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Cambria Quartz Slab Cost and Pricing Guide – Adnan Painting and Remodeling
Published: 2026-06-30T08:04:12+00:00 • 3 min read

Homeowners typically pay for Cambria quartz slabs based on slab size, thickness, edge profiles, and installation complexity. The price range reflects material quality, color availability, and regional labor costs. This article outlines the cost, price drivers, and budgeting considerations for Cambria slabs in the United States.

Assumptions: region, slab color, edge profile, and kitchen layout affect pricing; installed cost includes fabrication and installation labor.

Item Low Average High Notes
Cambria Slab Material $50/sq ft $70-$95/sq ft $100+/sq ft Per-square-foot material cost varies with color, pattern, and slab grade.
Fabrication & Installation $35/sq ft $75-$120/sq ft $150+/sq ft Includes cutouts, edge work, and seam work; higher with complex layouts.
Edge Profile Upgrade $2-$8/linear ft $10-$25/linear ft $40+/linear ft Bevel, eased, or eased mitre edges add cost.
Delivery & Handling $0-$15/sq ft $5-$12/sq ft $20+/sq ft Weight and travel distance affect fees.
Waste / Off-Cuts $0-$5/sq ft $2-$8/sq ft $10+/sq ft Leftover slabs may be used for projects or discarded.

Cambria slabs are sold as a premium quartz option, with price fluctuating by color family, pattern density, and availability. The following sections break down typical costs and how buyers can estimate a project for a mid-size kitchen.

Overview Of Costs

Typical project ranges have both total and per-square-foot estimates. For a standard 30- to 40-square-foot countertop, material plus fabrication often sits in the $2,100-$4,000 range, with most projects landing near $2,800-$3,800 when color, edge, and layout are moderate. If a premium color, large island, or intricate edge is chosen, totals can exceed $6,000. data-formula=”labor_hours × hourly_rate”>

Assumptions: typical 3 cm (1 1/4 inch) slabs, standard edge, single run, existing cabinets, no live plumbing changes. Per-slab costs can be quoted in square feet, with installation priced per linear foot or per project based on layout complexity.

Cost Breakdown

Category Low Average High Notes Assumptions
Materials $50/sq ft $70-$95/sq ft $100+/sq ft Cambria color and grade drive this range. 3 cm slabs, standard pattern
Labor $25-$40/sq ft $40-$75/sq ft $90+/sq ft Fabrication and installation included. Moderate kitchen, single island, basic cutouts
Equipment $0-$5/sq ft $5-$12/sq ft $15+/sq ft Diamond blades, polishing tools, clamps. Standard shop equipment usage
Delivery/Disposal $0-$5/sq ft $5-$12/sq ft $20+/sq ft Distance from fabricator affects cost. Urban vs rural transport differences
Taxes $0-$2/sq ft $2-$5/sq ft $6+/sq ft State and local taxes apply. Jurisdiction dependent
Contingency Included in labor 5-10% 15% For layout changes and hidden issues. New cabinetry or plumbing updates

Color and edge choices significantly impact cost. A dramatic edge like a full bullnose or mitered edge adds more to the fabrication time and material waste. The complexity of the kitchen layout, such as multiple corners, curved sections, or a large island, can raise both labor and waste costs.

Cost Drivers

Color depth, pattern complexity, and slab availability are top drivers in Cambria pricing. Additionally, edge profile and thickness materially shift the total.

Two niche-specific drivers to watch: thickness options (2 cm vs 3 cm) and edge profiles (straight to beveled to scalloped). For thickness, 3 cm slabs cost more per square foot but can reduce cape waste on large islands. For edge profiles, upgrading from a standard eased edge to a complex ogee edge can add several dollars per linear foot and require additional fabrication time. data-formula=”edge_cost_per_ft × linear_ft”>

Regional Price Differences

Prices vary by region due to labor markets and delivery distances. In the Northeast, installed Cambria costs often run 5-12% higher than the Midwest, while the West may add 3-10% due to travel and higher labor rates. Urban markets typically show higher delivery and permit fees compared to Rural areas, which can offset some material savings.

Examples: a 40-sq-ft run might cost $3,000 in a midwestern city, $3,400 in a coastal metro, and $3,900+ in a high-cost urban market, all before color and edge choices. These deltas reflect labor rate differences and logistics.

Real-World Pricing Examples

Three scenario cards illustrate typical quotes for Cambria installations.

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Basic — 35 sq ft, standard 3 cm slabs, straight edge, standard cutouts. Materials: $2,450; Labor: $1,100; Delivery: $180; Permits/Taxes: $150; Total: $3,880.

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Mid-Range — 42 sq ft, premium color, 3 cm, eased edge, island, two large cutouts. Materials: $3,000; Labor: $1,350; Delivery: $210; Taxes/Permits: $180; Total: $4,740.

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Premium — 50 sq ft, exotic color, 3 cm, full bullnose edge, complex layouts, seam work. Materials: $4,000; Labor: $2,250; Delivery: $260; Permits/Taxes: $260; Total: $6,770.

Purchasing guidance: ask fabricators for a per-slab price and a per-square-foot price to compare fairly. Also request a detailed written quote listing the scope, edge, thickness, seam work, and any trade discounts or allowances.

Ways To Save

Budget-focused strategies balance cost and aesthetics. Consider selecting standard colors from Cambria’s core palette, opting for a simpler edge profile, and planning a layout with fewer seams. Consolidate the project to minimize delivery and fabrication time. If possible, combine multiple areas (e.g., kitchen and pantry) under a single job to reduce overhead and travel fees.

Another savings lever is timing: non-peak seasons can yield modest price reductions on labor and delivery. If a specific color is backordered, ask about comparable alternatives that ship sooner and maintain visual impact. Assumptions: project scope remains constant while substitutions save time and money.