How Much Does Marble Floor Polishing Cost in Las Vegas? [2026 Pricing Guide]

Your marble floors were stunning when they were first installed. But after years of foot traffic, Las Vegas hard water, and fine desert dust, they've lost their shine. The good news? Professional marble polishing can bring them back to life — and it costs a fraction of what you might expect.

In this guide, we break down exactly what marble floor polishing costs in the Las Vegas Valley, what affects the price, and how to get the most value from your investment.

Marble Floor Polishing Cost at a Glance

Here's what Las Vegas homeowners typically pay for professional marble floor polishing in 2026:

ConditionCost Per Sq FtWhat's Involved
Light dullness (good condition)$3 - $6Basic polishing to restore shine
Moderate wear (scratches, etching)$6 - $10Honing + polishing + minor repairs
Heavy damage (deep scratches, stains, lippage)$12 - $18Diamond grinding + honing + polishing + sealing

The average Las Vegas marble polishing project costs between $500 and $2,500, depending on the size of the area and the condition of the stone.

For comparison, replacing marble floors costs $40 to $125 per square foot once you factor in demolition, new stone, and installation. That means professional restoration saves you 70 to 90 percent compared to tearing everything out and starting over.

What Affects Marble Polishing Cost?

Not every marble polishing job is the same. Here are the main factors that determine what you'll pay.

Current Condition of Your Marble

This is the single biggest factor in pricing. A floor with light dullness from normal wear needs far less work than one with deep scratches, chemical etching, or years of neglect.

  • Light dullness: The marble has lost its shine but has no significant scratches or stains. A standard polish brings it right back. This is the most affordable option.
  • Moderate damage: Visible scratches, etch marks from acidic spills, or areas where the finish has worn unevenly. This requires honing (smoothing the surface with diamond abrasives) before polishing.
  • Heavy damage: Deep gouges, widespread staining, cracks, or uneven tile edges (called lippage). This involves diamond grinding to level the surface, followed by multiple honing and polishing passes.

Square Footage

Larger projects typically have a lower per-square-foot cost because setup and equipment mobilization are the same regardless of area size. A 50-square-foot foyer might cost $10 per square foot, while a 1,000-square-foot living area might come in at $4 to $6 per square foot.

Type of Marble

Not all marble is created equal. Softer varieties like Carrara and Calacatta scratch more easily and require more careful handling. Harder marbles like Emperador are more durable but can still lose their polish over time.

Your stone restoration professional will assess your specific marble type and adjust the approach accordingly.

Honing vs. Polishing

These are two different finishes, and the one you choose affects the cost:

  • Honing produces a smooth, matte or satin finish. It requires fewer polishing passes and is generally less expensive.
  • Polishing produces a high-gloss, mirror-like finish. It requires additional diamond polishing steps beyond honing, which adds to the labor and cost.

Many homeowners in Las Vegas prefer a polished finish for indoor living areas and a honed finish for bathrooms and outdoor spaces where slip resistance matters.

Additional Repairs

If your marble has chips, cracks, or lippage (where tile edges sit at different heights), these repairs add to the base polishing cost. Our marble restoration specialists handle all types of repair work. Lippage correction is the most labor-intensive because it requires aggressive diamond grinding to level the surface before any polishing can begin.

Chip and crack repairs involve filling with color-matched epoxy or resin, which blends seamlessly with the surrounding stone once polished.

Marble Floor Polishing Cost by Room

To help you estimate your project, here's what Las Vegas homeowners typically pay by room size:

RoomApprox. SizeEstimated Cost
Bathroom50 - 80 sq ft$150 - $480
Foyer or entryway30 - 60 sq ft$90 - $360
Kitchen150 - 300 sq ft$450 - $1,800
Living room200 - 400 sq ft$600 - $2,400
Master bedroom200 - 350 sq ft$600 - $2,100
Whole house500 - 2,000 sq ft$1,500 - $12,000

These ranges assume moderate condition. Floors in good condition will fall toward the lower end, while heavily damaged floors will be higher.

Tip: Not sure of your square footage? Measure the length and width of each room in feet, then multiply. For irregularly shaped rooms, break them into rectangles, calculate each, and add them together.

Marble Restoration vs. Replacement: The Real Cost Comparison

One of the most common questions we hear is whether it's worth restoring existing marble or just replacing it entirely. The numbers make a strong case for restoration:

OptionCost Per Sq Ft500 Sq Ft ProjectTimeline
Professional restoration$3 - $6$1,500 - $3,0001-2 days
Full replacement$40 - $125+$20,000 - $62,500+2-4 weeks

Restoration is the clear winner for most situations. You save tens of thousands of dollars, avoid weeks of construction disruption, and end up with floors that look brand new.

The only scenario where replacement makes more sense is when the marble is structurally compromised — crumbling, severely cracked throughout, or you simply want a completely different stone type or color.

Why Las Vegas Marble Floors Need Extra Attention

Living in the Las Vegas Valley means your marble faces challenges that homeowners in other cities don't deal with.

Hard Water and Mineral Deposits

Las Vegas has some of the hardest water in the United States, measuring around 278 parts per million. That mineral-heavy water leaves deposits on marble surfaces every time it dries, gradually building up a cloudy, dull film that regular cleaning can't remove.

This is especially noticeable in bathrooms and kitchens where water contact is frequent. Professional polishing removes these mineral deposits and restores the stone's natural clarity. If you're in the Summerlin or Henderson area, you may notice this even more due to the older plumbing in some neighborhoods — check our stone restoration services in Henderson and Summerlin for local availability.

Desert Dust

The fine particulate dust that blows through the Las Vegas Valley acts like a very fine sandpaper on polished marble surfaces. Over time, it creates microscopic scratches that dull the finish. This is one reason Las Vegas marble floors tend to lose their shine faster than floors in humid climates where dust settles rather than blows.

Regular dust mopping helps, but eventually professional polishing is needed to remove the accumulated surface wear.

How Often Should You Polish Marble Floors in Las Vegas?

Given our local conditions, we recommend professional marble polishing every one to three years depending on:

  • High-traffic areas (entryways, kitchens, hallways): Every 1-2 years
  • Moderate-traffic areas (living rooms, bedrooms): Every 2-3 years
  • Low-traffic areas (guest rooms, formal dining rooms): Every 3-5 years

Sealing should be done every time the floors are polished, and potentially more often for areas exposed to water.

What to Expect During Professional Marble Polishing

Knowing the process helps you understand what you're paying for and why professional results are worth the investment.

Step 1: Assessment and Preparation

A stone restoration professional evaluates your marble's current condition, identifies the type of marble, and notes any repairs needed. Furniture is moved and the area is prepared for work.

Step 2: Cleaning and Surface Prep

The floor is thoroughly cleaned to remove all dirt, grime, old sealers, and wax buildup. This gives the technician a clear view of the actual stone condition and ensures nothing interferes with the polishing process.

Step 3: Diamond Grinding and Honing

For floors that need more than a basic polish, diamond abrasive pads are used to remove scratches, etching, and unevenness from the surface. This is done in multiple passes with progressively finer grits, similar to sanding wood.

This step is where the heavy lifting happens and where professional equipment makes the biggest difference compared to DIY attempts.

Step 4: Polishing to Desired Finish

Once the surface is smooth and even, polishing compounds and fine diamond pads bring out the shine. For a high-gloss finish, this involves several additional passes with increasingly fine polishing pads.

The result is a smooth, reflective surface that looks like new stone.

Step 5: Sealing and Protection

A professional-grade penetrating sealer is applied to protect the freshly polished marble from stains and moisture absorption. This sealer soaks into the stone's pores without changing its appearance, creating an invisible barrier.

We back all sealer applications with a 30-day guarantee. If you're not satisfied with the protection, we'll come back and reapply at no charge. Learn more about our floor polishing, sealing, and cleaning services.

Total timeline: Most residential marble polishing projects are completed in one to two days.

DIY vs. Professional Marble Polishing

You can find DIY marble polishing kits at home improvement stores for $50 to $200. But there are real risks to consider before going the DIY route.

Why DIY is risky for marble:

  • Using the wrong polishing compound or abrasive can permanently scratch or etch the surface
  • Uneven pressure creates visible swirl marks and inconsistent finish
  • Consumer-grade equipment simply can't match the results of professional standing floor polishing machines
  • Marble is softer than granite and much less forgiving of mistakes
  • A botched DIY attempt often costs more to fix than the original professional polishing would have

When DIY makes sense:

  • Very small areas like a single countertop
  • Minor spot treatment of a single etch mark
  • Regular maintenance cleaning between professional polishings

For anything larger than a countertop, professional polishing delivers dramatically better results and is more cost-effective when you factor in the risk of damage. Want to see the difference? Try our marble polishing cost calculator for a quick estimate.

How to Save Money on Marble Floor Polishing

Professional marble polishing is already a cost-effective investment compared to replacement, but there are ways to get even more value:

  1. Maintain regularly between polishings. Sweep or dust mop daily to remove abrasive dust and grit. Damp mop weekly with a pH-neutral stone cleaner. This slows down surface wear and extends the time between professional services.
  2. Address problems early. A small stain or etch mark is quick and inexpensive to fix. Left untreated, it can spread or deepen, requiring more intensive (and expensive) restoration later.
  3. Bundle multiple areas. If your entryway, kitchen, and bathrooms all need attention, having them done together reduces the per-square-foot cost since setup and mobilization happen once.
  4. Seal after every polishing. A quality sealer protects your marble from stains and moisture, which means less damage to repair next time. The cost of sealing is minimal compared to the damage prevention it provides.
  5. Use door mats and felt pads. Place mats at every exterior door to catch the desert grit before it reaches your marble. Put felt pads under furniture legs to prevent scratches.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does marble floor polishing cost per square foot?

In Las Vegas, marble floor polishing costs between $3 and $18 per square foot depending on the condition of the marble. Floors in good condition with light dullness cost $3 to $6 per square foot, while floors needing heavy restoration with grinding and repairs cost $12 to $18 per square foot.

Is marble floor polishing worth it?

Yes. Professional marble polishing restores floors to like-new condition at a fraction of replacement cost. Restoration typically costs $3 to $6 per square foot, compared to $40 to $125 per square foot for new marble installation. Polishing also extends the life of your floors by up to 15 years.

How long does marble floor polishing take?

Most residential marble polishing projects are completed in one to two days. A single room can often be done in a few hours. Larger projects or floors requiring heavy restoration may take two to three days.

How often should marble floors be polished?

In Las Vegas, we recommend every one to three years depending on foot traffic. High-traffic areas like entryways and kitchens may need annual polishing, while lower-traffic rooms can go two to three years between services.

Can scratched marble floors be restored?

Yes. Professional diamond honing removes scratches from the marble surface, and subsequent polishing restores the shine. Even deeply scratched marble can be brought back to like-new condition in most cases.

Does marble polishing include sealing?

At Night and Day Stone Restoration, sealing is included with every polishing service. We apply a professional-grade penetrating sealer and back it with a 30-day guarantee. Not all companies include sealing, so be sure to ask when getting estimates.

What's the difference between marble honing and polishing?

Honing produces a smooth, matte or satin finish. Polishing goes further to create a high-gloss, mirror-like shine. Honing is less expensive because it requires fewer steps. Many homeowners choose a polished finish for living areas and a honed finish for bathrooms where slip resistance is important.

Get Your Free Marble Polishing Estimate

Every marble floor is different, and the best way to know exactly what your project will cost is a free, no-obligation assessment. We'll evaluate your marble's condition, measure the area, and give you a straightforward price on the spot.

Night and Day Stone Restoration has been restoring marble floors across the Las Vegas Valley for over 20 years. We're a family-owned company that believes in honest pricing, quality workmanship, and results that speak for themselves.

Call us today at (702) 809-8436 to schedule your free estimate. We serve Henderson, Summerlin, Centennial Hills, Spring Valley, North Las Vegas, Paradise, and the entire Las Vegas Valley.

Se habla espanol: (702) 764-1528