In the US (2026): marble countertops install at $50–$300+ per square foot depending on tier, with most residential kitchens landing in the $70–$120 per square foot range. A typical 45-square-foot kitchen costs $2,250–$3,375 in Tier 1 marble (commercial-grade Carrara, Vermont Danby), $3,600–$5,400 in Tier 2 (Calacatta, Statuary, Georgia White, premium Carrara), and $6,075–$13,500+ in Tier 3 (Calacatta Gold, Borghini, bookmatched and exotic slabs). Marble is Mohs hardness 3–4 per the standard mineral hardness scale, softer than granite (6–7) and harder than soapstone (1–2.5), with working lifetimes of 50+ years and a finish that softens to patina over time. The biggest cost swings are tier (slab rarity drives most of the spread), edge profile, slab size, and whether the fabricator hand-selects and bookmatches slabs for your specific job.
What you actually pay for
A marble countertop bill breaks into four parts:
- Slab material — $25–$200+/sq ft retail in 2026. Tier 1 Carrara from a stocking fabricator runs $25–$45/sq ft for the slab; Tier 3 Calacatta Gold or rare bookmatched material reaches $150–$200+/sq ft.
- Fabrication labor — cutting to template, profiling edges, cutting sink and cooktop holes, polishing finished edges. $20–$50/sq ft. Marble fabrication runs higher than granite because the material chips more easily under stress; an experienced shop is the only sensible choice.
- Installation — templating, transport, lifting, seam fitting, plumbing reconnect. $5–$15/sq ft. Marble seams require pigmented epoxy color-matched to the veining; not every install crew does this well.
- Add-ons — demolition ($3–$8/sq ft), backsplash ($30–$60/lf), mitered waterfall ends ($75–$200/lf), bookmatched seams ($150–$400 per seam), integrated drainboards ($300–$800), undermount sink cutout ($150–$400 flat).
The headline per-square-foot quote usually bundles the first three. Add-ons are where unclear quotes inflate.
The three marble tiers
Tier reflects slab rarity, pattern quality, and import volume — not durability. All three tiers are the same metamorphic rock geologically.
| Tier | Examples | Material $/sq ft | Installed $/sq ft |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tier 1 — commercial grade | Carrara (standard), Vermont Danby, Bianco Carrara | $25–$45 | $50–$75 |
| Tier 2 — premium | Calacatta, Statuary, Georgia White, premium Carrara, Bianco Venatino | $50–$90 | $80–$120 |
| Tier 3 — exotic & bookmatched | Calacatta Gold, Calacatta Borghini, Calacatta Vagli, Statuario Extra, exotic Brazilian marble | $100–$200+ | $135–$300+ |
Tier 1 is what most US kitchens with “marble countertops” actually install. Carrara is the default; Vermont Danby and Georgia White are the US-quarried alternatives at equivalent pricing. Tier 2 trades up to whiter background with more dramatic veining, and Calacatta is the most common Tier 2 ask in 2026. Tier 3 is for bookmatched applications, large-format islands where pattern continuity matters, and slabs chosen for specific veining (gold, grey-green, deep grey).
Regional pricing — marble countertops across the US
Installed pricing for standard Carrara, 3 cm slab, eased edge, standard sink and cooktop cutouts, residential install. Premium marbles add the Tier 2/3 spread.
| Region | Installed $/sq ft (Tier 1) | 45 sq ft kitchen (Tier 1) |
|---|---|---|
| Northeast (NY, NJ, PA, CT, MA) | $55–$80 | $2,475–$3,600 |
| Mid-Atlantic (MD, VA, DC) | $55–$75 | $2,475–$3,375 |
| Southeast (NC, SC, GA, FL, TN) | $50–$70 | $2,250–$3,150 |
| Midwest (OH, IN, IL, MI, WI) | $50–$70 | $2,250–$3,150 |
| Texas & Oklahoma | $48–$68 | $2,160–$3,060 |
| Mountain West (CO, UT, NM, AZ) | $55–$80 | $2,475–$3,600 |
| West Coast (CA, OR, WA) | $65–$95 | $2,925–$4,275 |
The cheapest US markets for marble are Texas and the Southeast, both with large fabrication clusters competing on volume. West Coast pricing reflects port-of-entry costs (LA and Oakland handle most imported marble) plus higher labor rates. Vermont Danby and Georgia White are sold at the same Tier 1 band nationally; the freight differential against Italian Carrara is small once a slab is in the US distribution network.
Edge profiles — what each one costs
Edge profile is one of the largest cost line items most homeowners overlook. Profiles are priced per linear foot of finished edge.
- Eased / straight (square) — included in standard quote, no upcharge. The default for most US marble installs.
- Bullnose — $5–$10/lf. A soft rounded edge, classic, less sharp at corners.
- Beveled — $5–$12/lf. A 45-degree chamfer on the top edge.
- Ogee — $15–$30/lf. An S-curve decorative profile; reads traditional or formal.
- Mitered waterfall — $75–$200/lf. Vertical drop on island ends with the veining mitered to continue around the corner. Tier 1 cost but premium aesthetic.
- Bookmatched seams — $150–$400 per seam. The slab pattern is mirrored at the joint, so the veining flows continuously. Only meaningful with dramatic veined slabs.
The default eased edge is the right answer for most kitchens. Mitered waterfall and bookmatched seams are where Tier 2 and Tier 3 marble actually justifies the price premium. Without those, you are paying Tier 2 for material and using it like Tier 1.
Sealing and maintenance
All marble needs sealing. Most US fabricators apply a penetrating sealer at install (included in the quote). Re-seal every 6–18 months in a working kitchen — sooner for light-colored marble (Carrara, Statuary) than darker (Nero Marquina, dark Calacatta).
Test for seal integrity by dripping water on the surface. If it beads up after 10 minutes, the seal is fine. If the stone darkens, re-seal — a $25–$45 bottle of penetrating sealer (Akemi, Miracle 511, Stone Tech) covers a typical kitchen. DIY is straightforward: clean, apply, wipe excess after 5 minutes, repeat once.
Etching is acid damage to the polished surface and is not preventable by sealing. The two practical responses are: live with the patina (most marble-kitchen owners do), or have a fabricator hone or re-polish the affected area ($300–$800 service call). Lemon juice, wine, vinegar, and tomato are the most common etchants — coasters and trivets are worth more than a $40 bottle of polish.
Vermont, Georgia, and the case for native US marble
Most US marble countertops are imported Italian Carrara. Two domestic alternatives sit at equivalent Tier 1 pricing:
Vermont marble (Danby Imperial, Mountain White, Olympian White) is quarried in the Taconic range and is the densest marble produced in the US, slightly harder than Carrara and with cleaner white-on-white veining. Used in the Lincoln Memorial, the US Supreme Court Building, and the Jefferson Memorial. For US-provenance buyers who want the classic white-marble look without the Italian freight footprint, Vermont Danby is the best dollar-per-result choice. See the Vermont Marble stone-library entry for full geological and historical context.
Georgia marble (Cherokee, Pearl Grey, Etowah Pink) is quarried in Pickens County and is the largest marble deposit in the US. Used in the Lincoln Memorial sculpture, the US Capitol Senate Chamber, and the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Less common as residential countertops than Vermont marble but available across the Southeast at competitive pricing. The Etowah Pink is a distinctive color rarely found in imported marble. See the Georgia Marble stone-library entry for the full profile.
The case for native US marble is not cost (Carrara is cheaper at port) but provenance, geological story, and supply-chain transparency. For most kitchen projects, a slab visit at the fabricator’s yard will tell you whether US or Italian marble fits the space better than any spec sheet.
How to choose a fabricator
Three questions to ask before signing:
- Can I visit the yard and tag the actual slab? A serious fabricator stocks slabs you can walk through and chalk-mark for selection. Pre-templated bin selection from photos is fine for Tier 1 Carrara. For Tier 2 marble and above, a yard visit is mandatory; if a fabricator refuses or only offers photo selection, get another quote.
- Do you bookmatch or pattern-match across seams? For any kitchen with more than one seam in dramatic-veined marble, this matters. Some fabricators charge for it; some include it; some don’t do it at all. “We do our best to match” is not a yes. Confirm in writing before signing.
- Are you Natural Stone Institute accredited? Not required for good work, but a strong external signal. NSI accreditation covers fabrication competency, business practices, and safety. See how verification works on found.rocks for the editorial policy.
Where to go next
For the granite alternative (same kitchen, harder stone, easier maintenance), see the granite countertop cost guide. For the full geology of US-quarried marble, the Vermont Marble and Georgia Marble stone-library entries cover applications, color grades, and historical landmark use.
For verified US fabricators and installers, see the Natural Stone Institute accredited company directory — the source found.rocks treats as the canonical verification body for US listings.