Quartz is the most popular countertop material in Maryland kitchens right now — and for good reason. Non-porous, zero maintenance, consistent pattern, and available in hundreds of colors. But the pricing is confusing because it spans a wide range and the advertised numbers almost never reflect what a real project costs.
This guide walks through what's included in a per-square-foot price, the four tiers within quartz, the brands we carry and where they sit in those tiers, why GreenGuard Gold certification matters, optional services that may be part of your project, and real cost examples for small, mid-sized, and large Maryland kitchens.
We've fabricated and installed quartz countertops across Maryland for 15+ years out of our facilities in Eldersburg and Columbia. The numbers below reflect real Maryland projects.
The "$39.99 per sq ft" advertised price is almost never the real price
You'll find Maryland fabricators advertising quartz "starting at $39.99 per square foot installed." That number is almost always the slab and basic install only. Sink cutouts, edge profiles, templating, and delivery are added back as line items. By the time the real quote arrives, the same project is usually $65–$80 per square foot.
Our prices below reflect what most homeowners actually walk out paying — slab, fabrication, standard edge, sink cutout, templating, delivery, and installation, all included. Optional services like countertop removal, plumbing, and tile work are scoped separately based on what your project actually needs.
The four quartz pricing tiers
Quartz spans four tiers. The slab and brand you choose — not just the material category — determines where your project lands.
Quartz Tier Pricing — Installed
These prices cover slab, fabrication, standard edge profile, sink cutout, templating, delivery, and installation. Optional services are scoped separately and covered below.
The quartz brands we carry
We carry quartz across all four tiers. Every brand we carry is GreenGuard Gold certified — more on why that matters below. Here's where each line generally sits and what distinguishes it:
Starting to Mid-Range
Q Quartz — Wide color range covering whites, veined looks, and concrete finishes. Reliable consistency and solid construction. A dependable choice for projects where value matters without sacrificing quality.
Vicostone — Striking veined and marble-inspired patterns at strong value pricing. Vicostone punches well above its tier visually — if you want dramatic movement without moving into premium pricing, this is the brand to see first at our showroom.
Dal-Tile — Practical color range, consistent quality. A solid choice for budget-conscious projects that still want engineered stone performance.
Polar Stone — Clean, consistent color palette with solid coverage of neutrals and whites. A reliable workhorse at an accessible price point.
Premium to Exotic
Caesarstone — One of the original quartz brands with a long track record in Maryland. Wide range of finishes including matte, concrete-look, and ultra-white. Strong in clean, modern kitchens and among the most consistent for color matching across multiple slabs.
Silestone — Made by Cosentino using HybriQ technology — a hybrid of quartz and recycled materials. Good range of neutrals and whites. Their upper lines produce some of the most realistic marble-look patterns in engineered stone.
Cambria — American-made with a lifetime warranty. Their Marble Collection produces some of the most realistic veined looks in quartz. Dense, highly stain-resistant, and the only major quartz brand manufactured entirely in the U.S.
The brand you choose affects per-square-foot price meaningfully. Not sure which tier is right for your kitchen? Come to either showroom — we'll walk you through slabs side by side without any pressure.
Why GreenGuard Gold certification matters
This is a detail most cost guides skip entirely. Every quartz brand we carry holds GreenGuard Gold certification — an independent third-party certification that the product has been tested for low chemical emissions and meets strict standards for indoor air quality.
- Quartz is engineered with resin binders. Lower-grade quartz can off-gas volatile organic compounds (VOCs) into your home for months after installation
- GreenGuard Gold is the strictest certification tier — used as the standard for schools, healthcare facilities, and LEED-certified buildings
- For households with kids, allergies, or anyone sensitive to indoor air quality, this is the difference between a countertop that's safe from day one and one that isn't
We don't carry uncertified quartz. The price difference at the slab level is small. The difference in what you're putting in your home is not. If you're comparing quotes, ask whether the quartz is GreenGuard Gold certified — if they don't know, that's an answer.
Ready for a real quote on your kitchen?
Free in-home estimate. All-in pricing scoped to your project. Most quotes back within 24 hours.
Additional services that may be part of your project
The per-square-foot price covers your countertops — fabrication, standard edge, sink cutout, templating, delivery, and installation. The following are optional line items scoped based on what your specific project requires. Most kitchen projects include at least some of these.
Countertop Removal & Disposal
Removing your existing countertops before the new quartz goes in. Laminate and Corian are straightforward. Existing stone takes more labor. Tile countertops are the most involved — typically set in mortar that has to come out cleanly without damaging the cabinet boxes below.
Plumbing Disconnect & Reconnect
Licensed plumbers handle sink and faucet disconnect before installation and full reconnect after. Required on virtually every kitchen project. Scheduled as part of your install day so your kitchen is fully operational when we leave.
Tile Backsplash Removal
If you have existing tile on the wall that needs to come out — whether to accommodate new countertop height, a new backsplash, or a full kitchen refresh — tile demo is a separate scope we offer. Labor intensity varies based on how the original tile was set.
Tile Backsplash Installation
A fresh tile backsplash alongside new quartz countertops is one of the most impactful kitchen upgrades you can make. We offer tile installation as an optional add-on to your countertop project — priced per project based on area and tile selection.
Edge Profile Upgrades
A standard eased edge is included. Beveled and ogee add a modest upcharge. Mitered or laminated edges — which double the visual thickness of the stone — are higher. Waterfall edges are the highest. In quartz, mitered edges require matched-grain cutting for the seam to disappear — ask to see examples at the showroom.
Specialty Cutouts & Overhangs
The standard sink cutout is included. Additional cutouts — cooktops, secondary sinks, farmhouse apron sinks — are priced per cutout. Island overhangs longer than 10–12 inches require support brackets. All scoped and itemized before fabrication begins.
Everything above is scoped and priced in writing before we cut a single piece of stone. You'll know exactly what your project includes — and what it costs — before any work begins.
What makes a good quartz install
Quartz quality isn't just about which brand you buy — it's about how the slab gets fabricated and installed. Three things separate a great quartz install from a mediocre one:
Seam quality
Most kitchens require at least one seam. A good fabricator hides seams almost invisibly by matching the veining pattern across the joint, using color-matched adhesive, and tightening with mechanical clamps before the adhesive cures. We use adhesive for all seams — never silicone, which is reserved for perimeter joints only. Many of our customers can't find the seam unless they're looking for it.
Edge finish
A polished quartz edge should feel like glass under your fingers. Lower-quality fabrication leaves micro-roughness or visible polishing marks, especially on mitered or laminated edges. CNC equipment and finishing technique matter here more than most homeowners realize.
Digital templating
A bad template means cabinets get scribed, walls get caulked to cover gaps, or a slab has to be recut. Digital laser templating eliminates measurement error before the slab is touched. We've used it for years — it's the reason our installs fit the first time, every time.
Is quartz right for you?
Quartz is the right call if
- You want true zero-maintenance — no sealing, ever
- You want a specific consistent look, especially marble-look without marble's fragility and maintenance
- You have kids and want maximum stain resistance and a low-VOC certified surface
- You're matching a specific design palette and need color predictability across multiple slabs
- You want a full-height slab backsplash — quartz creates a seamless, grout-free surface top to wall
Quartz may not be the best call if
- You're doing an outdoor kitchen — quartz is not UV-stable and will fade in direct sun
- You set hot pans directly on the counter constantly — quartz handles warm but sustained high heat can affect the resin
- You want genuine natural stone variation — that's granite or quartzite territory
Real cost examples for Maryland kitchens
Countertop costs only — slab, fabrication, standard edge, sink cutout, templating, delivery, and installation. Countertop removal, plumbing, tile work, and edge upgrades are not included in these figures and will add to your total depending on project scope.
Small kitchen — 30 to 44 sq ft
Galley, apartment-style, or compact layout with one sink. Calculated at 44 sq ft.
| Tier | Rate | Estimated Total |
|---|---|---|
| Starting | ~$60/sq ft | ~$2,640 |
| Mid-Range | ~$95/sq ft | ~$4,180 |
| Premium | ~$135/sq ft | ~$5,940 |
| Exotic | $175+/sq ft | $7,700 and up |
Mid-sized kitchen — 45 to 64 sq ft
The most common Maryland layout — L-shape with island, undermount sink, cooktop. Calculated at 64 sq ft.
| Tier | Rate | Estimated Total |
|---|---|---|
| Starting | ~$60/sq ft | ~$3,840 |
| Mid-Range | ~$95/sq ft | ~$6,080 |
| Premium | ~$135/sq ft | ~$8,640 |
| Exotic | $175+/sq ft | $11,200 and up |
Large kitchen — 65+ sq ft
Big island with overhang, multiple cutouts, larger layout. Calculated at 80 sq ft.
| Tier | Rate | Estimated Total |
|---|---|---|
| Starting | ~$60/sq ft | ~$4,800 |
| Mid-Range | ~$95/sq ft | ~$7,600 |
| Premium | ~$135/sq ft | ~$10,800 |
| Exotic | $175+/sq ft | $14,000 and up |
These are countertop-only estimates. Add countertop removal, plumbing, tile work, edge upgrades, and full-height backsplash to get a complete project total. We scope all of this in writing before any work begins.