Quartz Worktops FAQ · Polishing
Can quartz worktops be polished?
Short answer: yes by professionals, no for DIY. Quartz comes permanently polished from the factory and rarely needs re-polishing if cared for properly. Here is what restores shine, what genuinely damages the surface and when a specialist visit is the right call.
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“Can quartz be polished” is one of the most common questions we hear from owners whose worktop has lost a bit of its showroom sparkle. The answer has two parts. Quartz arrives at your home permanently polished from the factory using industrial diamond pads and high-pressure techniques you cannot replicate at home. Under normal use, that polish lasts the lifetime of the slab. If something has dulled the finish, the right response is almost always a thorough clean rather than re-polishing.
Where genuine re-polishing is needed, professional refinishing is the only safe route. There are two main techniques that specialists use, both of which require equipment and skill that DIY attempts cannot match. This page sets out when a wipe-and-buff is enough, when a quartz-safe cleaner restores the shine and when you should genuinely call us in. After two decades of fitting and inspecting quartz across the UK, we have a clear view of which is which.
The factory polish is permanent for the life of the slab. What people call “dulling” is almost always residue, not damage.
— Rock & Co Showroom Team
What actually causes the loss of shine
Across years of inspecting “dull” quartz, the cause splits into four categories. Three are reversible without polishing.
Most “dulling” is residue, not surface damage
The single biggest cause of perceived dulling is product residue from cleaning products. Oil-based soaps, granite sealants applied incorrectly, soap scum and limescale all build up a thin film that looks like the polish has gone but is actually sitting on top of an intact surface. A proper deep clean restores the shine.
Genuine polish damage from harsh chemicals is the next biggest cause. Bleach, oven cleaner and acidic limescale removers can etch the resin component over time. The fourth and rarest cause is physical damage from abrasive scrubbers or steel wool which create micro-scratches in the polish. Both of these need professional attention.
Wipe to fix residue
Pro for deep marks
Avoid harsh chems
No DIY abrasion
Four scenarios that genuinely require professional polishing
Most “dull” worktops just need a proper deep clean. These four cases are when a specialist refinish is the correct answer.
Bleach etching damage
Repeated bleach use has lightly etched the resin component, leaving cloudy patches. Cleaning will not restore these. Chemical or physical re-polishing is the only fix.
Heat scorch marks
Permanent discolouration from hot pan contact. Polishing alone cannot reverse the colour change but professional refinishing can blend small areas into the surrounding slab.
Light scratches across the polish
Steel wool or scouring pad damage that has created micro-scratches across a large area. Professional buffing with diamond pads can restore the polish to near-original.
Refurbishment refresh at year 15+
Older slabs in heavy-use kitchens may benefit from a polish refresh in the prep zone. Often part of a wider kitchen refurbishment when units are being replaced.
What restoring shine actually costs
Three escalating tiers from a five-minute wipe to a full professional refinish. Most issues resolve at the first tier.
- Soapy water plus microfibre
- Window cleaner sparingly
- Resolves residue and water spots
- Fixes 75% of “dull” cases
- Quartz cleaner plus polish kit
- Premium microfibre cloths
- Limescale remover (quartz-safe)
- Resolves another 20% of cases
- Chemical or physical re-polishing
- Diamond pad buffing
- For genuine surface damage only
- Cheaper than slab replacement
Always try the DIY tier first. The vast majority of “dull” worktops respond to a proper deep clean rather than needing actual polishing.
Never attempt DIY polishing with sandpaper, abrasive pads or polishing compounds. The wrong technique creates permanent damage that requires professional refinishing to fix. The cost of a bad DIY attempt is always higher than the cost of doing it properly.
Restoration options at a glance
A side-by-side view of the four common ways to bring shine back to a quartz worktop, ranked by what they actually fix.
| Soapy water | Window cleaner | Quartz polish | Pro refinish | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Removes residue | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Removes water spots | Partial | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Restores high gloss | Slightly | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Fixes light etching | No | No | No | Yes |
| Fixes scratches | No | No | No | Yes |
| Fixes scorch marks | No | No | No | Sometimes |
| Cost | Free | £ | ££ | £££ |
7 habits that protect the factory polish for life
Avoiding the need for professional polishing is far easier than booking it. These seven habits keep the polish intact across the full lifespan of the slab.
Use only soapy water for daily cleaning
The most important habit. Mild washing-up liquid in warm water removes everyday spills, residues and grease without affecting the polish. Nothing more is needed for routine care.
Avoid bleach, ammonia and oven cleaner
These dull the polished finish over months of repeated exposure. The damage is gradual and hard to spot until it is significant. Stick to pH-neutral cleaners only.
Skip the abrasive scrubbers entirely
Steel wool, scouring pads, gritty kitchen sponges. All create micro-scratches in the polish that accumulate over time. Use only soft cloths and microfibre.
Wipe acidic spills within an hour
Lemon juice, vinegar, red wine, tomato sauce. None will damage quartz quickly but extended contact can faintly etch the resin. Wipe within sixty minutes for full polish protection.
Use a trivet for hot cookware
Heat damage permanently changes the polish. Once scorched, only professional refinishing can address it. A trivet is the single biggest polish protector you can adopt.
Use a chopping board, always
Quartz is harder than your knives but cutting directly creates subtle marks in the polish over years of repeated use. A chopping board protects both the slab and the blade.
Buff dry after every wet clean
Hard water UK regions especially. Drying with a clean microfibre stops limescale film building. Five extra seconds at the end of cleaning saves hours of polish-restoring work later.
How the factory finish ages over twenty years
Real observations from inspecting UK quartz installations across our two decades of fitting.
Showroom shine
Polish full, perfect reflection, no marks. Looks identical to install day.
Effectively unchanged
If cared for properly, the polish at five years is indistinguishable from year one. Customer satisfaction stays high.
Slight wear in prep zone
The single zone next to the hob may show very slight polish dulling from daily use. Rest of the worktop unchanged.
Optional polish refresh
Some owners book a professional polish refresh of the whole surface at this point. Not required but restores showroom finish for another decade.
Refurb-ready
Polish dulled in heavy-use zones but still presentable. Often refit on new cabinets in a kitchen refurbishment with a polish refresh as part of the lift-and-relay.
Three DIY polishing attempts that make things worse
From years of being called in to fix DIY damage, these are the three most common attempts that turn a minor issue into an expensive repair.
Sanding down a stain
Sandpaper and abrasive pads remove a layer of the resin and leave a permanently rougher patch in the surface. The original “stain” was usually just residue that would have wiped off with the right cleaner.
Using granite polish on quartz
Granite-specific polishes contain oils designed to seep into the porous stone. Quartz is non-porous so the oil sits on top creating a tacky residue that attracts more dirt and dulls the finish further.
Heat-treating to “burn off” stains
We have genuinely seen this. Hot pans applied directly to a stained area in the hope of burning the mark off. The result is permanent scorching damage that requires a slab section replacement.
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
The simplest way to keep your polish intact is the right daily cleaning routine. Our piece on how to clean quartz countertops walks through the daily and weekly process step by step with the products to use and avoid.
If your worktop has visible damage rather than just dulling, our article on how to repair chipped quartz worktops covers the chip and crack repair side of the same conversation, including when to call a specialist.
And if you are still in the planning stage and weighing up polished vs matte finish, our piece on matte vs polished quartz worktops covers the trade-offs for both finishes including how each ages.
For the wider context of all our care and finishing answers, the full quartz worktops FAQ covers every question we are asked across the showroom and on the phone.
Related FAQs
How to maintain quartz worktops
The full long-term care guide that keeps the factory polish intact across the lifetime of your worktop.
Read article →
How to remove stains from quartz worktops
The right products and techniques for each type of mark, before you reach for anything that might damage the polish.
Read article →
Quartz worktop finishes explained
Polished vs honed vs leathered. How each finish is created at the factory and how each one ages.
Read article →
Quick answers
Can I polish my quartz worktop myself?
Light shine restoration with soapy water, microfibre and the occasional window cleaner spray is fine and useful. Genuine re-polishing with abrasive compounds, sandpaper or buffing wheels should not be attempted at home. The risk of permanent damage is high.
Why has my new quartz worktop already lost its shine?
Almost certainly product residue rather than polish damage. New worktops can quickly accumulate a film from oil-based soaps, granite sealers applied incorrectly or limescale from hard water. A proper deep clean with a quartz-safe cleaner usually restores the showroom shine entirely.
What does professional quartz polishing involve?
Two main techniques. Chemical polishing applies a thin restorative layer to the surface to fill micro-scratches and restore gloss. Physical polishing uses diamond buffing pads to actually re-finish the resin layer. Both require specialist equipment and an experienced operator.
How much does professional quartz polishing cost in the UK?
Spot polishing of a small area starts at around £200. Full worktop refinishing for a typical UK kitchen runs £400 to £800 depending on size and the extent of damage. Still significantly cheaper than a slab replacement which would run into the thousands.
How do I know if I need polishing or just a deep clean?
Run a damp cloth over the dull area firmly. If the area becomes shiny while wet then dulls again as it dries, the issue is residue and a deep clean will fix it. If the area remains dull even when wet, the polish itself has been compromised and a professional refinish is the right answer.
Need a worktop polished or replaced?
Pop into our Stevenage showroom or give us a call. We can assess whether your worktop needs cleaning, professional refinishing or replacement and quote accordingly.