Free Calculator
Stone Restoration Cost Calculator
See what it costs to bring your natural stone floors back to life — and how that compares to ripping them out and replacing them. Pick your stone, enter the square footage, and set the condition for an instant Las Vegas estimate.
Restore (recommended)
$2,400–$4,200
Deep clean, hone, polish & seal your existing marble — usually 1–2 days, no demolition.
Replace
$8,400–$13,500
Demolition, disposal, new material & installation — days to weeks of disruption.
You save by restoring
$4,200–$11,100 (~70% less)
Want the exact number for your floor?
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 projects and Night & Day's published rates; final pricing depends on stone hardness, damage, access, and finish. Restoration typically saves 50–85% versus replacement while keeping your original stone.
How stone restoration pricing works
Restoration cost is driven by three things: the stone, its size, and how much damage it has. Softer stones like marble and limestone need finer, slower diamond-grit progressions than granite. Bigger floors cost more in total but often less per square foot. And the deeper the scratches, etching, or lippage, the more passes it takes to grind flat and re-polish.
Replacement, by contrast, is a fixed hit no matter the condition — you pay to demolish the old floor, haul it away, buy new material, and install it, plus days or weeks of disruption. That's why restoration wins on cost for the vast majority of Las Vegas floors. For the full breakdown, see our restoration vs. replacement cost guide.
Frequently asked questions
How much does stone floor restoration cost in Las Vegas?
Professional stone floor restoration in Las Vegas typically runs $4–$18 per square foot depending on the stone (travertine and slate at the lower end, marble and terrazzo higher) and how much damage there is. A 300-square-foot marble floor in moderate condition usually lands around $2,400–$4,200. Replacement of the same floor would cost roughly $8,400–$13,500 once demolition, disposal, new material, and installation are included — so restoration commonly saves 50–85%.
Is it cheaper to restore or replace natural stone floors?
Restoration is almost always cheaper than replacement — usually 50–85% less — because it reuses your existing stone instead of paying to tear it out and buy and install new material. The exceptions are floors with widespread structural failure or missing tiles. For dull, etched, scratched, or stained stone, restoration delivers a like-new finish at a fraction of the cost.
What affects the price of stone restoration?
The main drivers are stone type (softer stones like marble and limestone need finer grit progressions), square footage, the severity of damage (light dulling vs. deep scratches and lippage), the finish you want (honed vs. high polish), and access (bathrooms and stairs are slower than open rooms). Las Vegas hard water and desert dust also accelerate wear, which can add cleaning and sealing time.