Rocky Tops Granite & Marble

Material comparison

Granite vs. Quartzite Countertops

The short answer

Both granite and quartzite are natural stone, and both need sealing, but that's roughly where the similarity ends. Quartzite is harder (7–8 Mohs vs. granite's 6–7), more scratch-resistant, and available in the white-veined marble-like aesthetics that granite mostly isn't. Granite tends to cost less and comes in a wider color variety, especially darker tones and complex speckled patterns. If you want the look of white marble with better durability, quartzite is the path. If you want a proven, heat-tolerant natural stone in a classic kitchen finish and you'd like to pay a bit less, granite is a strong choice.

Granite vs. Quartzite: spec by spec

Detailed comparison: Granite vs. Quartzite
SpecGraniteQuartzite
OriginNaturalNatural
Hardness (Mohs)6–77–8
Heat resistanceExcellentHigh
Stain resistanceHighLow
Scratch resistanceHighVery high
Etch resistanceExcellentHigh
Needs sealingYesYes
Relative cost$$ $$$$$$ $$$$
MaintenanceSeal once a year or when water stops beading.Sealing is not optional: quartzite is porous enough that unsealed surfaces will absorb oils and liquids.

Where Granite and Quartzite actually differ

Granite

Natural stone · Mohs 6–7

A natural igneous stone prized for heat resistance, unique variation, and decades of proven kitchen performance.

Best for:

  • High-traffic kitchen countertops
  • Cooking enthusiasts who use the range heavily
  • Buyers who want natural stone without marble's maintenance demands
  • Anyone who wants one-of-a-kind character in a durable package

Watch out for:

  • !Every slab is unique. What you see in a showroom sample may differ from your actual slab. Look at the full slab before you buy.
  • !Needs periodic sealing. Skip it and darker liquids (red wine, oil) can work into the pores over time.
  • !Some granites have natural fissures that are not defects. They're part of the stone.

Quartzite

Natural stone · Mohs 7–8

A natural metamorphic stone, harder than granite, with the elegant veining of marble but far better durability. Honest maintenance requirements.

Best for:

  • Buyers who want the marble look without acid-etching risk
  • Kitchen islands where pots land directly on the surface
  • Bathroom vanities where standing water is a risk
  • Long-term investment pieces: properly maintained quartzite lasts generations

Watch out for:

  • !Quartzite must be sealed. This is the one we repeat most often at the shop: unsealed quartzite will stain. The sealing itself is easy and inexpensive, but it cannot be skipped.
  • !The word "quartzite" is sometimes misused. Some sellers label softer stones as quartzite when they aren't. Ask for a scratch test if you're unsure.
  • !More expensive than granite and most quartz. The price is real; so is the durability.

Common questions: Granite vs. Quartzite

Is quartzite harder than granite?
Yes. Quartzite typically runs 7–8 on the Mohs hardness scale; granite is 6–7. Both are hard enough for kitchen use, but quartzite has a meaningful edge in scratch resistance.
Do both granite and quartzite need sealing?
Both do, yes. Neither is non-porous like engineered quartz. Quartzite is often more porous than granite, so the sealing on quartzite is arguably more important. An unsealed quartzite surface will absorb oils and stains faster than most granites will.
Why is quartzite more expensive than granite?
Supply and demand. The white-veined quartzites (Taj Mahal, Macaubas) are in high demand and come from a limited number of quarries. Granite is quarried worldwide in enormous variety, which keeps the price range broader and the bottom end lower.
Does quartzite look like marble?
Many quartzites do, especially the white and cream varieties with grey veining. Taj Mahal quartzite is the classic example. This is intentional: buyers who want the marble aesthetic but are concerned about marble's softness and etching tendency often land on quartzite as the durable alternative.

Rocky Tops Granite & Marble · Cayce, SC

Come see the real difference in person.

Photos and spec tables only go so far. At the showroom we can pull a slab of each material side by side, talk through how you actually cook, and give you a straight recommendation. No pressure, just a real conversation about stone.

2015 Charleston Hwy, Cayce, SC · Mon 9–4 · Tue–Fri 9–5 · Sat 10–2

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