Quartz Worktops FAQ · Installation
Can quartz worktops be cut on site?
Short answer: rarely, and only for minor adjustments. Quartz is templated and CNC-cut at the workshop for a reason. Cutting at home risks cracks, dust hazards and a finish that does not match the rest of the slab. Here is what genuinely can and cannot be done on site.
4.8 from 515+ Google reviews · UK-wide quartz specialists
Quartz worktop specialists · UK-wide installation
Almost every quartz cut you see in a finished UK kitchen was made in a workshop with industrial CNC machinery before the slab arrived at your house. Templating happens first, usually with a laser system that maps the kitchen down to the millimetre. The slab is then cut, polished and edged at the workshop. By the time it reaches your home, only the lifting, levelling and joining work remains. On-site cutting is the rare exception rather than the norm.
There are good reasons for this. Quartz dust contains crystalline silica which is a serious respiratory hazard regulated under UK Control of Substances Hazardous to Health (COSHH). Wet cutting is mandatory and requires specific equipment. The slab is heavy enough that handling errors can crack it. And the finish on a fresh cut needs precise polishing to match the rest of the slab. This page sets out exactly what work can be safely done on site, what genuinely should never be attempted at home and how the alternative usually plays out.
The cut is fine. It is the dust that kills. UK silicosis cases from quartz dust are real and the regulations exist for a reason.
— Rock & Co Showroom Team
What workshop cutting actually delivers that on-site cannot
Four specific advantages of workshop CNC cutting that make on-site work the rare exception rather than the norm.
Precision, dust control, finish quality and safety
Workshop CNC machinery cuts to tenths of a millimetre. The dust is captured, contained and disposed of safely. The cut edge can be polished to factory finish standards. The cutting equipment is calibrated, the operator is trained and the workshop is set up specifically for the task. None of these can be replicated reliably in a customer’s kitchen.
On-site work is therefore limited to a small set of jobs that genuinely cannot be done in advance. Final levelling adjustments. Adjusting a sink cutout slightly if the cabinet position has moved during install. Drilling a single small hole for an extra tap if needed. Anything bigger goes back to the workshop.
CNC precision
Dust contained
Polished finish
Safety certified
Four cuts that genuinely happen on site
Almost all on-site quartz work falls into these four categories. Anything outside the list usually means the slab needs to go back to the workshop.
Edge re-trim for a misaligned wall
Walls are rarely perfectly straight in older UK properties. A small edge re-trim of one or two millimetres lets the slab sit flush against the wall. Done with a wet-cut handheld diamond saw.
Drilling an extra small hole
For an additional tap, soap dispenser or boiling water tap added late in the kitchen design. Possible with a wet diamond core drill provided the slab is not over a structural joint.
Sink cutout micro-adjustment
If the cabinet position has shifted slightly during install, the sink cutout may need tiny adjustments to the underside of the lip. Fine work only, never a full re-cut on site.
Joining mitre or seam dressing
Where two slabs meet at a corner or join, the actual joining surfaces are dressed and cleaned on site before the structural adhesive is applied. Not strictly cutting but related work.
What workshop work costs if changes are needed late
If a slab needs to go back to the workshop for additional cutting, three escalating tiers cover the typical UK price range.
- Single new cutout or hole
- Slab returns to workshop
- 2-3 day turnaround
- Re-fitted on second visit
- Multiple cutouts or large reshaping
- Polished edge re-finishing
- 5-7 day turnaround
- Often more cost-effective than re-fab
- Original slab no longer usable
- New slab cut from raw stock
- 2-3 week turnaround
- Avoidable with good templating
Most major changes during install can be avoided with thorough laser templating before the workshop cuts begin. Saves the cost of a workshop return.
Cutting quartz dry creates respirable crystalline silica which is a serious UK health hazard. UK silicosis cases linked to engineered stone cutting are documented and rising. All quartz cutting should be wet-cut with proper extraction. Never DIY dry-cut a quartz slab in your kitchen.
On-site capability across worktop materials
A side-by-side view of how easily each common UK worktop material can be modified during installation.
| Quartz | Granite | Laminate | Wood | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Suitable for on-site full cuts | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| On-site adjustments OK | Yes, minor | Yes, minor | Yes | Yes |
| Dust hazard level | High | High | Low | Lowest |
| Wet-cutting required | Yes | Yes | No | No |
| DIY-friendly | No | No | Yes | Yes |
| Templating done off-site | Yes, laser | Yes, laser | Optional | Optional |
| Edge polish achievable on site | No | No | Yes | Yes |
7 ways to avoid needing on-site quartz cuts
Most “can it be cut on site” questions stem from a late kitchen change. These seven habits significantly reduce the risk of needing post-template adjustments.
Finalise sink and tap choice before templating
Have the actual sink, taps and any boiling water tap on site at template stage. Last-minute swaps from the original choice are the single biggest cause of needing re-cuts later.
Confirm hob model and dimensions
Hob cutout size depends on the exact model. Have the hob delivered or the spec sheet confirmed before templating. Substituting a different size hob later means a workshop return.
Make sure cabinets are fully fitted before template
Templating against half-fitted units leads to fit issues during install. Cabinets, end panels and any plinth work should all be in place when the laser template is taken.
Decide on splashback type early
Tile splashback vs upstand vs full quartz splashback affects how the slab sits against the wall. Decide before template to avoid a workshop return later for upstand cuts.
Walk the kitchen with the templater
Five minutes with the templater going through every cutout, cabinet height and wall position pays back many times over. Catches the issues before they become workshop returns.
Confirm power and water positions
Hidden socket boxes under the worktop or unexpected water pipes through cabinets need to be flagged at template. Discovering them at install is too late for a clean re-cut.
Sign off the template before workshop cutting
A reputable installer will share the template drawings with you for sign-off before cutting starts. Take the time to check carefully. Once the slab is cut, changes get expensive.
How quartz cutting actually flows from order to install
The five-step UK industry process from confirmed order to fitted worktop. On-site cutting is the rare deviation rather than part of the standard flow.
Laser templating
The templater visits and laser-maps the kitchen. Captures every wall, cabinet and cutout to within a millimetre.
Drawing sign-off
Template drawings shared for customer review. Cutouts, edges and dimensions all confirmed before cutting begins.
Workshop CNC cut
Slab cut to the template using industrial CNC machinery. Edges polished and cutouts shaped to factory finish.
Quality inspection
Workshop QC checks dimensions, edge polish and surface integrity before the slab leaves for delivery.
On-site install
Two fitters lift, level and join the slab. Minor adjustments only. Fully fitted in three to six hours typically.
Three DIY cutting attempts that go badly wrong
From years of being called in to inspect DIY damage, these are the three most common attempts that turn a small need into a slab replacement.
Cutting dry with an angle grinder
The dust hazard is enormous. Crystalline silica from quartz dust causes silicosis and is a documented UK health concern. Beyond the safety issue, dry cutting also chips the surface badly and overheats the resin. Never attempt this.
Drilling holes without a wet diamond bit
Standard masonry bits cannot cut quartz cleanly. They overheat the resin, crack the slab and create unacceptable dust. Diamond core drilling with water cooling is the only safe method. Specialist equipment required.
Cutting without supporting underneath
Quartz is heavy and will crack along the cut line if not properly supported. Workshop cuts use a full bed of support. On-site cutting without this almost guarantees a crack runs further than the intended cut.
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 full installation walkthrough that puts the cutting process in context, our piece on how are quartz worktops installed covers the entire flow from template to finish.
For decisions you need to make before templating including edge profile choice that affects how the slab is cut, our article on quartz worktop edge profiles explained walks through every option and what each adds to the workshop cutting process.
And for an understanding of why on-site cutting is so impractical including the basic weight challenges, our piece on how heavy are quartz worktops covers the structural considerations that affect both lifting and cutting.
For the wider context of all our installation and process answers, the full quartz worktops FAQ covers every question we are asked across the showroom and on the phone.
Related FAQs
How are quartz worktops installed?
The full installation walkthrough from template to fitted worktop including how cutting fits into the process.
Read article →
Quartz worktop edge profiles explained
Edge profile choice affects how the slab is cut at the workshop. A guide to the options and what each one adds.
Read article →
How heavy are quartz worktops?
The weight side of the conversation that helps explain why on-site cutting is so impractical without specialist equipment.
Read article →
Quick answers
Can I cut a quartz worktop myself with the right tools?
Strongly not recommended. Even with a wet-cut diamond saw and proper PPE, the dust hazard, crack risk and finish-matching challenges make DIY cutting a high-risk job. The cost of a workshop cut is far less than the cost of replacing a damaged slab.
Why is the dust from cutting quartz so dangerous?
Quartz cutting releases respirable crystalline silica which causes silicosis, a serious lung disease. UK regulations under COSHH require wet cutting and respiratory protection for any commercial quartz fabrication. The hazard is well documented and rising in cases linked to the engineered stone industry.
Can a fitter cut a hole for an extra tap on site?
Yes, with the right wet diamond core drill. Adding a single small hole for a soap dispenser, water filter tap or boiling water tap is a routine on-site adjustment. Larger cuts or a second sink would need the slab returned to the workshop.
What if my hob has changed since the template was taken?
If the new hob has a different cutout size, the slab needs to go back to the workshop for a re-cut. Costs typically £100 to £300 plus a few days of turnaround. This is one of the most common reasons for needing post-template work and is best avoided by confirming the hob spec at template stage.
How does the on-site joining of two slabs actually work?
The two slab edges are dressed clean on site, structural epoxy is applied along the join, the slabs are pulled together with adjustable clamps and the resin is colour-matched to the slab pattern. The visible joint is usually under a millimetre wide once cured. Workshop pre-cutting ensures the join surfaces are perfectly mated before they leave the workshop.
Need a worktop cut properly?
Pop into our Stevenage showroom or give us a call. We have full workshop CNC capability and laser templating across UK installations. No on-site improvisation required.