below the sink where it lay like a dead chrome snake. Procedure: turn off the hot and cold water valves under the sink first. Clear the space out, then decouple the plastic quick-release coupling fastening the broken flex-hose to the small-diameter water-line pipe to which it is attached by pushing upwards on the quick-release fitting while simultaneously retracting its collar. Hold the green-and-black (or older yellow-and-black) plastic coupling in one hand and use the 13mm wrench on the flats of the old chrome hose fitting to unfasten the two. Save the long, slinky spring encasing the old hose for re-use later. Slide on the new threaded, tapered sprayer-head bezel (or re-use your familiar old one, as I did) over the new hose, then connect that end of the new hose to the sprayer-head by first unscrewing the original tapered bezel fitting, removing the old broken end, and pushing the new O-ringed brass hose-end coupling into the sprayer head, then screwing together the hose with the sprayer by hand-tightening the hose bezel. Feed the new hose length back down the faucet neck and refit the sprayer-head back into the faucet neck as it normally resides. Now go underneath the sink and slide on to the new flex-hose length the original slinky spring you saved earlier (easier to do than to describe). Once it's on, reattach the plastic quick-release to the threaded end of the new flex-hose and tighten using the 13mm wrench. Now reattach the entire assembly to the water line with the quick-couple. You're now ready to turn back on the water valves and - Presto! - you'll be back in business. You can do the whole thing in about the time it takes to read this, plus you'll feel great because you did it yourself and saved so much money, starting with this replacement hose purchase. The replacement hose sold here on Amazon is an OEM part, fits perfectly, and about 50% off list. All-in, I doubt you can find it cheaper anywhere else. Being a 'value-conscious shopper', I tried. Save your time. I paid an extra $5+ bucks for Priority Mail shipping, and it got from NY to SoCal in 2 1/2 days! No 9% CA sales tax about paid for the expedited shipping.
S**4
SO EASY TO INSTALL ONCE YOU KNOW THE TRICK
This product is a name brand Grohe 46092000 LadyLux replacement hose that worked beautifully for the LadyLux Plus faucet we have. It took me more time to clear out the items under the sink than it took to do the repair. I kid you not, it took maybe 10 minutes to do the repair. The hardest part was removing the hose from the swivel faucet but once I found a video describing a trick to use it was super easy to get out. For those novice DIY home repair warriors, I have listed the steps I used below. I hope this is helpful. My faucet is working great! To Remove Old Hose: 1. Turn off water under sink 2. Find green or yellow coupler under sink on one end of hose and pull back on the sleeve to release (have a container ready to collect drainage from the hose. Part: Grohe America 46315000 Quick Coupling, Green 3. Unscrew coupler from old hose and save (or replace with new one--mine was still good with so I kept it) 4. Slide wire cage around hose and set aside to reuse being careful not to tangle. 5. Pull spay faucet handle to pull hose up through bottom of sink. the end of the hose is bulky and I had to push it up through the hole in bottom of sink. 6. Pull hose all the way out faucet end--this is where the trick helps. If the bulky end gets stuck in the curved neck of the faucet, pull up on the curved facet neck to remove it. You might need to give it a good tug, but It comes off where the seam is shown. I did this and the hose was easy to get out. 7. Unscrew spray faucet from hose To Put In New Hose: 1. Screw faucet nozzle on (Hand tighten only) 2. Thread hose through goose neck of the faucet and down sink 3. Push the faucet goose neck back into place--it snaps back on pretty easy 4. Slide cage back up over hose 5. Screw green or yellow coupler back on (Hand tighten only)--The Grohe manufacturer site said yellow or green connectors can be used with this faucet. 6. Pull sleeve back on coupler and re-attach under sink 7. Turn supply back water on 8. Test it out
C**N
Perfect replacement with a 5 minute installation
My wife finally managed to kill the hose after she had previously killed the sprayer head. Replacing the two parts (sprayer and hose) were still less than replacing the entire faucet. How do these hoses break you ask? Kinking them. They're just like flexible electrical whips (the flexible metal conduits used on central air conditioners and the like). They're coiled metal and, once you over flex it, the coil kinks. There's no going back from that. How to avoid that? Pull more hose out of the faucet and hold the sprayer with one hand and support the hose with the other. Some people think that because they're covered in metal they are invincible. They are not. Installation was a breeze, with it taking longer to empty the cabinet than to perform the repair. You don't even have to turn off the water supply as the faucet itself is sufficient to stop the water flow. First, disconnect the spray head by unscrewing the sprayer from the hose. The connection should be no more than hand tight. (remember the old "lefty loosey" saying) Now crawl under the sink. Here's the trick.... the yellow fitting on the end of the hose is a "click" fitting. Slide the yellow plastic portion down while pushing up on the end of the hose, and it will disconnect. You will notice that there is a spring on the hose that prevents you from pulling the entire hose out of the faucet and kinking it (which is how it breaks - as described above). Look at the end of the hose where the yellow quick connector is. You will notice that those two parts separate. Taking a narrow open end wrench (I used a small miniature set of slip joint channel locks - a wider wrench might not fit between the yellow fitting and the metal hose end fitting), unscrew the yellow connector from the hose. The spring will now slide off. Make sure you take a look at how the spring and hose go back together for reassembly. Go back topside and pull the hose through the faucet. It doesn't come out smoothly as the end doesn't flex, but it will come out. Just keep gently bringing it up and rotating it slightly until it does. You're almost done. Now side the replacement hose through the faucet. Same caution goes. It's not going to slide smoothly into the faucet, but it does go with a little manipulation (again, rotating the hose helps). Once it passes through, put the sprayer handle on the top side, return to your under the sink position, slide the spring back onto the hose under the sink, reinstall the yellow connector (don't over tighten), and simply click the yellow connector back on the faucet body. It really is that simple.
K**.
Easy to install, listing is still a mess (1500 inches?!?)
The old hose burst after nearly 20 years of service, making a small flood under the sink, but shutting off the faucet stopped things from getting too bad. The hose is easy to replace. No tools are needed. Other reviewers have suggested using various lubricants to get the hose through the faucet, but this is not necessary, and seems like a bad idea to me. Removing the old hose is the first step. Under the sink, there's a plastic coupler, similar to a Gardena garden hose connector, that joins the hose to the metal part of the faucet. You pull back the collar on the coupler, and then pull the hose free. (You might want to have something to catch drips when you do this.) The coupler screws on to the end of hose. It also helps keep the spring hose guard in place. Unscrew the coupler and slide the spring off the hose. Keep the coupler and the spring, they are not included with the hose. The next step is to pull the hose out from the sprayer end. Don't pull too hard. If the hose gets stuck, back off a little and try rotating it a bit as you pull. It should come out easily with just a little bit of turning. After the hose is free, unscrew the sprayer from the other end by turning the knurled metal fitting. Installing is just the reverse. The hose is ready to go, with all the necessary o-rings and fittings already in place. Just screw the sprayer on to one end, then start pushing the hose down through the faucet body. Once again, rotating the hose a bit may be necessary to get it to go through. One reviewer suggested Vaseline, but don't listen to that. Down under the sink, slide the spring thing over the hose. This may be the trickiest part. It's easy at first, then you have to go inch by inch. Once you've got it, screw the coupler on to the end to hold the spring in place. Then pull the collar back, and push the coupler on to the metal nub that supplies the water. With any luck, your repair is complete. The old hose had gotten kinked under the sink, which may be why it burst. We'd noticed that the old hose was a little difficult to pull out, but never really paid much attention to why. It's probably a good idea to replace the hose once in a while anyway, but especially if you notice a problem. Grohe does have a lifetime warranty, but in this case, it appears something bad happened under the sink, which was not Grohe's fault. We previously had one of the plastic couplers crack and cause a mess under the sink. Grohe was good about replacing it under warranty, but it is kind of annoying that an expensive faucet relies on a cheap-looking plastic part. Of course, all the water coming out of the faucet also goes through a plastic tube inside the hose, so I guess the whole thing requires faith in plastics. Anyway, there are yellow couplers and green couplers and maybe even red couplers. You'll read different things online about which is better. In this repair, I went with a new green coupler Grohe had sent along with my warranty claim. (I'd replaced the coupler on one faucet, but the other faucet never had an issue, despite being more heavily used.) Bottom line on that, if you're replacing the hose to be on the safe side, you might want to do the coupler at the same time, although they are kind of pricey. I've also installed under-sink water alarms, a cheap form of insurance which hopefully won't be needed. I see the listing for this product is still a mess, saying "15mm x 1/2 x 1500 inches". 1500 inches is 125 feet, so that's wrong. The package says "1/2" x 1/2" x 1500 mm", which is still kind of insane, but may be at least accurate. The 1500 mm is of course 1.5 meters, or a touch over 59 inches. One of the 1/2" ends is unthreaded, and can really only connect to a Grohe handsprayer. The other 1/2" end is threaded, but it's really only for the plastic coupler. Without knowing threads per inch or mm, it's hard to tell what else you could attach. I didn't feel like experimenting. The listing also includes a mysterious diagram with arrows and numbers, but I have no clue about what it's trying to tell us. When I purchased, the listing also told me I was getting a "3 pack", but the price told me it was just one, so I didn't make an issue of it. The listing is now for just one hose, but you still won't be getting a 1500 inch hose.
J**R
Grohe is the best, good coupling!
This is a very quick coupling. My plumber was able to make the repair quickly
S**E
more a review about Amazon than the part
The hose worked fine - it was an exact replacement for the hose that my 7 year old daughter managed to sever while helping out in the Kitchen. The old hose was 12 years old - so it was destined to go sooner or later. My review is really about Amazon - which continues to deliver the right product at a great price in lightning quick time. In a nut shell - the hose I was looking for was not available within 50 miles of me last night (my window to get to a store before closing time on Friday night) - so I decided to get the product shipped overnight with Saturday delivery from Amazon. The overnight delivery brought the price of the product $10 over the price of the hose that I "tenatively" found in a warehouse 60 miles away (the warehouse was closed when I called Friday night - but a sister store "thought" that there was one available but couldn't be sure because the inventory system wasn't full proof). I took the plunge and went with Amazon - trusting that they would get the hose here as promised. The rub was - if Amazon didn't deliver the product (noon delivery) I would be completely out of luck getting the hose this weekend - the warehouse where the hose "might be" closed at 12:30. I trusted Amazon. The hose arrived at 11:05 and I installed it by 11:15. Instead of driving 60 miles each way - wasting 2 1/2 - 3 hours in the car and using 6 gallons of gas ($20) I spent time with the kids and my wife decorating the Christmas Tree this morning. Kitchen faucet is up and running, tree is decorated, my rear end isn't sore from sitting in my car for hours - life is good. Thank you Amazon.
N**N
Fake part
The coupler I received was a cheap generic fitting in an authentic Grohe box. I returned it and replaced it. The pics are the real and fake.
K**C
Perfect replacement for Original.
We've had a Grohe stainless steel Ladylux Plus, model 33.759-KDO for the past 17 years. This part number 46 092 000 is an exact replacement for the pull-out hose. If you still have your receipt, you might be able to get this item, under warranty, from Grohe. Had to replace the spray head once, many years ago; got that part under warranty from Grohe (you'll need to provide Grohe a copy/image of your original receipt). I couldn't find that scan, so I thought I'd just buy this pull-out hose outright--plus, it would be a day or two quicker. I might NOT have needed to actually replace this pull-out hose. When I removed the hose, I saw that the plastic yellow "quick coupler" [this connects the pull-out hose to the faucet body] had a "split"--it had obviously failed, and was probably the source of the water leaking under the kitchen sink. However, since the hose was already 17 years old, I went ahead and replaced it as a preventative measure. This takes only minutes [it takes longer to watch a couple of YouTube videos on how to do this, than actually doing it]. Suggestions: Grohe has [or had] a lifetime warranty. If you have your receipt on older items, and don't mind waiting a day or so longer, contact them for replacements. Grohe USA has a website. If you are going to replace your pull-out hose, you SHOULD also replace the "quick coupler" at the same time--it's only plastic, and while it is sturdy, it doesn't seem to last forever, and is easy to do [though it is a bit pricey, as is the pull-out hose]. Also, when you are removing the "old" pull-out hose from the faucet, and it seems to hang-up [hit an obstruction] when almost clear, it might be hitting the lip of the swing-arm [the swiveling/pivoting high-arc spout]. On the Ladylux Plus model, if you pull this high-arc spout vertically upwards, sharply and with a bit of force, it will separate and come free. Then, you can easily remove the last few inches of the pull-out hose [there's also a YouTube video showing this]. You will not need any tools, or plumber's putty, or teflon tape for anything described above. It is recommended to shut off the water at the fixture or the whole house [which I did]; however, if your faucet handle stays "off/closed," no water will actually flow through the hose.
M**C
Good price, fast delivery
Zoals aangegeven op de foto en omschrijving
C**O
Bon flexible. Parfaitement adapté à mon mitigeur de cuisine Gröhe
Un peu cher (44€ tout de même ...), mais se connecte parfaitement à mon mitigeur de cuisine Gröhe, et c'est nécessaire car les flexibles standards du marché ne conviennent pas, à cause notamment d'une grande longueur pour atteindre le filetage coté douchette Gröhe (assez inhabituel je dois dire ...) . Ce flexible ci est donc parfait et s'adapte de façon adéquate à la section du ressort qui permet le retour en place de la douchette extractible. Je recommande donc cet article si l'on dispose d'un mitigeur de cuisine Gröhe à douchette extractible. Merci.
M**R
Maat past niet bij kraan
Juiste kaat besteld via tekening, maat passen niet op de Chrohe kranen..!
L**A
Buen repuesto
Esta manguera es muy buen repuesto, confiable por la marca y a precio razonable.
J**.
Parfait.
Le raccord qui fuyait a été remplacé en 10 secondes.
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
4 days ago