02/03/2026
What Affects the Cost of Stone Projects?
When pricing natural stone, many people look for a simple square-metre rate. In reality, stone projects are influenced by far more than the slab itself, such as:
1. Material Selection
Different stones carry different price points based on availability, origin, and demand.
* Marble Type - Often at the premium end of the scale.
* Quartzite - Expensive due to its hardness and fabrication intensity.
* Granite - Typically cheap but varies widely.
*Limestone - Generally competitive.
Freight, exchange rates, and supply chains also play a role.
2. Slab Size, Thickness & Yield
Large islands, full-height cladding, and minimal seams may require additional slabs to achieve vein continuity. Thicker material increases both material cost and handling requirements. Early slab optimisation can significantly affect overall budget.
Optimising layouts to get set size stones rather than having to produce bespoke cuts for every area can drive efficiency in both the factory, installation and program duration once on site.
3. Fabrication Complexity
Detail drives cost. Waterfall ends, curves, intricate edge profiles, integrated sinks, bookmatching, and negative detailing all increase labour, machining time, and risk.
4. Engineering & Installation
Structural support, reinforcement, mechanical fixing systems, and substrate preparation add to cost - particularly in commercial or vertical applications.
Site access, lifting requirements, sequencing, and programme constraints can also substantially influence pricing.
5. Onsite Costs
Installation labour, grout, adhesive, fixings - all the hidden costs which must be factored in when preparing a budget for a marble or stone package.
The Bottom Line
Stone projects are not simply a “£/m²” calculation. They are a coordination exercise between design intent, fabrication capability, engineering, and site logistics.
Understanding these factors early leads to better specification decisions and more predictable project outcomes.