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Porcelain Countertops countertop in West Palm Beach

Porcelain Countertops in West Palm Beach

Porcelain surfaces for West Palm Beach projects—modern looks with fabrication expertise for edges and details.

What are porcelain countertops?

Porcelain countertops are fabricated from large-format sintered ceramic slabs created by subjecting natural minerals — primarily clays, silica, feldspar, and mineral oxides — to extreme heat (over 2,200°F) and compression (up to 25,000 tons of pressure). This sintering process fuses the raw materials into an ultra-dense, non-porous surface with properties that exceed most natural and engineered stones in several key performance categories. The result is a material with near-zero water absorption (less than 0.1%), extreme hardness, and chemical inertness that natural stone cannot match. The leading brands in this category differ in composition and manufacturing approach. Dekton by Cosentino uses a proprietary blend of glass, porcelain, and quartz particles sintered under their TSP (Technology of Sintered Particles) process — technically a 'sintered stone' rather than pure porcelain, giving it slightly different performance characteristics including exceptional flexural strength. Neolith is a sintered compact surface using 100% natural raw materials (clays, feldspar, silica, and natural mineral oxides) with no resins, making it fully recyclable. Laminam specializes in ultra-thin Italian-made slabs (as thin as 3 mm for wall cladding) with emphasis on large format and textured surfaces. SapienStone focuses specifically on kitchen countertop applications with competitively priced porcelain slabs. These manufacturers produce slabs in sizes up to 126 by 60 inches, enabling large seamless installations with minimal joints. Modern digital printing and full-body coloring technology allows these slabs to convincingly replicate the appearance of marble, concrete, wood, metal, and natural stone — with color extending through the slab thickness so that edge chips are less visually jarring than with surface-printed materials. For South Florida homeowners who want the aesthetics of natural stone combined with near-zero maintenance and exceptional durability, porcelain countertops represent one of the most technically advanced options available.

Advantages of porcelain for South Florida homes

Porcelain countertops offer a compelling list of advantages that align particularly well with South Florida's climate and lifestyle demands. UV resistance is the standout benefit — porcelain does not fade, yellow, or degrade under direct sunlight, making it one of the few countertop materials that performs identically indoors and outdoors. For South Florida homes with large windows, open-concept layouts, and outdoor living spaces, this UV stability eliminates the concerns that limit quartz and marble in sun-exposed applications. Zero porosity means no sealing is ever required, and the surface is impervious to staining from wine, citrus, coffee, oils, and virtually every household chemical. Porcelain resists heat better than quartz and most engineered surfaces — you can place hot pans directly on the surface without damage. Scratch resistance is excellent, and the material does not etch from acids the way marble and some dolomites do. For South Florida's humid, salt-air environment, porcelain's non-porous surface prevents moisture absorption, mold growth, and salt-air corrosion. The material is also lightweight compared to natural stone (particularly in 12mm thickness), which can simplify installation in high-rise condos where elevator access and weight limits are considerations.

Important considerations before choosing porcelain

Porcelain countertops are not without limitations, and understanding them helps you make an informed decision. Edge treatment is the primary consideration. Porcelain slabs are thinner than natural stone — typically 12mm (½ inch) or 20mm (¾ inch) — so achieving the substantial 3cm (1¼ inch) edge profile common in kitchen countertops requires edge buildup techniques. This involves mitering, laminating, or building up the edge with additional material. The quality of this edge work depends heavily on fabricator expertise, and not all shops produce clean, seamless results. Porcelain can chip or crack if subjected to sharp impact on edges or unsupported areas — it is a rigid, brittle material that does not flex. Sink cutouts and cooktop openings create stress points that require precise fabrication techniques. Repairs to damaged porcelain are more difficult than natural stone repairs — chips and cracks cannot be polished or filled as easily as granite or marble. Finally, porcelain lacks the natural depth and tactile warmth of real stone. While modern printing technology creates remarkably convincing visual replicas of marble and stone, close inspection and touch reveal the difference. For homeowners who prioritize the authenticity of natural materials, porcelain may feel like an imitation despite its technical superiority.

Porcelain countertop pricing in South Florida

Installed porcelain countertop pricing in South Florida typically ranges from $60 to $100 per square foot, depending on the brand, pattern, thickness, and edge treatment. Entry-level porcelain from brands like SapienStone and basic Neolith patterns starts around $60–70 per square foot installed. Popular Dekton patterns and premium Neolith designs fall in the $75–90 range. Ultra-premium patterns, large-format installations, and complex edge treatments can approach or exceed $100 per square foot. Edge treatment significantly impacts pricing. A simple mitered edge costs less than a built-up 3cm laminated edge with a visible seam, while a seamless mitered edge with color-matched filling costs more. Sink and cooktop cutouts require specialized waterjet cutting that adds fabrication cost compared to natural stone. A typical 40-square-foot kitchen countertop project in porcelain — including template, fabrication, edge treatment, undermount sink cutout, and installation — generally falls between $3,000 and $5,000. We provide itemized estimates that break down material, fabrication, and installation costs so you can compare porcelain against natural stone and quartz alternatives on equal footing.

Porcelain maintenance and daily care

Porcelain is arguably the lowest-maintenance premium countertop material available. Daily cleaning requires nothing more than warm water and a soft cloth, or any standard household cleaner — porcelain is chemically inert and unaffected by common cleaning products including bleach, ammonia, and acidic cleaners that would damage natural stone. No sealing is ever required, and no special cleaning products are necessary. For stubborn marks, a non-abrasive cleaner or a melamine foam sponge handles most situations. Because porcelain does not absorb liquids, there is no risk of staining from prolonged contact with wine, coffee, turmeric, or other pigmented substances. This zero-maintenance profile is particularly valuable in South Florida's humid climate, where the absence of micro-pores means no mold or mildew can develop within the surface. The only maintenance consideration is avoiding impact damage. Dropping heavy objects (cast iron pans, ceramic dishes) directly onto porcelain edges or unsupported areas can cause chips. Using cutting boards is recommended — not because the countertop will scratch, but because porcelain will rapidly dull knife blades.

Best applications for porcelain countertops

Porcelain's combination of UV resistance, zero porosity, and large slab formats makes it exceptionally versatile across indoor and outdoor applications — a breadth of use that few other materials can match. Kitchen countertops benefit from porcelain's heat resistance (safe above 600°F, compared to quartz's approximately 300°F limit), scratch resistance, and imperviousness to staining from turmeric, beet juice, red wine, and other notorious kitchen stainers. Bathroom vanities and shower wall cladding leverage the material's zero water absorption — in South Florida's humid climate, this means no mold can develop within the surface itself, unlike improperly sealed natural stone. Full-height backsplashes and wall panels — where the large slab format (up to 126×60 inches) enables floor-to-ceiling coverage with minimal seams — create dramatic, seamless surfaces that simplify cleaning and eliminate grout maintenance. Ultra-thin 3 mm porcelain can overlay existing tile or drywall for renovation projects where demolition is impractical. Outdoor kitchens and pool bars represent one of porcelain's strongest applications in South Florida — arguably its single biggest advantage over every other countertop material. South Florida receives among the highest UV index readings in the continental United States (regularly UV 11+ in summer), and porcelain's mineral-based coloring is completely immune to UV degradation. Quartz yellows, marble etches from acidic rain and citrus, and even granite sealers degrade faster under UV. Porcelain handles full sun exposure, grill heat (direct contact with grill grates is safe), rain cycles, chlorinated pool splashes, salt-system chemistry, sunscreen and tanning oil, and salt air without any maintenance beyond wiping it clean. For homeowners who want a unified material flowing from indoor kitchen through pass-through window to outdoor entertaining areas, porcelain provides seamless visual continuity between conditioned and unconditioned spaces. Commercial applications include restaurant surfaces (where NSF food-safety standards matter), hotel bathrooms, retail displays, and medical facilities where hygiene, chemical resistance, and maintenance simplicity are prioritized.

Popular porcelain brands at our South Florida showroom

We fabricate and install porcelain from the leading manufacturers in the sintered surface category. Dekton by Cosentino is the most recognized brand in South Florida, offering an extensive range of patterns including marble replicas (Aura, Entzo, Olimpo), concrete looks (Keon, Soke), and industrial finishes (Trilium, Radium). Dekton's 25-year warranty and consistent availability make it a reliable choice for residential and commercial projects. Neolith produces ultra-thin 3mm slabs for wall cladding as well as 12mm and 20mm slabs for countertops, with a pattern library that includes convincing Statuario and Calacatta replicas. Laminam offers large-format Italian-made slabs with emphasis on textured, tactile surfaces that go beyond visual replication. SapienStone provides competitively priced porcelain slabs targeted at kitchen countertop applications. We maintain displays of the most popular patterns and can order any pattern from these manufacturers, typically with 1–2 week lead times. Sample materials are available to take home for evaluation against your cabinetry and lighting conditions.

Porcelain performance in South Florida's coastal climate

Porcelain may be the most climate-proof countertop material available for South Florida's challenging conditions. Its zero porosity means humidity, salt air, and rain have no pathway to degrade the material from within. UV radiation — South Florida receives among the highest UV index readings in the continental United States — does not affect porcelain's color or structural integrity. The material does not expand, contract, or warp with temperature changes between air-conditioned interiors and tropical outdoor spaces. For waterfront properties where salt air penetrates living spaces, porcelain requires no protective measures beyond normal cleaning. For outdoor installations exposed to direct weather, porcelain handles torrential rain, hurricane-driven wind, and sustained heat without maintenance adjustments. The material is also resistant to the pool chemicals (chlorine, salt systems) and cleaning products used in outdoor entertaining areas. This climate resilience makes porcelain the top choice for South Florida homeowners who want a single material that works identically in their indoor kitchen, covered lanai, outdoor summer kitchen, and pool bar — with the same zero maintenance regardless of location.

Why fabrication expertise matters for porcelain

Porcelain slab fabrication differs fundamentally from natural stone work, and the quality gap between experienced and inexperienced porcelain fabricators is significant. Where granite and marble are cut with standard diamond bridge saw blades at moderate speeds, porcelain requires specialized sintered-diamond blades running at slower feed rates with continuous water cooling to prevent micro-fracturing. The material cannot flex — unlike granite, which has slight elasticity, porcelain will crack rather than bend, so full-surface support during cutting and transport is mandatory. Edge work is where porcelain fabrication diverges most dramatically from stone. Natural stone at 3 cm thickness has a finished edge ready to profile. Porcelain slabs at 12 mm or 20 mm require edge buildup to achieve the standard countertop thickness. The three primary methods are: mitered edges (two pieces cut at 45° and bonded to create a thicker profile — the cleanest result but the most skill-dependent), laminated edges (a strip bonded to the underside to double the visible thickness), and built-up edges with color-matched filler. The quality of this edge work is the single biggest differentiator between a professional porcelain installation and an amateur one. Sink cutouts are the most technically demanding aspect of porcelain fabrication. The internal corners of rectangular undermount sink cutouts create stress concentration points that can develop cracks if not properly radiused (minimum 1-inch radius recommended) and supported. Our facility uses CNC waterjet cutting for porcelain sink cutouts, which produces cleaner, stress-free openings compared to conventional bridge saw cuts. Waterjet cutting also eliminates the micro-chipping along cut edges that bridge saws can cause in porcelain. Adhesives differ from stone work as well — porcelain's non-porous surface does not bond well with the polyester-based adhesives used for granite seaming. Porcelain requires flexible, high-strength epoxy adhesives specifically formulated for sintered surfaces. Installation also uses flexible thin-set or adhesive rather than the rigid silicone typically used under stone countertops, allowing for minor thermal expansion without cracking. Not all countertop fabricators in South Florida have porcelain capabilities or experience. When evaluating porcelain fabricators, ask about their edge-building technique, sink cutout method, adhesive system, and the number of porcelain projects they have completed.

How porcelain compares to other countertop materials

Porcelain competes with quartz for the low-maintenance engineered surface market and with natural stone for the premium aesthetic market. Against quartz, porcelain wins on UV resistance (making it outdoor-capable), heat tolerance, and scratch resistance. Quartz offers a wider color selection, warmer tactile feel, simpler edge treatment, and a more established consumer reputation. Against granite, porcelain offers zero maintenance and UV resistance with comparable durability, while granite provides natural uniqueness, greater depth, and a warmer material character. Against marble, porcelain delivers marble-look aesthetics without any of marble's maintenance concerns — no etching, no sealing, no staining — but lacks the genuine depth and translucency of natural marble. Against Dekton specifically (which is technically a sintered stone rather than traditional porcelain), the comparison is nuanced: Dekton is manufactured by the same company that produces Silestone quartz and offers a slightly different composition than standard porcelain. For South Florida homeowners who prioritize maintenance simplicity and outdoor capability above all else, porcelain is the strongest option. For those who value natural material authenticity, granite and quartzite remain compelling alternatives.

Design applications and modern installations

Porcelain's large slab formats and thin profiles open design possibilities that are impractical with thicker natural stone. Full-wall cladding — from counter to ceiling or even floor to ceiling — creates a dramatic, seamless look with minimal grout lines. In South Florida's modern and contemporary interiors, porcelain wall panels are replacing tile for backsplashes, shower surrounds, and accent walls. Waterfall edge islands work well in porcelain, with the mitered edge creating a clean, geometric appearance that suits minimalist design. The material's thin profile (as slim as 12mm) enables lightweight floating shelf installations, integrated drainage grooves, and furniture-like applications that would be impractical with heavy natural stone. Ultra-thin 3mm porcelain is used for cabinet door resurfacing and furniture veneering. For indoor-outdoor continuity — a hallmark of South Florida architecture — porcelain provides a single material that flows from kitchen counter through pass-through window to outdoor bar without material transitions or maintenance changes. Popular porcelain design styles in the South Florida market include Calacatta marble replicas, raw concrete finishes, and textured natural stone looks that complement both contemporary and transitional interiors.

What to Know in West Palm Beach

In West Palm Beach, the most common decision points are material durability vs. aesthetics, timeline coordination with other trades, and budget allocation between the island (where guests notice) and perimeter runs (where function matters most). We help you prioritize based on how you actually live — not showroom lighting. Here are the key material trade-offs: quartz gives you zero-maintenance consistency but cannot handle hot pans directly; granite offers heat resistance and natural beauty but requires annual sealing; marble delivers unmatched elegance but etches from acidic foods; quartzite combines natural stone beauty with superior hardness but comes at a premium; porcelain is nearly indestructible and UV-safe but has visible seams on large spans.

Coastal and pool-adjacent properties in Palm Beach County need surfaces rated for UV and salt exposure. We'll steer you away from materials that look great indoors but fail within two years outside, and toward options that hold up with minimal maintenance.

Here's what the estimate-to-installation timeline actually looks like: Day 1, you send photos and measurements and we respond with a same-day ballpark. Within a few days, you visit our showroom to select your specific slab. Once you commit, we schedule laser templating (after cabinets are fully installed and leveled). Fabrication takes 5–7 business days on our CNC machines — your slab is cut, edged, polished, and quality-checked. Installation day itself takes 2–4 hours for a standard kitchen. Total timeline from template to living on your new countertops: 5–10 business days.

Common mistakes we help West Palm Beach homeowners avoid: choosing a material based on a 4×4 sample instead of seeing the full slab (pattern scale changes everything); not accounting for seam placement on L-shaped kitchens; selecting a polished white marble for a household with kids without understanding the etching reality; forgetting that cooktop cutouts and complex edge profiles add cost beyond the per-square-foot price; and waiting to order countertops last in a renovation timeline, which often delays the entire project.

To keep your investment looking new, know what to avoid on your specific surface. On marble and limestone, never use vinegar, lemon-based cleaners, or anything with citric acid — they etch the calcium carbonate on contact. On quartz, avoid bleach, oven cleaner, or anything above pH 11. On granite, skip oil-based soaps that build up a dulling film; use a pH-neutral stone cleaner instead. For all stone, never use abrasive pads or powders — a soft cloth and warm soapy water handles 95% of daily cleaning.

Send photos and rough measurements for a same-day ballpark. When you're ready to commit, we template with digital lasers after cabinets are set, fabricate at our Pompano Beach facility, and install — typically within 5–10 business days from template to completion.

Recent Projects & Reviews

We had a great experience with Florida Countertop Factory for selecting our kitchen and vanity quartz countertops. The process was smooth, the team was knowledgeable, and the results are beautiful.

Evan Felps, Google

Balázs and his team were wonderful. Fast service and very efficient. Their work was perfect and we're very happy!

Ed and Julie, Google

Balazs and Claudia were a pleasure to work with! They delivered excellent craftsmanship, in a quick turnaround time and were extremely efficient. The work speaks for itself! We will be using their services again!

Amalia G., Google

Common Questions About Countertops & Installation

Can I keep my existing sink when replacing countertops?
Often yes, but it depends on the sink type, condition, and compatibility with your new countertop. Undermount sinks are removed during countertop replacement and can typically be reinstalled if they are in good structural condition — no cracks, no corroded mounting clips, and the drain alignment works with the new cutout position. We inspect your undermount during templating and let you know if reuse is feasible. Drop-in (top-mount) sinks can often be reused if the new countertop cutout matches the existing sink dimensions — however, if you're switching from laminate to stone, many homeowners take the opportunity to upgrade to an undermount for a cleaner look (the cutout is different, so this decision needs to be made before templating). Farmhouse (apron-front) sinks require specific cabinet modifications and precise countertop fitting — if you already have one installed with the right cabinet, we can template around it. If you're adding a new farmhouse sink, the cabinet must be modified first. Compatibility note: if you're changing countertop thickness (e.g., from 2cm laminate to 3cm granite), your existing sink's mounting hardware may need adjustment, and your garbage disposal / drain connections may need replumbing due to the height difference. We handle the sink disconnection and reconnection as part of installation, but if replumbing is needed, we'll let you know at templating so you can have a plumber coordinate. Let us know your sink situation — make, model if possible — when requesting a quote.
Can you repair a cracked or chipped countertop?
It depends on the damage type, material, location, and size. Here's a general repair-vs-replace guide: Small edge chips (under 1/4 inch) can usually be repaired with color-matched epoxy or resin filler for $150–$350 — the result is near-invisible on most materials, especially granite and quartz with busy patterns. Hairline cracks that don't go all the way through the slab can often be stabilized with flowing epoxy and polished smooth — this prevents propagation and is cosmetically acceptable in most cases ($200–$500 depending on length). Cracks that span the full thickness of the stone or run from a cutout to an edge indicate structural failure — repair is possible but the crack will likely return, and replacement of that section is the better long-term solution. For quartz specifically, cracks often originate from stress near sink cutouts or unsupported overhangs, and are best addressed by replacing the affected piece. For granite, a crack near a cooktop cutout may have been caused by thermal shock (setting a hot pot on a cold counter near a thin section). When replacement makes more sense than repair: the crack is longer than 6 inches, the crack is in a highly visible area on a light-colored stone, the damage is near a cutout where structural integrity matters, or the repair cost approaches 40–50% of replacement cost for that section. Send us photos of the damage and the material type and we will give you an honest assessment — we never push replacement when a $200 repair will solve the problem.
Do quartz countertops stain?
Quartz countertops are highly stain-resistant but not completely stain-proof. The engineered resin binder makes quartz non-porous, so most spills — coffee, wine, juice, oil — can be wiped away without leaving a mark if cleaned within a few hours. However, prolonged exposure (12+ hours) to certain substances can cause permanent discoloration. The most common stain scenarios we see in South Florida kitchens: turmeric or curry paste left overnight (leaves a yellow shadow), red wine pooled behind a backsplash for days unnoticed, permanent marker from kids' art projects, and dark hair dye dripped during at-home coloring. If a stain does occur, try a paste of baking soda and water applied for 15–20 minutes — this draws out most surface discoloration without damaging the finish. For stubborn stains, a non-abrasive pad with Bar Keepers Friend (the liquid, not the powder) often works. Never use bleach, acetone, oven cleaner, or anything above pH 11, as these attack the resin binder and cause permanent clouding or dull spots. For daily cleaning, warm water with mild dish soap is all you need — avoid oil-based soaps like Murphy's that leave a buildup film. Quartz does not require sealing, ever. In South Florida's humid climate, quartz performs exceptionally well because its non-porous surface cannot absorb moisture, preventing the mold-in-pores issue that affects improperly maintained natural stone.
Do you work on commercial projects like restaurants and hotels?
Yes. We serve restaurants, hotels, medical offices, multi-family developments, retail showrooms, office buildings, and commercial builders throughout South Florida. Common commercial project types we handle: restaurant bar tops and service counters (often requiring food-safe, heat-resistant materials and NSF compliance considerations), hotel bathroom vanities (50–200+ identical units with tight delivery schedules), multi-family condo developments (bulk quartz or granite across 20–100+ units with phased installation per building floor), property management renovation cycles, and medical/dental office reception desks and exam room surfaces. Commercial projects typically involve volume pricing (5–20% below retail depending on scope), coordinated scheduling with your GC or project manager, and delivery windows that align with your construction timeline. We can handle phased installation for renovations where operations cannot be fully shut down — restaurants, hotels, and medical offices often need overnight or weekend work, which we accommodate. For multi-unit projects, we maintain material consistency by reserving slab lots from the same production batch. Logistics we manage: coordinating with multiple trades on-site, meeting commercial insurance requirements, providing lien waivers, working within union or prevailing wage job sites, and adapting to schedule changes that are inevitable on large builds. Contact us with your project scope, unit count, and target timeline for a commercial quote.
Do you seal natural stone countertops after installation?
Yes. We seal all granite, quartzite, and marble surfaces with a professional-grade fluorocarbon impregnating sealer as part of our installation process — this penetrates below the surface rather than sitting on top, providing long-lasting protection without changing the stone's appearance. Resealing frequency depends on the stone and usage: kitchen granite should be resealed every 12 months (every 8–10 months for coastal homes with salt air exposure); quartzite every 12–18 months; marble every 6–12 months depending on how much cooking acid exposure it gets. To test if your stone needs resealing, place a few drops of water on the surface — if it darkens within 5 minutes, it's time to reseal. For DIY resealing, we recommend Tenax Hydrex or StoneTech BulletProof for granite and quartzite, and StoneTech Stone & Tile Sealer for marble. Application is straightforward: clean the surface thoroughly, apply sealer evenly with a soft cloth, let it penetrate for 15–20 minutes, then buff off any residue with a dry microfiber cloth. Work in small sections and ensure good ventilation. Avoid cheap hardware-store topical sealers — they sit on the surface, create a film that traps moisture underneath, and peel within months in South Florida's humidity.
How fast can I get a countertop estimate?
Most homeowners receive a preliminary countertop estimate within a few hours of contacting us — often within 30 minutes during business hours. Send photos, rough measurements, your city, and the material you prefer via WhatsApp or our quote form and we typically respond the same day with a realistic price range (not a lowball-to-upsell range). To help us give you the most accurate same-day estimate, include: photos of your existing countertops from above (showing the full layout), a photo of any corners or angles, the sink area, your cabinet color, rough measurements (length × depth for each run — doesn't need to be exact), the material you're considering, and your preferred edge profile if you have one in mind. The more detail you provide upfront, the tighter our preliminary range will be. Firm pricing comes after in-home laser templating, when we capture exact dimensions, wall angles, outlet positions, and cutout locations to the 1/16th of an inch. The difference between preliminary and final pricing is usually within 10–15% unless the layout is significantly different from the photos. We offer same-day estimates across all of South Florida and respond to WhatsApp messages and quote form submissions 7 days a week.
How long does countertop installation take?
Most residential countertop projects take 5–10 business days from template to installation. The actual installation day itself takes 2–4 hours for a standard kitchen (under 45 sq ft) and 4–6 hours for larger kitchens with islands, waterfall edges, or multiple seams. Here is the typical timeline: Day 1 is the in-home estimate and material discussion, Days 2–3 for slab selection at our Pompano Beach showroom, Days 4–5 for digital laser templating (requires cabinets fully installed and leveled), Days 5–8 for CNC fabrication including cutting, edge profiling, polishing, and quality inspection, and Days 8–10 for professional installation including setting slabs, leveling, seaming, applying sealant, and reconnecting undermount sinks. After installation, avoid placing heavy items on seams for 24 hours while adhesives cure. The main variables that affect timing are slab availability (in-stock materials proceed immediately; special-order exotic stones can add 1–3 weeks), current shop queue during peak season (January–April is busiest in South Florida), complexity of edge work, and whether your cabinets are fully installed and leveled. Condo projects may add 2–5 days for COI approval, freight elevator scheduling, and building management coordination. We provide a specific calendar date at estimate — not a vague range — and communicate proactively if anything shifts.
How long does countertop fabrication take after templating?
Fabrication typically takes 5–7 business days after templating for most quartz and granite projects. Here's what happens during that time: your digital laser template is converted into a CNC cutting program, the slab is loaded onto our bridge saw and cut to exact dimensions, edge profiles are shaped and polished on the CNC machine (multiple passes for complex profiles like ogee or dupont), cutouts for sinks, cooktops, and faucets are precision-cut, seams are dry-fitted and color-matched, and the finished pieces undergo a quality inspection for chips, polish consistency, and dimensional accuracy. Complex edges, waterfall details requiring vein-matching, or mitered edges add 2–3 days because they require additional machining passes and careful alignment. Large commercial jobs with 20+ pieces may take 2–3 weeks depending on scope. Rush scheduling (3–4 business days) is sometimes available depending on current shop capacity — ask at templating if timeline is critical. We confirm your specific completion and install date at template and contact you immediately if anything changes.

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