What Are Countertop Edge Profiles?
An edge profile is the cross-sectional shape of a countertop’s finished edge — the shape you see when you look at the front edge of the counter straight-on. The profile is both functional and aesthetic: it determines how the countertop looks, how it feels when you lean against it, how easy it is to clean, and how it handles impacts.
For commercial projects, edge profile selection is driven by application, budget, material, and code requirements. A breakroom counter in an office has different edge needs than a nurse station in a hospital.
Common Edge Profiles
Square Edge (Eased)
The square edge is a flat, 90-degree edge with a very slight rounding (called an “ease”) to remove the sharp corner. The ease is typically 1/16” to 1/8” radius — just enough to prevent the edge from being sharp to the touch.
- Cost: Included in base pricing for all materials
- Materials: TFL, HPL, solid surface, compact laminate, quartz
- Applications: Offices, breakrooms, education, retail — any standard commercial use
- Pros: Lowest cost, clean modern look, works with edge banding on laminate
- Cons: Corners can chip on impact, not ideal for healthcare or pediatric settings
Square eased is the default commercial edge. If your shop drawing does not specify an edge profile, most fabricators will produce a square eased edge.
Beveled Edge (Chamfer)
A beveled edge has a flat angled cut, typically at 45 degrees, along the top corner of the countertop. The bevel width ranges from 1/8” to 1/2”. This creates a subtle shadow line and removes the sharp top corner.
- Cost: $1-$3 per linear foot above square edge
- Materials: All materials
- Applications: Office workstations, conference tables, reception counters
- Pros: Removes sharp corner, minimal cost increase, adds visual detail
- Cons: The bevel creates a small flat surface that can collect dust
Beveled edges are popular in corporate office environments where a slightly more refined look is desired without significant cost increase.
Bullnose (Half-Round)
A bullnose edge has a fully rounded top corner, creating a half-circle profile on the top edge. A full bullnose rounds both top and bottom edges, creating a complete semicircle on the entire edge thickness.
- Cost: $3-$8 per linear foot for half bullnose, $5-$12 for full bullnose
- Materials: Solid surface, quartz, compact laminate (not TFL or HPL — laminate cannot be shaped into a radius without postforming)
- Applications: Healthcare, pediatric facilities, nurse stations, assisted living
- Pros: No sharp corners, comfortable to lean against, easy to clean
- Cons: Requires solid material (not laminate), higher cost
Bullnose edges are often specified in healthcare settings because they eliminate sharp corners that could injure patients. Many healthcare design standards require radius edges in patient areas.
Waterfall Edge
A waterfall edge is when the countertop surface material wraps down the side of the cabinet or island vertically, flowing from the horizontal surface to the floor (or to a specified height) in a continuous plane.
- Cost: Material cost for the vertical panel + $15-$25 per linear foot for fabrication and seaming
- Materials: Solid surface (seamless), quartz (visible seam), laminate (visible seam)
- Applications: Reception desks, office islands, high-end break areas, hospitality
- Pros: Dramatic appearance, conceals cabinet structure, premium look
- Cons: Expensive, adds complexity, requires precise fabrication
In solid surface materials, the waterfall joint can be seamed invisibly, creating the illusion of a single bent piece. In laminate and quartz, the seam is visible and requires careful alignment.
Built-Up Edge
A built-up edge adds material to the underside of the countertop edge to make it appear thicker. Instead of a standard 1” thick edge, a built-up edge creates a 1.5” or 2” thick appearance.
- Cost: $4-$10 per linear foot for laminate, $8-$15 for solid surface
- Materials: All materials (technique varies by material)
- Applications: Reception desks, executive offices, conference tables, any application requiring a more substantial appearance
- Pros: Premium, substantial look; can incorporate different edge profiles on the built-up section
- Cons: Added cost, added weight, slightly more complex fabrication
For TFL and HPL countertops, built-up edges are created by laminating a strip of substrate under the front edge, then banding the entire built-up edge. For solid surface, additional material is bonded and shaped.
Postformed Edge
A postformed edge is a rounded edge created by bending laminate around a curved substrate profile during manufacturing. The laminate wraps continuously from the backsplash, over the front edge, and underneath — with no seam at the edge.
- Cost: Comparable to standard laminate with edge banding
- Materials: HPL on curved substrate (specific postforming-grade laminates required)
- Applications: Breakrooms, offices, education, retail — any standard commercial application
- Pros: No seam at the edge to trap moisture, integrated backsplash option, classic commercial look
- Cons: Limited to postforming-grade laminates, cannot do custom shapes as easily
Postformed countertops are covered in detail in our postformed countertops article.
Edge Profiles by Material
Not every edge profile is available in every material. Material properties dictate what shapes are possible:
| Profile | TFL | HPL | Solid Surface | Compact Laminate | Quartz |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Square eased | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Beveled | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Bullnose | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Ogee | No | No | Yes | No | Yes |
| Waterfall | Seam visible | Seam visible | Seamless | Seam visible | Seam visible |
| Built-up | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Postformed | Yes* | Yes* | N/A | No | No |
*Requires postforming-grade laminate
TFL countertops and HPL are flat materials bonded to a substrate. They cannot be machined into curved shapes after fabrication. The edge is covered with edge banding (square or beveled profile) or the entire piece is postformed during manufacturing.
Solid surface can be machined into any profile because it is a solid, homogeneous material. This is one of its primary advantages in healthcare and high-end commercial applications.
Which Profile for Which Application
Office / Corporate
- Standard: Square eased or beveled
- Premium: Built-up with bevel, waterfall on island ends
- Budget: Square eased with 3mm edge banding
Healthcare
- Patient areas: Bullnose or full radius (often required by design standards)
- Admin areas: Square eased or beveled
- Nurse stations: Bullnose or radius, often with built-up edge for durability
Education
- Classrooms: Square eased (durable, replaceable)
- Science labs: Bullnose on chemical-resistant materials
- Common areas: Postformed or beveled
Food Service / Breakrooms
- Standard: Postformed (no seam to trap food/moisture)
- Premium: Solid surface with bullnose
- Budget: Square eased with PUR adhesive edge banding
Hospitality
- Front desk: Built-up or waterfall (premium appearance)
- Back of house: Square eased (practical)
- Guest-facing counters: Bullnose or beveled
Cost Implications
Edge profile costs are per linear foot, and they add up fast on large projects. Here is a representative cost range for edge profile upgrades above a standard square eased edge:
| Profile | Cost Adder (per LF) | On 200 LF Project |
|---|---|---|
| Square eased | $0 (base) | $0 |
| Beveled | $1-$3 | $200-$600 |
| Half bullnose | $3-$8 | $600-$1,600 |
| Full bullnose | $5-$12 | $1,000-$2,400 |
| Built-up | $4-$15 | $800-$3,000 |
| Waterfall | $15-$25 | $3,000-$5,000 |
| Ogee | $8-$15 | $1,600-$3,000 |
These are fabrication cost adders only — material costs are separate and vary by material type.
Saving Money on Edge Profiles
For budget-conscious projects, use premium edges only where visible and standard square edges everywhere else:
- Front edges: Beveled or built-up (what people see)
- Back edges (against wall): Square — will be hidden by backsplash or not visible
- End caps against cabinet: Square — will be covered
- Exposed end panels: Match front edge profile
Specify edge profiles per-edge on your shop drawings, not as a blanket specification for the entire piece.
Specifying Edge Profiles on Shop Drawings
Clear edge profile specification prevents errors. On your shop drawings:
- Label each edge — front, back, left end, right end
- Specify the profile for each labeled edge — do not assume the fabricator will know which edges are exposed
- Include a cross-section detail for non-standard profiles showing exact dimensions
- Note edge banding specs for laminate edges — material (PVC/ABS), thickness (1mm/3mm), color
- Call out any mixed profiles explicitly — if the front edge is beveled but the exposed right end is square, say so
Edge Profiles at Precision Edge
Precision Edge fabricates all standard edge profiles on TFL, HPL, and solid surface countertops. Our CNC equipment cuts consistent profiles across every piece — whether you need 10 linear feet or 1,000. Square eased with 3mm color-matched edge banding is our default for laminate. Bullnose, built-up, beveled, and custom profiles are available on request. Include your edge profile specs on your shop drawings or call out your preference on the order — we will confirm before fabrication. Will-call pickup at our Fairfield, Ohio facility or shipping throughout OH, IN, and KY.
Related Terms
Edge Banding
Edge banding covers exposed substrate edges on laminate countertops with PVC, ABS, or melamine strips. Essential for commercial durability.
Postformed Countertops
Postformed countertops have laminate bent over a rounded edge profile during manufacturing. No edge seam, no banding — one continuous surface.
Solid Surface
Solid surface countertops are non-porous, seamless, and repairable — ideal for healthcare, education, and commercial projects. 5-day turnaround.
TFL
TFL (Thermally Fused Laminate) is the fastest, most cost-effective commercial countertop material. 2-day fabrication turnaround.
CNC Fabrication
CNC fabrication uses computer-controlled routers to cut countertops with +/- 1/16" tolerances. Faster, more accurate than manual cutting.
Surface Finishes
Countertop surface finishes: matte, satin, gloss, textured, and suede. How finish affects maintenance, appearance, and application.
Countertop Dimensions
Standard commercial countertop dimensions: 25" depth, up to 12' lengths, custom sizes by material. How to measure and submit.