Food-safe & FDA-approved resin · Hand-poured, made to order Free quotes · 303-000-0000

Epoxy Kitchen Countertops in Denver

A brand-new kitchen surface poured right over what you already have. Custom-matched color, food-safe finish, and a price that lands near half of granite.

  • No demo, no slab
  • Done in 2–3 days
  • Fixed on site if chipped

Price My Kitchen

Free quote within 24 hours.

Or call 303-000-0000 · We never share your info.

Most kitchen counters get replaced for one reason: they look dated. The laminate is fine. The structure is fine. It just reads "1998." Tearing all of that out to bolt in a stone slab is the expensive way to fix a cosmetic problem. We fix the look and keep the bones.

Why pour over instead of rip out

During our installs, the moment that surprises people most is how little gets disturbed. We don't disconnect your sink for a week. We don't pull cabinets. We mask the room, prep the existing top, and build the new surface in layers right where it sits. By day three you're looking at what reads as a poured-stone counter, except it was mixed for your kitchen, not cut from a quarry block 1,500 miles away.

And here's the part the stone yards won't tell you. When granite chips, you're often stuck. Quartz too. The repair either shows or you replace the whole run and hope the new slab matches the old one. Epoxy doesn't trap you like that. A chip gets sanded and re-poured on the spot, and it blends. That single difference is why a lot of our calls come from people who got burned by a stone repair quote.

Field note

The common failure point we see in DIY epoxy kitchens isn't the resin. It's prep. Grease that didn't get fully cleaned off, or a base coat poured too thick. We degrease, scuff, and prime every surface before a drop of color goes down. Boring? Yes. It's also the reason ours don't peel.

Why it costs less than a slab, and why that's not the point

A granite or quartz kitchen carries costs we just don't have. Tear-out. A fabricator. A crane some days, and a crew to set the slab. Strip those away and most of our kitchens land 40 to 50% under what a stone shop quotes. The savings are real. But the reason people stay is the work itself, a surface hand-mixed and poured for their room that a slab yard can't reproduce. Because every kitchen is its own design, we price each one on its own.

Typical kitchenEco EpoxyGraniteQuartz
The surfaceHand-poured, custom artCut from a slabEngineered slab
Cost vs. a slab job~40–50% lessBaselineHighest
Old counter removalNone, staysFull demoFull demo
Days kitchen is down2–37–217–21
Color matched to your roomYesNoNo

The messy middle: what prep actually involves

The look: you pick it, we mix it

This is where epoxy pulls ahead of stone for a lot of people. A granite slab is whatever the quarry cut that day. You get to pick from what's in the yard. We start from a blank surface and build the color in front of you. Want the white-and-gold marble look that's been all over Denver remodels? We can do that. Prefer deep charcoal with thin copper veins, or a warm earthy brown to match oak cabinets? Same resin, different mix.

  • White & gold marble, pairs with brass fixtures and bright kitchens
  • Black & copper, dramatic islands and modern remodels
  • Soft gray veining, the most-requested look the last two years
  • Solid matte tones, clean, low-key, fingerprint-friendly

Decision matrix: is epoxy right for your kitchen?

If your counters are structurally fine but dated
Epoxy is the clear pick, you're paying to change the look, not rebuild.
If you want a custom color no slab can give you
Epoxy wins. We mix to your cabinets; stone can't be re-colored.
If you cook on screaming-hot cast iron with no trivet
Consider quartz, or commit to trivets. Honest answer.
If your base cabinets are failing
Fix the cabinets first. We can pour once the foundation is sound.

The bottom line

For a dated-but-solid kitchen, epoxy gets you a custom, food-safe, stone-look surface for about half the cost of granite, in a long weekend instead of three weeks, and you can fix it if life happens. Send us a photo and we'll price yours this week.

Kitchen questions

Epoxy kitchen countertop FAQs

Yes, and laminate is one of our most common starting points. As long as the laminate is bonded down and the substrate underneath is solid, it makes a great base. We scuff it, prime it, and the resin grips it. Peeling or water-swollen laminate gets repaired first.

Cured epoxy handles everyday kitchen heat, but it isn't a trivet. A pot straight off the burner at 400-plus degrees can leave a mark over time. We tell every client the same thing we tell our own families: use a trivet or a hot pad. Do that and the surface stays flawless for years.

Soap and water, or a pH-neutral spray. That's it. Because the surface is non-porous, nothing soaks in, no annual sealing like granite needs. Skip abrasive pads and harsh solvents and the finish keeps its shine.

That's the part people love. We mix color and veining on sample boards and hold them against your cabinets, floor, and backsplash before we commit. White-and-gold marble to pair with brass hardware, warm browns for oak, cool grays for a modern look, your call.

You can set light items down after about 48 hours. Full cure, the point where it shrugs off heavy use, is around seven days. We sequence the work so your sink and stove come back online as fast as the resin allows.

For most Denver kitchens, yes, usually 40 to 50% less once you fold in granite's demo, fabrication, and crew. We skip all of that by pouring over what's there. But price isn't the headline. This is custom design work, hand-mixed for your room, so we quote each kitchen on its own rather than slap a sticker on it.

Ready when you are

Let's price your countertops

Send a few details and we'll get you a real number, usually within a day. Most kitchens are done in 2 to 3 days, right over what you already have.

Call Now Free Quote