Free Calculator
Countertop Repair Cost Calculator
Chipped edge, hairline crack, a seam that's pulling apart, or a surface that's gone dull? Pick your material and the type of damage for an instant Las Vegas estimate — and see how much repairing beats replacing the whole countertop.
Repair (recommended)
$150–$300
Color-matched epoxy fill, cure, then grind and polish the chip flush — usually one visit, no demolition.
Replace
$2,200–$3,600
New slab, fabrication, cutouts & installation — plus tearing out the old top.
You save by repairing
$1,900–$3,450 (~92% less)
Want the exact number for your countertop?
Send this estimate to our team and we'll confirm it with a free in-home assessment.
Estimates are planning ranges based on typical Las Vegas countertop projects; final pricing depends on the material, the size and depth of the damage, color matching, and access. Your in-home assessment is exact and free.
How countertop repair pricing works
Point damage — a chip, crack, or separated seam — is priced as a flat repair, not by the square foot, because the work is concentrated in one spot: fill and color-match the damage with epoxy or resin, cure it, then grind and polish it flush so the fix disappears. A dull or etched natural-stone surface is different; it's refinished across the whole top and priced per square foot. Quartz is an engineered material and can't be re-polished like marble or granite, so etched quartz usually calls for a color-matched filler or a section swap. See our granite crack repair guide for how deep cracks are stabilized.
Replacement, by contrast, is a fixed hit no matter how small the damage — you pay for a new slab, fabrication, cutouts, and installation, plus the disruption of tearing out the old top. That's why a single repair almost always wins on cost. When you're ready for the exact number, our Las Vegas countertop repair team can confirm it in a free in-home assessment.
Frequently asked questions
How much does it cost to repair a countertop in Las Vegas?
Most point-damage countertop repairs in Las Vegas run $150–$450. A small chip is typically $150–$300, a crack repair with color-matched epoxy runs $200–$450, and re-bonding a separated seam is about $200–$400. Restoring a dull or etched natural-stone surface is priced by the square foot — roughly $3–$8 — so a standard 40-square-foot kitchen lands around $120–$320. Replacing the same countertop would cost thousands once you factor in new slab material, fabrication, and installation.
Can a cracked or chipped countertop be repaired instead of replaced?
Yes. The large majority of chips, cracks, and separated seams in granite, marble, quartz, and quartzite are repairable with color-matched epoxy or resin and professional refinishing — you almost never need a new slab. Replacement only makes sense when the stone is broken clear through in multiple places or you are remodeling anyway. For a single crack or chip, repair costs a fraction of replacement and is usually done in one visit.
Can a quartz countertop be polished or repaired like natural stone?
Not the same way. Quartz is an engineered resin-and-stone composite, so a dull or etched quartz surface cannot be re-honed and re-polished the way marble or granite can. Chips and cracks in quartz are repaired with a color-matched filler starting around $250, and heat or scorch marks may need a section replaced. We recommend a quick in-home assessment before committing so you know whether repair or replacement is the smarter call.