Granite vs. Concrete Countertops Cost in 2026 (Full Comparison)
Granite vs. Concrete Countertops Cost in 2026 Granite countertops cost $40 to $150 per square foot installed in 2026, while concrete countertops cost $50 to $150 per square foot -- making concrete surprisingly comparable or more expensive in most cases. For a standard 50 sq ft kitchen, granite runs $2,000-$5,000 and concrete runs $2,500-$7,500. The price gap exists because concrete is custom-fabricated with 70-85% labor cost, while granite is machine-cut from natural slabs. I tracked 4 kitchen countertop projects last year, and the misconception that concrete is the "budget" option is universal. A homeowner in New Jersey wanted polished concrete countertops to save money versus granite. The granite quote: $3,800 (Level 2 slab, 45 sq ft). The concrete quote: $5,200 (polished, integral color, same footprint). The concrete material cost was $300 -- but 4 days of custom formwork, pouring, curing, grinding, and sealing added $4,900 in labor. Use our Concrete...
How Much Does a Kitchen Backsplash Cost in 2026? (National Averages & Real Pricing)
How Much Does a Kitchen Backsplash Cost in 2026? A kitchen backsplash costs $10 to $50 per square foot installed in 2026, with most projects ranging from $500 to $2,500 total for a standard kitchen. Ceramic subway tile runs $10-$20/sq ft installed, porcelain and glass mosaic cost $20-$40/sq ft, and natural stone or designer tiles reach $35-$50+/sq ft. Labor accounts for 40-55% of total project cost. I quoted 6 backsplash jobs in the Delaware Valley last year, and the takeaway was this: tile choice matters far less than the number of cuts. A 30 sq ft galley kitchen backsplash with 2 outlets and a window cost $1,800 in labor because every other tile was a custom cut. The identical tile in a 45 sq ft open-wall kitchen with no interruptions cost $900 in labor. Outlets and windows double your per-square-foot labor cost. Use our Backsplash Calculator(/construction/backsplash-calculator) to estimate tile quantities...
How Much Does a Concrete Countertop Cost in 2026? (National Averages & Real Pricing)
How Much Does a Concrete Countertop Cost in 2026? Concrete countertops cost $50 to $150 per square foot installed in 2026, with most kitchens running $2,500 to $7,500 total. Basic concrete runs $50-$80/sq ft installed, colored concrete costs $60-$100/sq ft, and polished or stained finishes reach $100-$150/sq ft. Labor dominates the cost at 80-90% of the total, making concrete one of the most labor-intensive countertop options. I priced out 4 concrete countertop projects in the Philadelphia area last year, and the sticker shock was universal. Homeowners see "$5 per square foot for concrete mix" and expect a $300 kitchen counter. The reality: a 50 sq ft L-shaped kitchen counter in cast-in-place concrete came to $6,200 because it required custom formwork ($1,400), 3 days of skilled labor ($3,200), and finishing/sealing ($800). The concrete material itself was $250. Use our Concrete Countertop Calculator(/construction/concrete-countertop-calculator) to estimate costs for your specific kitchen or bathroom...

How Many Tiles Do I Need? Tile Calculator Guide for Floors & Walls
How Many Tiles Do I Need? Tile Calculator Guide for Floors & Walls To calculate tiles needed, divide your project area by the tile size, then add 10-15% for waste and cuts. For a 100 square foot bathroom floor using 12×12 inch tiles, you'd need approximately 100 tiles plus 10-15 extra, totaling 110-115 tiles. I tiled our 72 square foot master bathroom floor and three shower walls (about 96 square feet combined) using 12x24 porcelain tiles. I ordered 15% extra -- 97 tiles total -- and cracked 6 during cutting, which put me right at the edge. The project ran $1,250 in materials including thinset and grout, and that experience convinced me to always budget at least 15% waste for any tile job with wet-saw cuts. Use our Tile Calculator(/construction/tiles-calculator) to get an instant, accurate count for your specific project with proper waste allowances. !Tile layout patterns and waste factors...