Quartz Worktops FAQ · Sustainability
Can quartz worktops be recycled?
Honest answer: technically yes, practically with limits. UK quartz recycling infrastructure exists but is limited. The greenest move is usually reuse rather than recycle. Here is what genuinely happens to old slabs and the greener routes for getting rid of one.
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Quartz worktops are roughly 93% ground natural quartz crystals bonded with about 7% polymer resin and pigments. The quartz itself is fully recyclable. The resin is the limiting factor. Separating the two cleanly enough for high-grade recycling is technically possible but commercially limited in the UK. As a result, full closed-loop recycling of old quartz slabs into new ones is rare here, although the manufacturing industry is moving in that direction.
The good news is that recycling is rarely the question worth asking. Quartz worktops have a 15 to 25 year usable lifespan and most slabs survive the kitchen they were originally fitted in. The greenest route is almost always reuse, whether that is lifting and refitting on new cabinets in a refurbishment, donating to a salvage firm or selling on for someone else to use. This page sets out what genuinely can be done with an old slab in the UK and the practical alternatives to throwing it away.
The greenest worktop is the one you do not throw away. Lift and refit beats every form of recycling on environmental impact.
— Rock & Co Showroom Team
What actually happens to old UK quartz slabs
Across the UK, end-of-life quartz takes one of four practical routes. Three of them are far greener than the fourth.
Reuse beats recycling on environmental terms
Most old quartz slabs in the UK end up either landfilled or crushed for aggregate. That is the unfortunate baseline. The greener routes – reuse on new cabinets, donation to salvage firms or resale through reclamation yards – take a bit more effort but extend the useful life of the slab significantly.
True closed-loop recycling where old slabs are ground down and used as raw material for new ones is technically possible but commercially limited. A handful of UK manufacturers now incorporate post-consumer recycled quartz into their new slabs, but the percentage of recycled content is usually below 20%. The infrastructure to scale this is still developing.
Reuse first
Donate second
Aggregate third
Landfill last
Four practical alternatives to landfill
Each of these takes a bit more effort than skip disposal but extends the useful life of a slab that may have decades left in it.
Lift and refit on new cabinets
The single greenest route. If your kitchen is being refurbished but the worktop is still sound, the same slab can be lifted, the new cabinets fitted underneath and the slab refit on top. Adds a small fee to the install.
Donate to a salvage yard
Reclamation and salvage yards across the UK accept quartz slabs in good condition. Often free pickup if the slab is in usable shape. Gets the slab to a buyer who genuinely needs it.
Resell through Facebook Marketplace
UK homeowners regularly buy used quartz slabs for outhouses, utility rooms, garden bars or DIY projects. A free listing often leads to a buyer arriving to collect within days. Better than landfill by a long way.
Repurpose within your own home
An old kitchen slab makes a brilliant utility room worktop, garage workbench, garden potting bench or outhouse counter. Cut down to size at the workshop and you get a second life from the same material.
What each end-of-life route actually costs in the UK
Three escalating tiers from free to skip-required. The greener options are usually also the cheaper ones.
- Lift slab during refurb
- Refit on new cabinets
- Fraction of new slab cost
- Greenest practical option
- Salvage yard collection free
- Online resale potentially profitable
- You may earn small payment
- Buyer responsible for transport
- Mini-skip or grab lorry
- Heavy load surcharge applies
- Goes to crushing or landfill
- Most expensive route overall
Compare the £200+ skip cost against the £0 salvage option. Greener is usually cheaper.
A typical UK quartz slab weighs 40 to 80 kg per square metre. Diverting one slab from landfill to salvage or reuse keeps that weight out of the waste stream and out of your skip hire bill. Greener and cheaper.
End-of-life recyclability across worktop materials
A side-by-side view of how the most common UK worktop materials compare on recyclability and end-of-life routes.
| Quartz | Granite | Laminate | Wood | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| UK closed-loop recycling | Limited | Limited | No | Yes |
| Salvage yard accepts | Yes | Yes | Rarely | Yes |
| Crushable for aggregate | Yes | Yes | No | N/A |
| Compostable / biodegradable | No | No | No | Yes |
| Lifespan reduces disposal | 15-25 yrs | 20+ yrs | 5-10 yrs | 10-20 yrs |
| Reuse on new cabinets | Yes | Yes | Rarely | Sometimes |
| Default UK end-of-life | Landfill | Aggregate | Landfill | Recycling |
7 steps to handle an old quartz slab greener
A practical workflow that takes a slab from “about to be skipped” to “reused or salvaged” with minimal extra effort.
Assess condition before assuming disposal
If the slab is structurally sound with no major cracks, it has another decade of useful life ahead. Disposal is the wrong default. Check carefully before deciding.
Photograph the slab from multiple angles
Wide shot, close detail, edge profile, joints, any chips. Useful for valuing it for resale, donation or your own future repurposing project.
List on Facebook Marketplace before refurb
Free, reaches a wide local audience, often produces a buyer within days. Listing with “buyer collects” removes any hassle from your side.
Contact local salvage yards
UK reclamation yards regularly take quartz slabs in good condition. Often free collection. They sell on for utility rooms, outhouses and garden projects.
Ask your installer about lift and refit
If you are refurbishing rather than fully replacing the kitchen, ask whether the existing slab can be lifted and refit on the new cabinets. Saves the cost of a new slab and avoids the disposal entirely.
Repurpose for utility or outhouse use
Cut down to size at a workshop, an old kitchen slab makes a great utility room worktop, garage workbench or garden potting bench. Cost of recutting is far less than buying new.
Use a builders merchant for crushed-aggregate disposal
If the slab genuinely cannot be reused, builders merchants and skip companies can route it to crushing rather than landfill. Worth asking about specifically rather than letting it default to landfill.
How a quartz slab journey looks across decades
Five life stages of a typical UK quartz slab from production through to its eventual end-of-life route.
Manufactured
93% natural quartz mixed with resin and pigments. Pressed and cured into slab form. Typically imported into the UK from European or Asian factories.
First kitchen, 15-25 yrs
Templated, cut and fitted in a UK kitchen. Serves daily use across teenage years to grandchildren visiting. Outlasts the cabinets it sits on.
Refurbishment lift
Cabinets replaced, slab lifted and refit on the new units. Common UK refurb path. Adds another 10-15 years of useful life.
Second life
Repurposed for utility, garage or outhouse use. Or sold on through salvage. Many UK quartz slabs see two or three different homes across their life.
Final disposal
Eventually crushed for aggregate, used as construction hardcore or sent to landfill. Closed-loop recycling into new slabs remains rare.
Three common end-of-life mistakes
From watching UK kitchen refurbs over the years, these are the three most common ways perfectly usable quartz ends up in landfill needlessly.
Defaulting to skip without considering reuse
The fastest disposal route is also the worst environmentally. Five minutes of consideration usually surfaces a better option for a structurally sound slab.
Assuming a chipped slab is unusable
A small front edge chip does not write off a whole worktop. Salvage yards routinely take chipped slabs which still have plenty of life for a utility, outhouse or budget kitchen.
Skipping the resale conversation entirely
A free Facebook Marketplace listing takes two minutes. The chance of finding a local buyer for a usable quartz slab is high. Worth trying before defaulting to disposal.
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
For the broader sustainability picture beyond just end-of-life, our piece on is quartz environmentally friendly covers the full footprint including manufacturing, transportation and the lifespan that drives most of the environmental case.
For evidence that quartz lifespan is genuinely long enough to make the recycling question rare, our article on how long do quartz worktops last walks through realistic timeframes versus warranty figures across UK installations.
And for an understanding of what is actually inside the slab that affects how it gets recycled, our piece on is quartz a natural stone covers the natural quartz vs resin balance that determines closed-loop recyclability.
For the wider context of all our material and care answers, the full quartz worktops FAQ covers every question we are asked across the showroom and on the phone.
Related FAQs
Is quartz environmentally friendly?
The full sustainability picture including manufacturing footprint, lifespan and end-of-life options across UK installations.
Read article →
How long do quartz worktops last?
Realistic UK lifespans rather than warranty figures, which underpins the recycling-vs-reuse calculation.
Read article →
Is quartz a natural stone?
The natural quartz vs polymer resin balance that determines what can and cannot be cleanly recycled.
Read article →
Quick answers
Can I put quartz in my household recycling?
No. UK kerbside recycling does not accept worktop slabs of any kind. Quartz needs to go through a salvage yard, builders merchant skip, dedicated waste removal service or be reused. Council recycling centres sometimes accept smaller quartz pieces in their hardcore stream.
Are any UK quartz brands made from recycled material?
A small number include post-consumer recycled quartz in their slabs, typically below 20% of the total content. Caesarstone and Silestone have made progress in this area. The recycled content is increasing year on year but full closed-loop manufacturing remains limited globally.
What is the most environmentally friendly worktop overall?
Sustainably sourced solid wood is often considered the greenest option from a pure raw-material perspective, though it has shorter lifespan and higher maintenance. Recycled glass surfaces score well too. Quartz with a 20-year lifespan and reuse on new cabinets is competitive across the full life cycle.
Can I cut down a large old quartz slab to reuse?
Yes, at a workshop. Cutting can be done at most quartz fabricators including ours. Edge re-polishing brings the new edge to factory finish. Total cost of cutting an old slab to fit a new space is often a third or less of buying new for that space.
Is replacement always more eco-friendly than repair?
Almost never. Repairing a chip or restoring a polished surface uses far less material than producing and shipping a new slab. The carbon footprint of a single new quartz slab is significant. Repair is the greener default for any damage that does not compromise the slab structurally.
Refurbing and want to reuse your worktop?
Pop into our Stevenage showroom or give us a call. We can quote for a lift-and-refit on new cabinets, or for cutting down an existing slab to fit a smaller second-life use.