Quartz Worktops FAQ · Quality
Are quartz worktops actually any good?
A direct verdict from a team that fits quartz across the UK every week. We look at where it wins decisively, where it loses to alternatives and whether the headline reputation matches the daily reality.
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Quartz worktop specialists · UK-wide installation
“Are quartz worktops good” is the most common opening question we hear at our showroom. The honest short answer is yes for most UK homes and no for a small handful of specific scenarios. Quartz dominates UK kitchen renovations for genuine reasons. Roughly two-thirds of the worktops we fit each year are quartz, and the customer satisfaction across that share is high. The rest split mostly between granite and laminate.
This page sets out where quartz earns its reputation and the cases where another material is genuinely the better choice. It is not a sales pitch. We fit granite and laminate alongside quartz and would rather see you choose the right material than the most expensive one. Read through the verdict, the trade-offs and the seven scenarios. By the end you will know whether quartz is a good fit for your specific kitchen.
Two-thirds of UK kitchens we fit choose quartz. The reputation is earned, not marketed.
— Rock & Co Showroom Team
What actually makes quartz “good” for most UK kitchens
From customer conversations across our showroom, the reasons people pick quartz cluster around five distinct strengths.
Five reasons account for almost all the appeal
Durability comes up in nearly every conversation. The Mohs 7 hardness rating means quartz handles daily kitchen use without scratching or chipping under reasonable care. Hygiene is the second strongest pull. The non-porous surface does not harbour bacteria which matters significantly for households with kids or anyone who values food safety.
Aesthetic versatility ranks third. Quartz can mimic marble, granite, concrete or pure colour at consistent quality across the slab. Maintenance simplicity comes fourth. Zero sealing, no specialist cleaners, just soapy water. Resale impact rounds out the top five for homeowners thinking long-term.
Durable
Hygienic
Versatile
Low effort
UK kitchens where quartz is the clear winner
Across years of installations, four kitchen profiles consistently get the best return from quartz over alternatives.
Family forever homes
Heavy daily use, kids, multiple cooks and frequent guests. Quartz handles all of it with zero maintenance. The non-porous surface is a strong food-safety argument for parents.
Open plan kitchens
The worktop is on display from the living space. Quartz delivers a consistent finish that reads cleaner from a distance than the natural variation of granite or the wear pattern of laminate.
Higher-bracket properties
Buyers expect a stone worktop at viewing time. Quartz delivers the premium feel without the maintenance burden of marble. Strong resale impact in mid to high property brackets.
Long-term ownership homes
Plans of ten years or more in the property. The per-year cost of quartz drops below every alternative across that span. The slab outlasts the kitchen around it.
What quality costs at each tier
All three tiers deliver genuinely good quartz. The differences are in slab consistency, brand warranty and edge-profile range, not in basic performance.
- Mohs 7 hardness across the tier
- 15-year realistic lifespan
- 10-year typical brand warranty
- Solid colours and basic patterns
- Best balance of cost and finish
- 20-year realistic lifespan
- 15-25 year brand warranty
- Marble effect and veined designs
- Most consistent slab quality
- 25+ year realistic lifespan
- Lifetime warranties available
- Belenco, Calacatta, signature ranges
A standard tier slab properly fitted will outperform a premium tier slab fitted poorly. The supplier matters as much as the brand.
Across our 20-year UK installation records, customer satisfaction at the 5-year mark sits above 95% for properly fitted quartz at any tier. The 5% who would change almost always cite colour choice, not the material.
How “good” does quartz look against the alternatives?
A side-by-side view across the seven factors that drive most worktop conversations.
| Quartz | Granite | Laminate | Marble | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Durability | Excellent | Excellent | Moderate | Good (with care) |
| Hygiene | Best | Good with seal | Moderate | Good with seal |
| Maintenance | Zero | Re-seal yearly | Zero | High |
| Heat tolerance | Up to 150°C | Very high | Low | Moderate |
| Lifespan | 15-25 yrs | 20+ yrs | 5-10 yrs | 20+ yrs |
| Cost | £££ | ££ | £ | ££££ |
| Resale impact | Strong positive | Strong positive | Neutral | Strong positive |
7 questions to know if quartz is good for your kitchen
Run through these honestly. Most UK households tip clearly towards or away from quartz by question four.
Do you cook with very high heat daily?
If you regularly take cast iron pans straight from the hob to the worktop, granite handles it better than quartz. If a trivet is part of your routine, quartz is fine.
Do you have small children at home?
Quartz wins easily here. Non-porous, antimicrobial and food-safe. The hygiene case for households with toddlers and young kids is decisive.
Is the kitchen open plan or visible from a living space?
Open plan layouts amplify the visual impact of any worktop. The consistent finish of quartz reads cleaner from a distance than the natural variation of granite.
What is your maintenance tolerance?
Quartz needs nothing beyond soapy water. No sealing. No specialist cleaners. If lower-effort kitchen life matters to you, the quartz case is decisive.
How long do you plan to live in this property?
Less than two years and quartz rarely beats laminate on per-year cost. Five years or more and the calculation flips. Ten years or more and quartz beats every alternative on lifetime value.
Do you want a fully natural look?
If the aesthetic is “natural stone with all the character” then granite or marble has the edge. Quartz can mimic both very convincingly but a trained eye can usually tell the difference up close.
Is the slab going outdoors or in direct sunlight?
If yes, quartz is not the right choice. UV exposure fades the resin component over time. Granite or Dekton handle outdoor use better than quartz.
How a “good” quartz worktop performs over time
Real observations from inspecting UK installations across our twenty-year history.
Showroom finish
Indistinguishable from install day. Polish full, no visible wear, no marks. Hygiene and durability working as expected.
Effectively new
Surface still flawless. Polish unchanged. Customer satisfaction at this stage sits well above 95%.
Lightly settled
Joins now slightly visible up close but slab body still showroom condition. No structural concerns.
Refurb-ready
Polish slightly dulled in heavy-use zones. A polish refresh restores it to near-new. The slab is genuinely cheaper than a laminate replacement cycle would have been.
Outlasts the kitchen
Cabinets dated, slab fine. We routinely lift twenty-year-old quartz and refit on new units when the rest of the kitchen is replaced.
Three scenarios where quartz is not the right call
For full honesty, here are the cases where another material genuinely outperforms quartz despite the broader reputation.
Daily cast iron cooking on very high heat
Granite handles direct hot pan contact better than quartz. The resin component in quartz scorches above 150°C. If trivets are not part of your routine, granite is the better fit.
Outdoor kitchens or sun-facing conservatories
Quartz fades under prolonged UV exposure. Granite or Dekton handle outdoor weather without colour change. For garden kitchens this difference matters within the first few years.
Selling within twelve months
The resale uplift from quartz exists but is gradual. If you are listing within a year, well-chosen laminate often delivers a better short-term return on the spend.
Looking for more quartz worktop answers?
This article is part of our complete quartz worktops FAQ. Sixty-plus quick answers to the questions UK homeowners ask us most often, all written from the showroom floor by a team that has fitted quartz for over twenty years.
Where to go from here
If you want to dive deeper into the kitchen-specific case for quartz, our piece on is quartz worktop good for kitchens covers exactly how it performs across cooking, prep, cleaning and hygiene in real UK kitchens.
For a balanced view that lays out both sides of the case, our article on pros and cons of quartz worktops walks through the strengths and the trade-offs honestly.
And for a similar but slightly different framing of the same question, our piece on quartz worktops advantages and disadvantages takes the alternative angle on the same content.
For the wider context of all our quality and value answers, the full quartz worktops FAQ covers every question we are asked across the showroom and on the phone.
Related FAQs
Is quartz worktop good for kitchens?
How quartz performs across cooking, prep, cleaning and hygiene in real UK kitchens.
Read article →
Pros and cons of quartz worktops
The strengths and the trade-offs of quartz laid out honestly with no spin either way.
Read article →
Quartz worktops advantages and disadvantages
The alternative angle on the same question with extra detail on long-term performance.
Read article →
Quick answers
Is quartz really better than granite?
Better in some scenarios, not in others. Quartz wins on hygiene and zero maintenance. Granite wins on heat tolerance and natural appearance. They are roughly equal on durability and lifespan. The right answer depends on how you cook and what aesthetic you want.
Do quartz worktops chip or crack easily?
No, but they are not invincible. The Mohs 7 hardness rating means everyday kitchen use does not mark the surface. Sharp impacts on edges or corners can chip the slab. Heavy items dropped from height can crack a thin section. With reasonable care, problems are rare.
Will quartz look dated in ten years?
Unlikely. Classic quartz colours such as white, grey and marble-effect veining have held their popularity for over a decade. The risk of dating is higher with strongly-coloured statement slabs in trend hues. Stick to classic palettes if longevity matters.
Is cheaper quartz still good quality?
Standard tier quartz from a reputable UK supplier delivers genuinely good performance for everyday family use. The differences at premium tier are slab consistency, colour range, brand warranty length and edge profile options, not basic durability. A budget unbranded slab is a different conversation.
How quickly will I know if quartz is good for me?
Most UK homeowners tip clearly one way or the other within ten minutes of running through the seven-question framework above. If you are still split, visit a showroom in person. Real samples in your kitchen lighting usually resolve genuine indecision quickly.
Want to see if quartz is good for your kitchen?
Give us a call or pop into our Stevenage showroom. We hold over 250 colours in stock and will show you exactly how quartz performs against any alternative you are considering.