Quartz Worktops FAQ · Material
Is quartz a natural stone?
Honest answer: no, but mostly. Quartz worktops are engineered stone made from approximately 93% natural quartz crystals bound with 7% polymer resin and pigments. The mineral itself is natural. The slab is manufactured. Here is what that distinction actually means for your kitchen.
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Quartz worktops are engineered stone, not natural stone. The slab is manufactured by binding crushed natural quartz crystals (around 93% by weight) with polymer resin (around 7%) plus pigments and decorative elements. The result is a material with the appearance and feel of stone but with engineered consistency that natural stone cannot match. Granite, marble, slate and limestone are all true natural stones, quarried in slabs and used essentially as-cut. Quartz is the engineered alternative invented in the 1960s by an Italian company called Breton.
The “is it natural?” question matters less than it might first seem. The natural quartz mineral content delivers the hardness, hygiene profile and durability that customers value. The engineering process delivers the colour consistency, pattern control and non-porous structure that distinguish quartz from natural alternatives. For most UK homeowners, the engineered nature is a feature rather than a drawback. This page sets out exactly what quartz is made of, how it differs from true natural stones and why the distinction matters less than the practical performance comparison.
The mineral is natural. The slab is engineered. That combination delivers more useful kitchen performance than pure natural stone for most UK homes.
— Rock & Co Showroom Team
The exact composition of a typical UK quartz slab
A clear breakdown of what actually goes into a quartz worktop. The natural mineral content does the structural work. The engineered binder controls the rest.
Natural quartz crystals do the heavy lifting
The 93% natural quartz crystal content provides the structural hardness (Mohs 7), heat tolerance, scratch resistance and density. Without this natural mineral content, quartz would not deliver the durability customers value. The crystals are crushed to specific size grades during manufacturing then mixed with the binder system.
The remaining 7% is polymer resin (primarily polyester), pigments to control colour, and small additions like glass, mirror chips or metallic flakes for decorative effects. The resin fills the gaps between the crystals making the slab non-porous, controls the colour and provides the engineered consistency. Together the natural and engineered components deliver a material that performs better than either pure resin or natural stone alone could.
Natural minerals
Polymer resin
Engineered colour
Non-porous result
Four UK kitchen surface materials by natural-vs-engineered
A clear overview of where common UK kitchen surfaces sit on the natural-to-engineered spectrum.
Granite (true natural stone)
100% natural igneous rock quarried in slabs. Variable patterns and colours, naturally porous. Needs sealing every 1-2 years. Heat-tolerant beyond quartz limits.
Marble (true natural stone)
100% natural metamorphic rock. Beautiful veining patterns. Highly porous and reactive to acids. Highest maintenance demands of common UK kitchen stones.
Quartz (engineered stone)
93% natural quartz crystals plus 7% polymer resin. Engineered consistency. Non-porous from manufacture. The most popular UK kitchen worktop material.
Dekton / sintered stone (fully engineered)
Manufactured from a blend of clays and silicas without natural quartz crystals. Highly heat resistant. Premium pricing. Newer alternative to quartz in some applications.
UK pricing across natural and engineered options
Three escalating UK tiers showing how quartz compares with true natural stones at typical mid-range pricing.
- Engineered consistency
- Non-porous, no sealing
- Wide colour range
- Most popular UK choice
- Mid-range quartz: £420/m²
- Mid-range granite: £350/m²
- Mid-range marble: £700/m²
- Different tradeoffs each
- Premium quartz: £600+/m²
- Premium granite: £500+/m²
- Premium marble: £1,000+/m²
- Designer specifications
Engineered quartz pricing is competitive with or below natural stone alternatives at equivalent tiers, while delivering lower maintenance demands.
Quartz delivers most of the performance benefits of natural stone (hardness, heat resistance, premium feel) with engineered improvements (non-porous, colour consistency, no sealing). For most UK kitchens, the engineered nature is a feature rather than a drawback.
Natural vs engineered stone in UK kitchens
A side-by-side view of true natural stones vs engineered quartz across the seven factors that drive most UK kitchen decisions.
| Quartz | Granite | Marble | Dekton | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Natural stone | No (93% mineral) | 100% natural | 100% natural | No |
| Engineered | Yes | Cut and polished only | Cut and polished only | Yes |
| Non-porous | Yes | Sealed only | Sealed only | Yes |
| Colour consistency | Excellent | Variable | Variable | Excellent |
| Heat resistance | ~150°C | ~480°C | Moderate | ~480°C+ |
| Sealing required | Never | 1-2 yrly | 6-12 monthly | Never |
| UK install share | ~65% | ~20% | <5% | ~3% |
7 considerations for natural vs engineered choice
Knowing what each material genuinely delivers helps you pick based on real performance rather than the “natural” label alone.
Decide on maintenance tolerance
Engineered quartz needs no sealing, ever. Natural granite needs annual or biannual sealing. Marble needs more frequent sealing. Pick honestly based on whether you will keep up with maintenance.
Consider colour and pattern preferences
Engineered quartz delivers consistent patterns. Natural stone offers unique slab variations including occasional surprise mineral inclusions. Pick based on your preference for consistent vs natural variation.
Think about heat exposure
Granite handles direct hot pans up to ~480°C. Quartz needs trivets above 150°C. For homes that cook intensively with cast iron, granite has a structural advantage. For most kitchens with sensible trivet use, quartz is fine.
Review your hygiene priorities
Quartz delivers permanent non-porous hygiene without intervention. Natural stones need ongoing sealing to maintain their hygiene profile. Quartz is the safer choice for households with food-safety priorities.
Match material to property bracket
Both quartz and granite deliver strong resale uplift in UK mid to high-bracket homes. Marble appeals to luxury bracket buyers. Match the material aesthetic to the property tier.
Compare costs at equivalent tiers
Quartz is competitive with granite and significantly cheaper than marble at mid tier. Premium tier sees similar pricing across the materials. Compare like-for-like rather than headline figures.
View samples in person before committing
The “natural” vs “engineered” label matters less than how the actual slab looks in your kitchen. Always view samples in person under your home lighting before making the final decision.
How engineered quartz emerged and grew in UK kitchens
Five stages of how engineered quartz developed from invention through to UK kitchen dominance.
Italian invention
Breton SpA in Italy invented the engineered quartz manufacturing process. Initial use was industrial rather than residential.
Brand emergence
Major brands like Caesarstone (Israel) and Silestone (Spain) launched engineered quartz worktops for residential use. Premium positioning at first.
UK adoption
Quartz worktops gained ground in UK premium kitchens. Granite still dominated the mid-market through this period.
Market shift
Quartz overtook granite as the most popular UK premium worktop material. Marbled grey patterns drove rapid adoption. Standard tier pricing made quartz mainstream.
Mature dominance
Quartz now accounts for around 65% of UK premium worktop installs. Engineered nature is universally understood and accepted as a feature.
Three “natural stone” misconceptions about quartz
From years of customer conversations, these are the three most common misconceptions about the natural-vs-engineered question that lead to confused decisions.
“Engineered means lower quality”
Wrong. Engineered means controlled. Quartz performs better on hygiene, consistency and maintenance than natural alternatives. The engineering process delivers improvements rather than compromises.
“Natural stone is always premium”
Not necessarily. Premium quartz brands like Caesarstone command higher prices than mid-range granite. Premium-vs-budget cuts across both natural and engineered categories rather than aligning with them.
“Quartz is plastic with stone in it”
Misleading. The 93% natural mineral content does the structural work. The 7% resin binder makes engineering possible. The slab is far closer to natural stone in performance than to plastic.
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 deeper detail on what specifically goes into a quartz slab, our piece on what is quartz made of covers the manufacturing process and exact composition in more technical depth.
For the geological side of the natural mineral question, our article on what type of rock is quartz covers the natural quartz mineral itself before it gets engineered into worktop slabs.
And for the head-to-head comparison with the most common natural stone alternative, our piece on quartz vs granite worktops covers exactly how engineered quartz differs from true natural granite in real UK kitchens.
For the wider context of all our material answers, the full quartz worktops FAQ covers every question we are asked across the showroom and on the phone.
Related FAQs
What is quartz made of?
The exact composition and manufacturing process of UK quartz worktop slabs in detail.
Read article →
What type of rock is quartz?
The natural quartz mineral itself before it gets engineered into worktop slabs.
Read article →
Quartz vs granite worktops
How engineered quartz differs from true natural granite in real UK kitchens across every important factor.
Read article →
Quick answers
Is quartz natural or man-made?
Both. The mineral content (around 93% by weight) is natural quartz crystal. The slab itself is manufactured by binding crushed crystals with polymer resin and pigments. So quartz is engineered stone made from primarily natural materials.
What percentage of quartz is actually natural?
Around 93% of a typical UK quartz slab is natural quartz crystal by weight. The remaining 7% is polymer resin (about 5%), pigments (about 1.5%) and decorative additions (about 0.5%). Exact ratios vary slightly by brand.
Is engineered quartz better than natural granite?
Different rather than universally better. Quartz wins on hygiene (non-porous), maintenance (no sealing) and consistency. Granite wins on heat tolerance (480°C vs 150°C) and natural variation. The right choice depends on your kitchen priorities.
Why do people often confuse quartz with granite?
Both are stone-look hard worktops in the same UK price range with similar visual feel. Quartz is engineered with consistent patterns. Granite is natural with variation. Visually they can look similar but the maintenance and performance profiles are quite different.
Are there any 100% natural quartz worktops available?
No. The natural quartz mineral cannot be cut into large continuous slabs without binding the crystals together. Anything sold as a worktop labelled “quartz” is engineered stone with the natural mineral content described above. Granite is the closest natural alternative.
Want to compare natural and engineered options?
Pop into our Stevenage showroom or give us a call. We hold both quartz and natural granite samples on display so you can see the differences in colour, finish and feel before making a decision.