Countertops

The 7 Best Quartz Countertop Brands in 2026 (Compared)

A side-by-side comparison of the top quartz brands: pricing, warranty, color selection, durability, and where to see them in Phoenix.

March 15, 2026 · 14 min read

Quartz countertops have dominated the kitchen and bathroom market for the past decade, and for good reason. They are durable, low-maintenance, and available in hundreds of colors and patterns. But not all quartz is created equal. The brand you choose affects the quality of the slab, the warranty coverage, the color options available, and the price you pay.

We have installed thousands of quartz countertops across the Phoenix metro area and worked with every major brand on this list. This guide reflects real-world experience, not marketing claims. We will cover what makes each brand unique, where they fall on the price spectrum, and which one is the best fit for different types of projects.

Why Quartz Countertops?

Before we compare brands, here is a quick primer on why quartz is the most popular countertop material in 2026:

The main limitation of quartz is heat sensitivity. Direct contact with hot pans can damage the resin binders, causing discoloration or thermal shock marks. Always use trivets. For outdoor kitchens, consider Dekton instead (covered below). Use our material comparison tool to see how quartz stacks up against granite, marble, and other surfaces.

Quick Comparison Table

Brand Price Range (installed/sq ft) Warranty Colors Made In
Cambria $75 - $120 Lifetime (transferable) 200+ USA (Minnesota)
Silestone $65 - $100 25 years 150+ Spain
Caesarstone $65 - $95 Lifetime (residential) 100+ Israel / USA
MSI Q Premium $55 - $80 Lifetime (limited) 180+ Various (India, China, Turkey)
Hanstone $60 - $85 15 years 80+ South Korea / USA
Dekton $75 - $130 25 years 100+ Spain
LG Viatera $55 - $80 15 years 70+ South Korea / USA
Note: Installed prices include fabrication, standard edging, cutouts, and installation. Specialty edges, extra cutouts, and complex layouts add to the base price. Prices reflect Phoenix metro area rates for 2026.

1. Cambria

The Premium American Choice

Cambria is the only quartz brand manufactured entirely in the United States, with production facilities in Le Sueur, Minnesota. The company is family-owned and has built a reputation for producing some of the most visually striking and highest-quality quartz on the market. Cambria's proprietary designs, particularly their marble-look collections like Brittanicca and Ella, have become industry benchmarks that other brands attempt to replicate.

What sets Cambria apart technically is their slab thickness (standard 3cm vs. the 2cm offered by some budget brands), their use of higher quartz content, and their proprietary manufacturing process that produces deeper, more natural-looking veining. The lifetime warranty is fully transferable, meaning it follows the countertop even if you sell your home.

Price range: $75-$120/sq ft installed. Entry-level solid colors start around $75, while premium veined designs like Brittanicca Warm or Skara Brae run $100-$120.

Pros

  • Made in the USA
  • Lifetime transferable warranty
  • Industry-leading designs
  • Consistent quality control
  • 3cm standard thickness

Cons

  • Highest price point
  • Limited dealer network
  • Some designs have long lead times

2. Silestone

The Global Leader with HybriQ+ Technology

Silestone, manufactured by Cosentino in Spain, is the world's most recognized quartz countertop brand. They pioneered the engineered quartz category and continue to innovate with their HybriQ+ technology, which uses recycled materials and a more sustainable manufacturing process. Silestone holds a unique position in the market because it offers built-in antimicrobial protection (Bacteriostatic technology) as a standard feature in all slabs.

The Silestone color library is extensive and ranges from solid neutrals to dramatic veined patterns. Their Eternal collection (marble looks) and Loft collection (industrial/concrete looks) are particularly popular in Phoenix kitchens. Silestone also offers the Suede and Volcano textured finishes in addition to standard polished, giving designers more options for custom looks.

Price range: $65-$100/sq ft installed. The Loft and Eternal collections are mid-to-upper range, while basic solids like White Storm start at the lower end.

Pros

  • Built-in antimicrobial protection
  • HybriQ+ sustainable manufacturing
  • Wide dealer and fabricator network
  • Multiple finish options
  • Strong 25-year warranty

Cons

  • Some colors are import-only (longer lead times)
  • Mid-to-high pricing
  • Warranty not transferable

3. Caesarstone

The Original Engineered Quartz Pioneer

Caesarstone, founded in Israel in 1987, was one of the first companies to commercially produce engineered quartz surfaces. They have manufacturing facilities in Israel, the United States, and Australia. Caesarstone is known for clean, sophisticated designs that tend toward minimalism. Their colors lean more contemporary than traditional, making them a popular choice for modern kitchens and bathrooms.

The brand's standout collections include the Metropolitan and Supernatural lines. Their Porcelain collection also offers ultra-thin formats for applications where weight is a concern. Caesarstone recently expanded their outdoor-rated surfaces, though Dekton still leads in that category.

Price range: $65-$95/sq ft installed. Caesarstone positions itself as a premium brand but tends to price slightly below Cambria, making it an attractive option for homeowners who want high quality without the absolute top-tier price.

Pros

  • Lifetime residential warranty
  • Clean, modern designs
  • US manufacturing for key products
  • Excellent consistency slab to slab
  • Good availability in Phoenix

Cons

  • Smaller color selection than competitors
  • Less dramatic veining options
  • Limited textured finishes

Compare Countertop Materials Side by Side

Use our free comparison tool to see how quartz stacks up against granite, marble, quartzite, and porcelain for your specific project.

Compare Materials

4. MSI Q Premium

Best Value for the Budget

MSI (M S International) is one of the largest natural stone and quartz distributors in North America. Their Q Premium Natural Quartz line sources slabs from manufacturers in India, China, Turkey, and other countries, which allows them to offer significantly lower pricing than brands that manufacture in the US or Europe. MSI has massive distribution infrastructure, meaning their products are readily available at major retailers and stone yards across Phoenix.

The Q Premium lineup has expanded dramatically in recent years, now offering 180+ colors including convincing marble-look, concrete-look, and solid options. While the quality is good for the price, experienced fabricators note that MSI slabs can show more variation between batches and occasionally have inconsistencies in resin distribution. For most kitchens, however, the quality is perfectly acceptable.

Price range: $55-$80/sq ft installed. This makes MSI the most affordable major quartz brand. Popular colors like Calacatta Laza and Carrara Mist offer a luxury look at a mid-range price.

Pros

  • Lowest price point of major brands
  • Huge color selection (180+)
  • Widely available in Phoenix
  • Lifetime limited warranty
  • Good for rental properties and flips

Cons

  • Quality can vary between batches
  • Not manufactured in-house
  • Warranty claims can be slower to process
  • Some colors only in 2cm thickness

5. Hanstone

The Underrated Mid-Range Option

Hanstone, manufactured by Hanwha Group (a South Korean conglomerate also known for solar panels and chemicals), produces quartz in both South Korea and London, Ohio. Hanstone occupies a middle ground between budget brands like MSI and premium brands like Cambria, offering solid quality and good designs at competitive pricing. The brand does not have the marketing presence of Cambria or Silestone, which keeps it under the radar for many consumers, but fabricators generally speak highly of the product.

Hanstone's standout feature is the consistency of their slabs. The manufacturing process is tightly controlled, and fabricators report fewer issues with soft spots, resin inconsistencies, or color variation than with some larger-volume brands. The color selection is smaller (80+ options) but curated, with a focus on versatile neutrals and marble-look patterns that work in most kitchen and bathroom designs.

Price range: $60-$85/sq ft installed. Hanstone's sweet spot is the $65-$75 range where you get quality comparable to Silestone or Caesarstone at a lower price.

Pros

  • Excellent consistency
  • Competitive mid-range pricing
  • US manufacturing (Ohio plant)
  • Fabricator-friendly material

Cons

  • Smaller color selection
  • Lower brand recognition
  • 15-year warranty (shorter than competitors)
  • Fewer Phoenix showroom displays

6. Dekton (Ultra-Compact Surface)

The Heat-Proof, UV-Stable Alternative

Dekton is technically not a quartz countertop. It is an ultra-compact sintered surface manufactured by Cosentino (the same company that makes Silestone) in Spain. We include it here because Dekton is increasingly being chosen instead of quartz for kitchen countertops, and it solves quartz's biggest weakness: heat sensitivity.

Dekton is made by compressing a blend of raw materials (glass, porcelain, quartz, and other minerals) under extreme pressure and heat (25,000 tons of force and temperatures exceeding 2,200 degrees F). The result is a surface that is virtually indestructible: it resists heat, UV light, scratches, and stains better than any quartz brand. Dekton can be used outdoors without fading, placed next to a cooktop without damage, and set with hot pans without trivets (though we still recommend them for safety).

Price range: $75-$130/sq ft installed. Dekton costs more than most quartz, but the performance advantages may justify the premium for serious home cooks and outdoor kitchen applications.

Pros

  • Heat-resistant (no trivet panic)
  • UV-stable (outdoor kitchens)
  • Extremely scratch-resistant
  • Large-format slabs (fewer seams)
  • Zero water absorption

Cons

  • Higher cost than quartz
  • Chips are harder to repair
  • Limited fabricators (specialized tooling)
  • Can crack if improperly supported

7. LG Viatera

Budget-Friendly with Solid Quality

LG Viatera is manufactured by LG Hausys (the building materials division of LG Corporation) in South Korea and their US facility. Like Hanstone, LG Viatera flies under the radar compared to the big-name brands, but it offers reliable quality at an attractive price point. The brand benefits from LG's massive manufacturing infrastructure and quality control systems.

LG Viatera's color palette focuses on practical, popular choices: whites, grays, creams, and marble-look patterns that work in the majority of kitchen designs. The selection is not as extensive as Cambria or MSI, but the colors they do offer are well-executed and consistent across slabs. The 15-year warranty is shorter than some competitors, but warranty claims are backed by LG's corporate infrastructure.

Price range: $55-$80/sq ft installed. LG Viatera and MSI Q Premium compete directly at the value end of the market. LG Viatera tends to have slightly better consistency, while MSI offers more color choices.

Pros

  • Affordable pricing
  • Backed by LG corporate
  • Good slab consistency
  • Readily available at major distributors

Cons

  • Smaller color selection (70+)
  • 15-year warranty
  • Lower brand recognition
  • Fewer design-forward options

How to Choose the Right Brand

With seven strong options, choosing the right quartz brand depends on your priorities. Here is a decision framework based on the most common scenarios we see:

If Budget Is Your Top Priority

Go with MSI Q Premium or LG Viatera. Both deliver solid quality at $55-$80/sq ft installed. MSI has more colors to choose from; LG Viatera has slightly more consistent slab quality. Either is a smart choice for investment properties, rental units, or homeowners who want to allocate more budget to other parts of the kitchen.

If You Want the Best Overall Value

Hanstone or Caesarstone offer the best balance of quality, design, and price. You get premium-level consistency and good warranties at $60-$95/sq ft. Caesarstone leans more contemporary; Hanstone is more versatile.

If You Want the Best Quality, Period

Cambria is the answer. American-made, lifetime transferable warranty, and designs that consistently lead the industry. The premium is $10-$25/sq ft over mid-range brands, which on a typical 40 sq ft kitchen works out to $400-$1,000 more. For a surface you will use every day for decades, that is a reasonable investment.

If You Cook Seriously or Want an Outdoor Kitchen

Dekton is the only material on this list that is truly heat-proof and UV-stable. If you regularly set hot pots directly on your countertop, or if you are building an outdoor kitchen in Arizona's intense sun, Dekton is worth the premium.

If You Want Antimicrobial Protection

Silestone is the only brand with built-in bacteriostatic technology. For households with young children or anyone particularly focused on kitchen hygiene, this is a meaningful differentiator.

Pro Tip: Regardless of brand, always view the actual slab you will receive, not just a sample chip. Quartz patterns, especially veined designs, can look very different at full slab scale. Visit a stone yard to see slabs in person before committing.

Where to See Quartz Countertops in Phoenix

Seeing quartz in person is essential. Screen images never accurately represent the color, depth, or texture of a countertop surface. Here are the best places to view quartz slabs in the Phoenix metro area:

Browse our stone yards directory for a complete list of locations, hours, and available brands in the Phoenix metro area.

Ready to Choose Your Quartz Countertop?

Get a free estimate with pricing for any brand on this list. We will help you compare options and find the best fit for your kitchen and budget.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best quartz countertop brand in 2026?

Cambria is widely considered the best overall quartz brand for its American manufacturing, lifetime transferable warranty, and premium design quality. Silestone and Caesarstone are close seconds with broader global availability and strong reputations. MSI Q Premium offers the best value for budget-conscious buyers.

How much do quartz countertops cost installed in Phoenix?

Quartz countertops in Phoenix cost $55-$120 per square foot installed, depending on the brand and color. Budget brands like MSI and LG Viatera start around $55/sq ft, mid-range brands like Silestone and Caesarstone run $65-$95/sq ft, and Cambria ranges from $75-$120/sq ft installed.

Is Cambria quartz worth the extra cost?

Cambria is worth the premium for homeowners who want American-made quality, the industry's best lifetime transferable warranty, and exclusive designs not available from other brands. On a typical 40 sq ft kitchen countertop, the difference between Cambria and a mid-range brand is roughly $400-$1,000 total.

What is the difference between Dekton and quartz?

Dekton is an ultra-compact sintered surface, not traditional quartz. It is made by fusing raw materials under extreme heat and pressure, making it more heat-resistant and UV-stable than quartz. Dekton can be used outdoors and near heat sources where traditional quartz cannot, but it costs more and is harder to repair if chipped.

Where can I see quartz countertop samples in Phoenix?

You can see quartz samples at stone yards throughout the Phoenix metro including Arizona Tile, MSI Phoenix, Daltile, Floor & Decor, and Surprise Granite. Always view full slabs in person rather than relying on small samples or screen images. Visit our stone yards directory for locations and hours.

The Bottom Line

All seven brands on this list produce quality quartz countertops suitable for kitchens and bathrooms. The differences come down to warranty strength, design exclusivity, manufacturing origin, and price. Cambria leads on quality and warranty, Silestone on innovation and antimicrobial technology, Caesarstone on modern design, MSI on value, Hanstone on consistency-per-dollar, Dekton on performance, and LG Viatera on affordability.

The best brand for you depends on your budget, design preferences, and how you use your kitchen. Whatever you choose, quartz remains one of the smartest countertop investments for Phoenix homeowners. Explore your options with our material comparison tool or browse available slabs in our slab marketplace.

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