Quartz vs Granite Countertops Las Vegas: A Fabricator's Honest Comparison

Material Comparison · Las Vegas Fabricator

Quartz and granite countertop slabs displayed side by side at Signature Stone Las Vegas showroom
Quartz and granite slab options at Signature Stone — 5022 Bond St, Las Vegas, NV 89118. Both in stock for in-person comparison.

These are the two materials every Las Vegas homeowner compares before choosing countertops. Quartz holds 51% of the US countertop market in 2026. Granite has been the dominant natural stone for 30 years and remains among the most installed materials in the valley. The national conversation treats this as roughly a coin-flip decision based on personal preference. The Las Vegas version of this comparison has three specific factors that change the calculus significantly — and almost no buying guide addresses any of them.

This comparison is written by a fabricator who installs both materials every week. The goal is to tell you what actually matters for your specific Las Vegas project, not to give you a balanced answer that leaves you exactly where you started.

The Fast Answer: Which Is Right for You

Choose Quartz If

Zero maintenance is the priority

  • Indoor kitchen only — no outdoor component
  • You want consistent, predictable patterning across slabs
  • Hard water worries you and sealing feels like extra work
  • Contemporary design direction — clean marble looks, solids, concrete aesthetics
  • Household that avoids placing hot pots directly on surfaces
Choose Granite If

Natural stone character matters

  • Outdoor kitchen planned or existing — quartz cannot be used outdoors
  • You cook with high heat and set pots down directly
  • You want unique, one-of-a-kind slab variation
  • Budget is a real consideration — granite's mid-range undercuts quartz
  • Resale value in the traditional or luxury buyer segment

What Each Material Actually Is

The comparison starts here because the materials are more different than most buyers realize.

Engineered quartz is a manufactured product — approximately 90–93% ground natural quartz crystals mixed with polymer resins and pigments, pressed into slabs. The manufacturing process produces a surface that is completely non-porous, consistent in appearance, and predictable in performance. No two batches are identical in the way no two paint batches are quite identical, but the variation is minimal. Quartz never needs sealing because there are no pores for liquid to enter. The polymer resin content that makes it non-porous is also its limitation: resins can scorch from sustained direct heat, and they degrade under prolonged UV exposure — which is why quartz cannot be used in Las Vegas outdoor kitchens.

Granite is a natural igneous rock formed when molten magma cools slowly deep underground. The cooling process creates the crystalline, interlocking mineral structure visible in every slab. Each granite slab is geologically unique — no two are identical. Granite is porous, meaning it requires periodic sealing to prevent liquid infiltration. It contains no polymer resins, which means it handles heat and UV without damage — hot pots can go directly on granite, and granite performs well outdoors in Las Vegas conditions. Granite's limitation is the sealing requirement, which in Las Vegas's hard water conditions is a more significant consideration than in softer-water markets.

Head-to-Head: Eight Rounds

Round 1MaintenanceQuartz Wins
Quartz requires zero sealing — ever. No annual schedule, no water bead test, no resealing cost. Granite needs resealing every 1–3 years depending on the specific stone's porosity and usage. In Las Vegas's hard water conditions (278 ppm), unsealed or inadequately sealed granite is more vulnerable to mineral infiltration around sink areas than in softer-water markets. For homeowners who genuinely want to do nothing beyond wiping the surface, quartz is the lower-maintenance choice by a significant margin.
Round 2Heat ResistanceGranite Wins
Granite is formed at temperatures far beyond any kitchen can produce. Hot pans, cast iron directly from the oven, sustained heat from a warming tray — none of these damage granite. Quartz's polymer resin content begins to break down around 300–400°F with sustained direct contact. A hot pan on quartz can cause discoloration, surface scorching, or thermal cracking that voids warranty coverage. Quartz requires trivets. Granite does not. For households that cook actively and move pots from stove to counter, this is a real daily-life difference.
Round 3Hard Water ResistanceQuartz Wins
Las Vegas water tests at 278 parts per million — among the hardest in the country. On quartz, hard water deposits sit on the non-porous surface and wipe away. On unsealed granite, calcium and mineral deposits can penetrate the surface and create staining. On sealed granite, the protection is effective but the seal degrades over time and requires attention. Quartz is the easier material to maintain in high-mineral water conditions — a meaningful advantage in this specific market.
Round 4Outdoor UseGranite Wins
Quartz cannot be used outdoors in Las Vegas. The polymer resin content degrades under sustained UV, causing yellowing and discoloration within 18–36 months. All quartz warranties explicitly exclude outdoor applications. Granite handles UV, desert heat, and outdoor conditions well — it contains no resins that degrade. For Las Vegas homeowners planning an outdoor kitchen, covered patio bar, or pool-adjacent countertop, granite is the natural stone default. Annual sealing is required outdoors. Darker granite varieties are so naturally dense that some fabricators recommend sealing twice per year for outdoor installations.
Round 5Scratch ResistanceTie
Both materials resist scratches in normal kitchen use. Granite averages 6–6.5 on the Mohs hardness scale; quartz engineered surfaces effectively perform comparably for surface scratch resistance. Neither material will be scratched by standard kitchen knives, utensils, or abrasive cleaning. Both manufacturers advise against cutting directly on the surface — not because the countertop scratches easily, but because knives dull faster on hard stone. Scratch resistance is essentially equal and should not drive this decision.
Round 6Slab UniquenessGranite Wins
Every granite slab is geologically unique. The crystal structure, color distribution, veining, and movement vary between slabs even from the same quarry run. No factory can replicate the visual depth of natural granite crystal structure. Quartz is engineered — patterns are consistent by design. Premium quartz brands produce convincing marble and stone-look reproductions, but the surface has a different character than natural stone. For homeowners who value authenticity and uniqueness, granite wins clearly. For those who prefer predictable consistency across a large kitchen, quartz is the advantage.
Round 7Stain ResistanceTie (With Conditions)
Sealed granite resists staining effectively in normal kitchen use. Unsealed or poorly sealed granite stains readily from cooking oil, wine, and coffee. Quartz resists staining without any sealing requirement. The tie reflects the real-world performance of properly maintained granite versus quartz — both perform well. The advantage shifts to quartz for households that are unlikely to maintain a sealing schedule, and to granite when properly sealed and cared for. What both resist equally: citrus acids. Neither material etches from household acids the way marble does.
Round 8Mid-Range ValueGranite Wins
At the mid-range price point in Las Vegas — the most competitive segment — granite frequently delivers more visual drama and slab surface area per dollar than quartz at the same price level. The Las Vegas market has strong local granite inventory with competitive fabricator pricing. Entry-level quartz and entry-level granite are comparably priced, but the mid-range inversion is real: a visually striking Level 2 or Level 3 granite often costs less than a similarly premium-looking mid-grade quartz from a branded manufacturer. Budget-conscious buyers who want natural stone character get more per dollar from granite at this price level.

The Master Comparison Table

Factor Quartz Granite
Material type Engineered — manufactured slabs Natural igneous rock — quarried
Porosity Non-porous — zero sealing needed Porous — sealing required annually
Heat tolerance Use trivets — resins scorch at 300–400°F Hot pots OK — no resin content
UV / outdoor Las Vegas Not suitable — resins degrade Suitable — UV-stable natural stone
Scratch resistance Excellent (Mohs 7 surface) Excellent (Mohs 6–6.5)
Stain resistance (sealed) Non-porous — inherently stain-resistant Good — when properly sealed
Hard water (LV 278 ppm) Deposits wipe away — non-porous Fine when sealed — more vigilance required
Design variety 200+ consistent patterns per brand Hundreds of varieties — each slab unique
Slab uniqueness Engineered pattern consistency Each slab is geologically unique
Entry installed (LV) $55–$75/sq ft $45–$65/sq ft
Mid-range installed (LV) $75–$110/sq ft $65–$90/sq ft
Premium installed (LV) $110–$150/sq ft $90–$150/sq ft
Warranty 15–25 years (brand dependent) Fabricator warranty — material lifetime
Resale perception Strong — modern buyer preference 2026 Strong — especially luxury / traditional

The Las Vegas Factors That Change This Decision

Every national buying guide treats this as a universally applicable comparison. It is not. Las Vegas has three specific market conditions that shift this decision significantly from the generic national answer.

1. Hard Water at 278 PPM

Las Vegas Valley Water District reports source water at approximately 278 parts per million — well above the 180 ppm threshold for "very hard" classification. This is consistently among the hardest municipal water supplies in the United States, sourced from the Colorado River with high calcium and magnesium content.

On quartz: hard water deposits calcium carbonate on the surface, particularly around sink areas. Because quartz is non-porous, these deposits never penetrate the material — they sit on the surface and are removed with regular cleaning or diluted isopropyl alcohol. Hard water is a cleaning nuisance on quartz, not a material threat.

On granite: the same mineral deposits interact with the stone's porosity. Well-sealed granite performs fine — the sealant creates a barrier that keeps minerals at the surface. But sealant degrades over time, and in hard water conditions, the mineral load on the seal is higher than in soft-water markets. Granite owners in Las Vegas should seal on the more aggressive end of the 1–2 year range and should watch particularly carefully around the sink, where hard water exposure is highest and concentrated.

The water bead test for Las Vegas granite owners: Place a few tablespoons of water on your granite near the sink. If it beads immediately, the seal is active. If it darkens the stone or absorbs within 5 minutes, reseal now — do not wait. In Las Vegas, this test should be run every 6–12 months for sink-adjacent granite, not the generic annual schedule recommended by national guides written for softer-water markets.

2. Outdoor Kitchens: The Decision That Eliminates Quartz

Las Vegas Outdoor Kitchen Rule: Quartz Is Not an Option

Las Vegas has one of the highest outdoor kitchen installation rates in the country. Covered patios, built-in grills, pool bars, and outdoor entertainment spaces are standard in new construction throughout Summerlin, Henderson, and the Northwest valley. For any outdoor countertop application, engineered quartz is eliminated by material physics: the polymer resin content degrades under sustained UV exposure, causing yellowing and surface discoloration within 18–36 months. Every major quartz manufacturer excludes outdoor applications from warranty coverage. No Las Vegas outdoor kitchen project should use engineered quartz regardless of brand or price tier. The outdoor kitchen options are granite, quartzite, Dekton, and porcelain slab. Granite is the most common and most cost-effective outdoor kitchen material in the Las Vegas valley.

The outdoor kitchen implication also affects the indoor-outdoor continuity question. Many Las Vegas homeowners prefer to run the same countertop material from their indoor kitchen through to their outdoor kitchen — a design choice that reads as intentional and cohesive rather than two separate material decisions. This continuity is only possible with a material that works in both environments. Granite makes this possible; quartz does not.

3. The Pricing Inversion at Mid-Range

The national conventional wisdom — "quartz and granite cost roughly the same" — is approximately true at the entry level. At the mid-range in Las Vegas, the comparison changes.

Las Vegas is a major distribution hub for natural stone with good regional access to domestic and imported granite. Local fabricators maintain strong inventory relationships and competitive pricing on mid-grade granite. The result: a Level 2 or Level 3 granite slab with dramatic visual character — bold movement, interesting crystalline pattern, distinctive coloring — often costs $65–$90 per square foot installed in Las Vegas, while a visually comparable mid-grade quartz from a branded manufacturer (Silestone, Caesarstone, Cambria) runs $85–$110 per square foot installed for equivalent quality and visual presence.

The entry-level tiers are close. The premium tiers overlap significantly. The mid-range is where granite delivers the most value advantage for buyers who want visual interest but are watching the budget.

Mid-range granite countertop with bold crystalline pattern in Las Vegas kitchen versus consistent quartz surface
Mid-range granite can deliver striking natural character at a price point where branded quartz often costs more for comparable visual presence — a consistent pattern in the Las Vegas market.

Is Granite Outdated? The Honest Answer

This is the question Las Vegas showroom staff hear constantly, and it deserves a direct answer: No. Granite is not outdated.

The "granite is dated" narrative emerged from the mid-2000s through mid-2010s, when the same four or five granite varieties — Venetian Gold, Santa Cecilia, Uba Tuba, Black Galaxy — appeared in virtually every new construction and remodel in the country. Those specific, overused varieties look dated because they are associated with a specific era. The material itself is not.

Modern granite specifications look nothing like 2008 granite. White Ice granite. Black Cosmic granite. Bianco Antico. Titanium granite. Blue Bahia. The current Las Vegas granite market includes varieties that read as thoroughly contemporary — slabs that designers specify for premium new construction without any concern about appearing dated. The conflatation of "specific 2005 varieties" with "granite as a category" is the error that sustains this misconception.

In 2026, national market data shows quartz holds a 51% share of countertop installations versus granite at approximately 24%. Quartz's dominance reflects its maintenance advantages, not aesthetic superiority. In the Las Vegas luxury market — Summerlin guard-gated communities, Henderson estates, custom builds in Southern Highlands — natural stone including both granite and quartzite remains a premium specification that commands buyer attention and real estate value.

What the data shows: Both quartz and granite consistently rank as the top countertop upgrades for home resale value according to real estate professionals. In 2026, quartz has a slight edge in mainstream buyer preference due to its low-maintenance reputation. Granite holds equivalent or stronger appeal in the luxury segment and among buyers who specifically value natural stone. Neither material is "outdated" — the specific 2005 varieties that saturated the market look dated; the material category does not.

Pricing Breakdown: Las Vegas 2026

Scenario Quartz (Installed) Granite (Installed) Notes
Entry level $55–$75/sq ft $45–$65/sq ft Granite has a slight edge at entry; quartz consistency preferred by some
Mid-range (most popular) $75–$110/sq ft $65–$90/sq ft Granite delivers more visual character per dollar at this tier
Premium / exotic $110–$150/sq ft $90–$150/sq ft Tiers converge; exotic granite and branded quartz overlap
Standard 40 sq ft kitchen $3,200–$4,800 $2,600–$4,000 Typical full-kitchen range including sink cutout and standard edge
Outdoor kitchen (20 sq ft) Not available $1,000–$1,800 Quartz not suitable for Las Vegas outdoor applications
Additional: sink cutout $150–$300 $150–$300 Comparable fabrication cost either material
Additional: edge upgrade $10–$30/ln ft $10–$30/ln ft Comparable for most profiles; granite handles complex edges well
Sealing (granite, annual) $0 $75–$150/yr professional DIY sealing $20–$40/yr; professional sealing recommended in LV hard water

The Decision Framework: Five Questions

After fabricating and installing both materials across thousands of Las Vegas projects, these are the five questions that actually resolve the choice.

Do you have or plan an outdoor kitchen? If yes, granite is the answer for your outdoor surfaces. If you also want indoor-outdoor continuity, granite across the full project. If the kitchen is fully indoor only, this factor doesn't apply.

How actively do you cook, and do you set pots down directly? Active cooks who frequently move hot pans from stove to counter without trivets will wear quartz down over time or risk discoloration. Granite handles this without restriction. If you always use trivets regardless, this factor doesn't apply.

Do you genuinely want natural variation, or do you prefer predictability? Quartz gives you the same consistent look across your entire kitchen. Granite slabs vary — the island and the perimeter countertops will look related but not identical. Neither is superior; they reflect different preferences. If you care about exactly how each section will look and want control, quartz. If you appreciate natural variation as part of the appeal, granite.

Are you confident you will maintain a sealing schedule? Granite requires resealing every 12–24 months in Las Vegas conditions. This takes 30–45 minutes and costs $20–$40 for a DIY product, or $75–$150 for professional sealing. If this feels like more effort than you will realistically do, quartz eliminates that requirement entirely. If it's not a concern, it shouldn't drive the decision.

Is mid-range budget a real consideration? If you're deciding between comparable levels of visual interest and mid-range pricing is a real constraint, granite delivers more character per dollar in the Las Vegas market. If budget is flexible and brand recognition matters (Cambria, Silestone), quartz at the branded premium tier is worth it for the zero-maintenance value.

Compare Quartz and Granite Slabs In Person

Visit Signature Stone at 5022 Bond St, Las Vegas to see quartz and granite samples side by side. We'll walk through the specific differences for your project — indoor, outdoor, or both — and give you a line-item estimate for comparison.

5022 Bond St, Las Vegas, NV 89118 · Licensed & Insured · Quartz · Granite · Quartzite · Dekton · Digital Templating

Frequently Asked Questions

It depends on your specific priorities. Quartz is better for indoor kitchens where zero maintenance is the priority — it handles Las Vegas hard water without sealing, never needs treatment, and is completely non-porous. Granite is better when: an outdoor kitchen is involved (quartz cannot be used outdoors in Las Vegas), you cook with high heat and set pots directly on the surface, or you prefer natural stone character and uniqueness at a mid-range price point. For most purely indoor Las Vegas kitchens, both perform well — the decision comes down to maintenance tolerance and aesthetic preference.

Entry-level quartz and granite are closely priced in Las Vegas — both start around $45–$75 per square foot installed. At the mid-range tier, granite consistently delivers more visual character per dollar than comparable branded quartz: Level 2–3 granite with strong visual interest runs $65–$90/sq ft installed, while mid-grade branded quartz (Silestone, Caesarstone) runs $85–$110/sq ft for equivalent visual presence. At the premium tier, both materials converge. For budget-conscious buyers who want visual impact, mid-range granite is typically the better value in this specific market.

Yes — Las Vegas water at 278 ppm is among the hardest in the country. Hard water deposits calcium and minerals more aggressively on stone surfaces than softer-water markets. National "seal every 2–3 years" advice underestimates Las Vegas conditions for most granite varieties. The practical recommendation: seal every 12–18 months, and use the water bead test near the sink every 6 months. If water darkens the stone rather than beading, reseal immediately. Sink-adjacent granite is most vulnerable to hard water mineral infiltration as seals age.

No. Engineered quartz cannot be used for outdoor kitchens in Las Vegas. The polymer resin content (7–10% of quartz composition) degrades under sustained UV exposure, causing yellowing and surface discoloration within 18–36 months. Every major quartz manufacturer explicitly excludes outdoor applications from warranty coverage. For Las Vegas outdoor kitchens, the appropriate materials are granite (most common and cost-effective), quartzite (premium natural stone, UV-stable), Dekton (ultra-compact, UV-rated, zero maintenance), or porcelain slab (UV-proof, fully non-porous). Signature Stone fabricates and installs all four for outdoor applications.

No. The "granite is dated" perception comes from the overuse of specific 2000s-era varieties (Venetian Gold, Santa Cecilia, Uba Tuba) in that era's new construction. Those specific slabs look dated because they are associated with that period. The material category is not dated — modern granite varieties including White Ice, Black Cosmic, Bianco Antico, Titanium, and Blue Bahia are specified in Las Vegas luxury new construction without any concern about appearing dated. Both quartz and granite rank among the top countertop upgrades for home resale value in 2026. Quartz holds a slight mainstream preference edge; granite remains the premium specification in the luxury natural stone segment.

Yes — mixing materials intentionally is a common Las Vegas specification for homeowners with both indoor and outdoor kitchen components. A typical example: quartz on indoor perimeter countertops (zero maintenance, consistent color), granite on the indoor island (natural uniqueness as the focal point), and granite continuing to the outdoor kitchen (UV-stable, matching the indoor island material). This approach gives you the maintenance advantages of quartz where they matter most while using granite's natural character and outdoor capability where those properties are needed. Signature Stone regularly helps homeowners plan multi-material projects across indoor and outdoor kitchen spaces.