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Commercial Countertop Cost Breakdown: What Every Contractor Should Know Before Bidding

February 19, 2026

Why Most Countertop Bids Are Wrong

Here is what typically happens: a GC wins a commercial project, gets three countertop quotes, picks the lowest per-linear-foot price, and moves on. Six months later, the countertop line item is 20-40% over budget because of change orders, re-fabrication, rush charges, and costs that were never in the original bid.

The problem is not dishonest fabricators. The problem is that “price per linear foot” does not capture the full cost of a countertop scope. It is like bidding a concrete pour based on cost per yard without accounting for forming, finishing, curing, and testing.

This article breaks down every cost component in a commercial countertop project — the ones on the quote and the ones that never are — so you can bid accurately, evaluate fabricator proposals apples-to-apples, and avoid the budget surprises that make project managers miserable.

Material and Fabrication Costs

Material and fabrication are quoted together as a per-linear-foot price. This is the number everyone focuses on and the one that matters least in the total cost picture.

TFL (Thermally Fused Laminate)

TFL countertops are the workhorse of commercial construction. Particleboard substrate with a thermally bonded decorative surface. Most contractors call it laminate, and that is fine.

ComponentCost Range
Material (25” depth standard)$6-12/LF
Fabrication (cutting, edge banding)$8-18/LF
Standard edge (flat, eased)Included
Total fabricated$15-35/LF

The range depends on three variables: decor selection (commodity colors vs. premium woodgrains), depth (standard 25” vs. custom), and order volume.

Solid Surface

Solid surface — Corian, LG Hi-Macs, Staron, and others — is a homogeneous acrylic or polyester material. More expensive to fabricate, but seamless, non-porous, and repairable.

ComponentCost Range
Material (1/2” sheet, 25” depth)$18-40/LF
Fabrication (CNC cutting, seaming, finishing)$20-40/LF
Standard edge (eased, half bullnose)Included
Total fabricated$40-85/LF

The range is driven by brand, color group (solids cheaper than veined patterns), and fabrication complexity.

Quartz

Quartz (engineered stone) is less common in commercial than residential, but it shows up in hospitality, corporate, and high-end healthcare projects.

ComponentCost Range
Material (3cm slab)$30-65/LF
Fabrication (CNC cutting, polishing, seaming)$25-55/LF
Standard edge (eased, beveled)Included
Total fabricated$55-120/LF

If your fabricator outsources quartz, add markup and lead time risk.

Cost Comparison at a Glance

MaterialFabricated Cost/LFBest For
TFL$15-35Offices, breakrooms, education, multifamily, back-of-house
Solid surface$40-85Healthcare, food service, labs, reception, high-visibility
Quartz$55-120Hospitality lobbies, executive offices, high-end healthcare

Add-On Costs That Change the Number

The per-linear-foot price is the starting point. The following add-ons can increase the total fabrication cost by 15-40%.

Edge Profiles

Standard edges (flat/eased for TFL, eased/half bullnose for solid surface) are typically included in the per-foot price. Upgraded profiles are extra:

Edge ProfileTFL Add-OnSolid Surface Add-On
Eased / flatIncludedIncluded
Half bullnose$2-4/LFIncluded or +$2-3/LF
Full bullnose$3-5/LF$3-5/LF
Beveled$2-3/LF$2-4/LF
Waterfall (vertical edge)$15-30 per end$20-45 per end
Built-up/stacked$8-15/LF$10-20/LF

Waterfall edges deserve special attention. Each waterfall end requires a separate piece of material mitered and bonded to the horizontal surface. On a reception desk with two waterfall ends, the edge treatment alone can add $60-90 to the cost.

Cutouts

Standard sink cutouts are usually included or priced at a flat fee per cutout. Specialty cutouts are additional:

Cutout TypeTypical Cost
Standard sink cutout (undermount or drop-in)$0-50 each
Faucet holes (per hole)$5-15 each
Power/data grommet (2-3” round)$10-25 each
Custom-shape cutout$25-75 each
Cooktop cutout$35-75 each
Integrated solid surface sink$200-500 each

On a project with 50 sink cutouts, 100 faucet holes, and 80 grommets, these per-unit charges add up to thousands.

Backsplashes

Backsplashes are sometimes included in the countertop scope and sometimes bid separately. Clarify which when comparing quotes.

Backsplash TypeCost
Flat laminate backsplash (4”)$8-15/LF
Solid surface backsplash (4”)$15-30/LF
Coved solid surface backsplash$25-45/LF
Full-height (countertop to upper cabinets)$20-50/LF

Coved backsplashes — where the countertop curves seamlessly into the backsplash with no joint — are standard in healthcare and food service. They cost significantly more than flat backsplashes but eliminate the seam where bacteria and moisture collect.

Delivery vs. Will-Call

How the countertops get from the fabrication shop to your jobsite is a cost and schedule decision.

Delivery

The fabricator arranges shipping to your site.

FactorRange
Local delivery (under 50 miles)$150-350
Regional delivery (50-200 miles)$300-600
Freight (200+ miles)$500-1,500+
Liftgate service$75-150 additional
Inside delivery (beyond tailgate)$100-300 additional

Delivery pricing depends on distance, order size, and access conditions. A ground-floor commercial project with a loading dock is straightforward. A 5th-floor medical office renovation with an elevator that only runs 2’x8’ pieces requires different logistics.

Will-Call Pickup

Will-call means you or your installer picks up the finished countertops from the fabricator’s facility. Advantages:

  • No delivery fee — the savings are real, especially on small or mid-size orders
  • You control timing — pick up when your site is ready, not when the delivery truck has a route available
  • Quality inspection at pickup — you or your installer sees the product before it leaves the shop

The trade-off is you need a vehicle and crew to transport safely — countertops need to travel flat, supported, and protected. For projects within driving distance of the fabricator, will-call almost always makes sense. Precision Edge offers will-call from our Fairfield, Ohio facility.

Installation Costs

Precision Edge fabricates countertops — we do not install. But understanding installation costs is essential for accurate bidding.

Installation Labor

MaterialInstallation Cost/LFNotes
TFL (simple drop-on)$12-18/LFStraight runs, minimal scribing
TFL (complex, L-shapes, scribing)$16-22/LFInside corners, wall scribing, tight fits
Solid surface (simple)$18-25/LFSeaming, adhesive, finishing
Solid surface (complex, integrated sinks)$22-35/LFOn-site seaming, sink integration, coved backsplash bonding
Quartz (simple)$20-30/LFHeavy material requires more labor
Quartz (complex)$28-40/LFLarge-format pieces, tight access

Countertop installation triggers work by other trades. Budget for these in your countertop line item or as separate scope items:

TradeCostWhen
Plumber — disconnect existing$150-300 per sinkBefore demo
Plumber — reconnect after install$200-400 per sinkAfter countertop set
Electrician — disconnect/reconnect$100-250 per locationIf electrical is through countertop
Demolition of existing countertops$8-15/LFBefore installation
Debris removal / dumpster$200-500 per projectDuring demo

On most commercial projects, the GC self-performs installation or hires an installer separately from the fabricator. Some fabricators offer installation as an add-on — ask during quoting if single-source accountability matters for your project.

The Hidden Costs That Blow Budgets

These are the costs that never appear on a fabricator’s quote but show up on your project cost report.

Re-Fabrication

When a countertop does not fit — wrong dimensions, wrong cutout location, wrong material — someone has to make a new one. The costs:

Re-fabrication CostAmount
New materialSame as original fabrication cost
Rush fabrication (you cannot wait 4 weeks again)25-50% premium
Demolition of incorrect piece$200-500
Re-installationSame as original installation cost
Idle trade time while waiting for replacement$2,000-5,000+ per week
Total re-fabrication cost (typical)$2,000-$8,000+

On a single exam room with 10 LF of solid surface at $65/LF, the original countertop cost $650. The re-fabrication cost — including rush charges, demo, reinstall, and idle time — can hit $4,000. Six times the original cost.

The cause is almost always measurement error. Field measure after cabinets are set. Measure twice. Confirm with the fabricator.

Change Orders

Mid-project changes to countertop scope are expensive because fabrication has specific sequence dependencies. Once a shop drawing is approved and material is cut, changes require:

  • Re-engineering the shop drawing
  • New material (the original cut piece is usually scrap)
  • Re-queuing in the production schedule
  • Potential delay to the overall project

Common change order triggers and their costs:

ChangeTypical Cost Impact
Color change after fabrication startsFull re-fabrication ($40-85/LF for solid surface)
Adding cutouts after fabrication$75-200 if caught before finishing; re-fabrication if after
Dimension change (wall moved, cabinet modified)$200-1,500 depending on scope
Edge profile upgrade$5-20/LF if caught before production; re-fabrication if after
Adding backsplash after original scope$15-45/LF plus lead time extension

The pattern is clear: changes caught before fabrication starts cost 10-20% of the countertop value. Changes caught after fabrication starts cost 100%+ because you are buying the countertop twice.

Rush Charges

When someone else’s delay compresses your schedule, fabricators charge rush premiums: 25-50% for expedited, 50-100% for same-week, 100%+ for same-day (if even possible). The best way to avoid rush charges is to use a fabricator whose standard lead time is already fast. If the standard is 2 days for TFL and 5 days for solid surface, there is not much left to rush.

Delay Costs

We covered this in detail in our article on countertop delay costs, but the summary: a one-week countertop delay on a mid-size commercial project costs $34,500-$67,000 in general conditions, idle crews, liquidated damages, and lost opportunity.

That number should inform how you evaluate fabricator bids. A fabricator charging $5 more per linear foot but delivering in 2-5 days instead of 4-6 weeks eliminates tens of thousands in delay risk. On a 200-LF project, the $1,000 per-foot premium is negligible against $34,000+ in avoided delay costs.

How to Bid the Countertop Line Item

Step 1: Get a Fabricator Quote During Bidding

Do not estimate countertop costs from a database or historical data. Get a real quote from a real fabricator based on the project plans and specs. The 30 minutes it takes to send plans to a fabricator and get a budgetary quote is the best time investment in your bid.

Step 2: Break the Bid Into Components

Structure your countertop line item like this:

ComponentHow to Estimate
Fabrication (material + labor)Fabricator quote, per LF by material type
Edge profiles (if non-standard)Fabricator quote, per LF or per piece
Cutouts (sinks, grommets, faucets)Fabricator quote, per unit
BacksplashesFabricator quote, per LF by type
Delivery or will-callFabricator quote or your own logistics cost
Installation laborInstaller quote or crew rate x estimated hours
Plumbing disconnect/reconnectPlumber quote, per sink
Demolition (if replacement project)Crew rate x estimated hours
SubtotalSum of above
Contingency (10-15%)Applied to subtotal
Total countertop line itemSubtotal + contingency

Step 3: Carry Adequate Contingency

A 10-15% contingency on the countertop line item covers:

  • Field measurement variances that require minor re-fabrication
  • Small scope additions (an extra grommet cutout, a backsplash extension)
  • Delivery logistics that differ from plan
  • Minor material price fluctuations between bid and order

For projects with high change-order risk (fast-track construction, design-build with incomplete drawings, renovation with unknown existing conditions), carry 15-20%.

Step 4: Factor Lead Time Into Your Schedule Cost

This is the step most GCs skip. Add a schedule risk line item that accounts for the fabricator’s lead time reliability:

Fabricator Lead TimeSchedule Risk Factor
2-5 business days (stocked material)Low — $0 schedule risk
2-3 weeksModerate — carry $5,000-10,000 in schedule contingency
4-6 weeksHigh — carry $15,000-30,000 in schedule contingency
6-8 weeksVery high — carry $30,000+ and identify a backup fabricator

These are not imaginary numbers. They are the expected value of delay risk — probability of delay multiplied by cost of delay. A fabricator with a 30% chance of being one week late has an expected delay cost of 30% x $34,500 = $10,350. That is a real cost that should be in your bid.

Volume Pricing: Where the Breaks Are

Countertop fabrication has economies of scale. Setting up a CNC program, selecting material, and configuring the production line has a fixed cost whether you are cutting 10 linear feet or 1,000. Larger orders spread that fixed cost over more linear feet.

Typical Volume Pricing Tiers

Volume (Linear Feet)TFL Discount RangeSolid Surface Discount Range
Under 50 LFList priceList price
50-100 LF0-5%0-5%
100-250 LF5-10%5-10%
250-500 LF10-15%8-12%
500-1,000 LF12-18%10-15%
1,000+ LF15-25% (negotiate)12-20% (negotiate)

These are general ranges — every fabricator structures pricing differently. The point is that volume pricing is real and significant on large projects. A 1,200 LF multifamily project should not be quoted at the same per-foot rate as a 50 LF office breakroom.

How to Negotiate Volume Pricing

  • Get project pricing, not rate-card pricing. Tell the fabricator the total scope upfront and ask for project-specific pricing.
  • Consolidate scope. If your project has TFL in the apartments and solid surface in the common areas, quote both scopes to one fabricator. Combined volume often unlocks better pricing than splitting the scopes.
  • Commit to timeline. A fabricator can offer better pricing if they can schedule your production efficiently. A firm order with clear delivery milestones is more valuable to a production shop than a tentative order that might change.
  • Simplify the scope. Fewer color selections, standard edge profiles, and consistent countertop dimensions reduce production complexity and cost. If you can standardize on 3 TFL colors instead of 8, the per-foot cost comes down.

Putting It All Together: A Real Project Budget

Here is what a complete countertop budget looks like on a 150-unit multifamily project with TFL in units and solid surface in common areas.

Scope

  • 150 apartment kitchens: 8 LF each, TFL, standard edge, 1 sink cutout = 1,200 LF TFL
  • 150 apartment bathrooms: 4 LF each, TFL, standard edge = 600 LF TFL
  • 3 common area kitchens: 25 LF each, solid surface, half bullnose, 2 sinks each = 75 LF solid surface
  • 1 reception desk: 18 LF, solid surface, waterfall edges = 18 LF solid surface
  • 2 restrooms: 10 LF each, solid surface, integrated sinks = 20 LF solid surface

Budget

Line ItemQuantityUnit CostTotal
TFL fabrication (apartments)1,800 LF$20/LF$36,000
Solid surface fabrication (common)113 LF$65/LF$7,345
Sink cutouts (TFL)150$25 each$3,750
Sink cutouts (solid surface)8$40 each$320
Integrated sinks (restrooms)4$350 each$1,400
Waterfall edges (reception)2$35 each$70
Faucet holes162$10 each$1,620
Backsplash (solid surface, coved)113 LF$35/LF$3,955
Delivery (phased, 4 deliveries)4$400 each$1,600
Fabrication subtotal$56,060
Installation labor (TFL)1,800 LF$14/LF$25,200
Installation labor (solid surface)113 LF$22/LF$2,486
Plumbing reconnection162 sinks$250 each$40,500
Installation subtotal$68,186
Total before contingency$124,246
Contingency (12%)$14,910
Total countertop budget$139,156

That works out to approximately $73/unit all-in — a number you can sanity-check against historical data. Notice that fabrication is only 40% of the total. Bidding based on fabrication cost alone would miss more than half the actual expense.

The Takeaway

Commercial countertop cost is not a single number — it is a stack of components, some visible and some hidden. The contractors who bid accurately are the ones who break the scope into components, get real fabricator quotes during bidding, account for installation and related trade costs, carry appropriate contingency, and factor schedule risk into the total.

The cheapest per-foot quote is rarely the cheapest project outcome. A fabricator with competitive per-foot pricing, stocked materials, fast turnaround, and reliable delivery — like Precision Edge — delivers the lowest total cost because the hidden costs never materialize. No re-fabrication from material supply delays. No rush charges from blown lead times. No idle-trade costs from missed delivery dates.

Get pricing for your project from Precision Edge. We will break it down the same way this article does — no hidden costs, no surprises.

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