Material comparison
Quartz vs. Travertine Countertops
The short answer
Quartz wins this comparison for kitchen use, and it's not close. Quartz is non-porous, never etches from acids, needs no sealing, and is significantly harder than travertine. Travertine is limestone with characteristic voids, etches from lemon juice and vinegar, needs regular sealing, and is genuinely more at home on floors, backsplashes, and bathroom tile than on a kitchen countertop. If you love the warm earthy tone of travertine, that's a real aesthetic preference and it deserves respect, but almost any quartz slab in a warm cream or beige will give you a similar color story without the maintenance burden. For a working kitchen, the practical case for travertine as a countertop is very thin.
Quartz vs. Travertine: spec by spec
| Spec | Quartz | Travertine |
|---|---|---|
| Origin | Engineered | Natural |
| Hardness (Mohs) | 7 | 3–4 |
| Heat resistance | Low | Moderate |
| Stain resistance | Excellent | Low |
| Scratch resistance | High | Low |
| Etch resistance | Excellent | Low |
| Needs sealing | No | Yes |
| Relative cost | $$ $$$ | $$ $$$ |
| Maintenance | Wipe and go. | Needs sealing to resist stains, and the filled holes require attention if they erode. |
Where Quartz and Travertine actually differ
Engineered Quartz
Engineered stone · Mohs 7
An engineered surface made from ground quartz bound with resin. The most stain-resistant and lowest-maintenance countertop option, with consistent color and pattern.
Best for:
- →Busy households with kids where spills happen
- →Rental properties or commercial kitchens needing consistent appearance
- →Buyers who want a specific color matched across multiple pieces
- →Anyone who wants stone-like beauty with almost no upkeep
Watch out for:
- !Resin does not like direct heat. Set a hot pan on quartz and you risk permanently scorching or discoloring the surface. Always use trivets.
- !Not for outdoor kitchens or areas with direct UV exposure. Sunlight degrades the resin and causes discoloration over time.
- !It's engineered, not stone. The look can be very convincing, but it's a manufactured product with manufacturing limitations.
Travertine
Natural stone · Mohs 3–4
A natural limestone with characteristic pitting and holes (usually filled at the fabricator). Soft, porous, and etches readily. A better fit for floors, backsplashes, bathrooms, and accent surfaces than a primary kitchen prep counter.
Best for:
- →Floor tile and large-format floor installations
- →Backsplashes and accent walls
- →Bathroom surfaces where cooking acids are not present
- →Outdoor pavers and Mediterranean or Tuscan-style spaces
Watch out for:
- !Not well-suited as a primary kitchen countertop. The combination of soft stone, acid etching, and porous surface means it will degrade faster than granite, quartzite, or even marble under real cooking conditions.
- !Etches from acids. It is limestone, so lemon juice, vinegar, and wine will dull the surface.
- !The holes need maintenance. Filled voids can erode over time, especially with heavy use, and require re-filling.
- !Needs sealing and is still stain-prone even when sealed.
Common questions: Quartz vs. Travertine
- Does travertine etch and does quartz?
- Travertine etches from kitchen acids because it's limestone (calcite-based). Quartz doesn't etch; its resin binder isn't reactive to acids. In a kitchen where lemon juice, vinegar, and wine are everyday, that difference is enormous.
- Does quartz need sealing? Does travertine?
- Quartz needs no sealing; it's non-porous by design. Travertine needs regular sealing and is still stain-prone even when properly sealed. For maintenance-minded homeowners, quartz is the obvious choice.
- What is travertine good for if not kitchen countertops?
- Floor tile is the best fit. Travertine has a long history as a flooring material and performs well underfoot. Outdoor pavers, bathroom surrounds, and backsplashes are also strong applications. The acid and maintenance issue mostly disappears when it's not your primary prep surface.
- Can quartz replicate the look of travertine?
- Reasonably well. Travertine's warm beige and tan tones are available in many quartz lines. The natural pitting and texture of travertine won't be replicated, but the color story is achievable. If you like earthy tones, there's almost certainly a quartz option that works.
More comparisons
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.