Natural stone · Timeless, luxurious veining

Marble Countertops

The original luxury stone — soft, natural veining and a rich depth of color that engineered quartz spends millions trying to replicate. Marble is a statement piece for kitchens, islands, bathrooms, and fireplace surrounds where beauty matters as much as durability.

$48–$150+ per sq ft, installed

What Marble Countertops Cost

This price includes the slab material, templating & fabrication (cutting, edging, sink and cooktop cutouts), and professional installation — everything, start to finish, from one in-house crew. A classic Carrara-style white typically starts around $48/sqft; genuine Calacatta, the real stone most Calacatta-look quartz is designed to mimic, can run $100 to $150/sqft or more.

Material + fabrication + install, always included
Pricing by tier

Marble Price Tiers

Exact pricing depends on the slab you choose, edge profile, and layout — but here's a general guide based on the pattern tier.

Level 1 ~$48/sqft

Classic Carrara-style whites with soft, subtle grey veining.

Level 2 $65–$85/sqft

Richer movement and unique character.

Level 3+ $100–$150+/sqft

Genuine Calacatta and dramatic exotic slabs — the real stone, not the printed imitation.

Popular colors in our shop

Popular Marble Colors

A sample of the marble slabs we regularly stock and install across Metro Atlanta & North Georgia. As a natural stone, each slab has one-of-a-kind veining and movement.

Matarazzo marble slab close-up, white stone with bold grey veining

Matarazzo

River Blue marble slab close-up, grey and blue speckled stone

River Blue

Shadow Storm marble slab close-up, white stone with soft grey veining

Shadow Storm

Calacatta marble slab close-up, white stone with dramatic grey veining

Calacatta

Black Marquina marble slab close-up, black stone with bold white veining

Black Marquina

Cintilante marble slab close-up, white stone with cloudy grey veining

Cintilante

Calacatta Belgia marble slab close-up, white stone with dense grey veining

Calacatta Belgia

Calacatta marble slab detail
Natural Stone

Why Homeowners Choose Marble

Marble is the original luxury stone — soft, natural veining and a depth of color no engineered material fully replicates. It's more porous and softer than granite or quartzite, so it will etch from acids and scratch more easily over time, but many homeowners see that developing patina as part of marble's charm. With annual sealing and reasonable care, it's a stunning choice for islands, bathrooms, and fireplace surrounds.

Unmatched Natural Beauty

Soft, dramatic veining that engineered stone can't fully replicate.

Genuine, Not Printed

The real stone that Calacatta-style quartz was designed to imitate.

Ideal for Low-Traffic Areas

Stunning in bathrooms, islands, and fireplace surrounds.

The Ultimate Luxury Upgrade

Instantly recognized as the premium natural stone choice.

Marble countertops FAQ

Common Questions About Marble

How much do marble countertops cost installed?

Marble countertops typically run $48 to $150+ per square foot fully installed, which includes the slab material, fabrication (cutting, edging, sink cutouts), and professional installation. A classic Carrara-style white starts around $48/sqft, while genuine Calacatta — the stone most Calacatta-look quartz is designed to mimic — can run $100 to $150+/sqft.

Does the marble price include installation and fabrication?

Yes. Every price we quote is an all-in installed price covering the slab material, templating, fabrication (cutting, polishing, edge profile, sink and cooktop cutouts), and professional installation — not just the raw material cost some competitors advertise.

What marble colors and patterns do you carry?

We regularly stock and source popular patterns including Matarazzo, River Blue, Shadow Storm, Calacatta, Black Marquina, Cintilante, and Calacatta Belgia, plus dozens of other marble options available at our partner slab yards.

Is marble a good choice for kitchen countertops?

Marble offers a soft, luxurious look that no engineered stone fully replicates, and it's a classic choice for bathrooms, fireplace surrounds, and lower-traffic kitchen areas like islands. It is porous and can etch from acidic foods or scratch more easily than granite or quartzite, so we recommend it for homeowners willing to reseal periodically and embrace some natural patina over time.

Ready to see slabs in person?

Get a Free Marble Quote

Tell us your kitchen or bath dimensions and the colors you like — we'll follow up with pricing within 24 hours.