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Italian Carrara-style quartz · Soft gray veining on white

White Carrara Quartz

White Carrara is part of ST Stones' Carrara line — engineered quartz modeled on the classic Italian Carrara marble. Carrara reads softer and more neutral than Calacatta, with finer gray veining on a white background and less dramatic figure. Carrara-look quartz is one of the most timeless choices for a Palm Beach County kitchen — it pairs cleanly with virtually any cabinet finish and floor tone.

White Carrara
White Carrara quartz slab

About White Carrara

White Carrara quartz - what to know

Character

How White Carrara reads in a kitchen

White Carrara reads as a clean white quartz with a calm, uncluttered field and minimal contrast. It's a workhorse choice that doesn't compete with cabinetry, floors, or backsplash.

South Florida fit

Why quartz works in our climate

Quartz is one of the strongest countertop choices for Palm Beach County kitchens. The surface is non-porous (so it won't absorb spills the way a natural stone can), it's highly heat-resistant up to the typical countertop range, and it shrugs off humidity — no sealing required, ever. White Carrara ships with the same maintenance profile as every other quartz in this catalog.

Pairings

Cabinetry, hardware, and design context

White Carrara pairs cleanly with brushed nickel or matte-black hardware and works with virtually any cabinet color — white, gray, hunter green, or navy. We always recommend laying the actual slab next to your cabinet sample before final commitment — quartz photographs differently from how it reads in person under your kitchen's actual lighting.

Specs at a Glance

White Carrara - quick reference

MaterialQuartz
Color familyWhite
Series / lineCarrara
Thickness2CM or 3CM available
Slab formatStandard slab format (confirmed at consultation)
FinishPolished
CareDaily wipe with mild soap; no sealing required (non-porous engineered surface)
Best applicationsFull perimeter, kitchen islands, master bathroom vanities, butler pantries
Service areaAll Palm Beach County, FL - free in-home consultation

Cabinet Pairings

Best paired with White Carrara

Our top cabinet recommendations for a White quartz countertop, hand-picked from the White install palette we use most often in Palm Beach County.

Related slabs

Other Carrara and White options

Compare Materials

Considering something other than White Carrara?

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Where we install White Carrara - and what to read next

Get In Touch

Quote on White Carrara

Let's build something beautiful together.

Interested in White Carrara quartz? Request a free in-home consultation and we'll price your kitchen or bathroom with this slab — itemized quote, 3D rendering, no obligation.

Phone(561) 401-0064
Service AreaAll Cities in Palm Beach County
HoursMon - Fri: 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Sat: By appointment

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about White Carrara

Does White Carrara need to be sealed?

No. Quartz is engineered (roughly 90–93% natural quartz aggregate bound with resin) and is non-porous, so it never needs sealing. Wipe daily with mild soap and water; avoid harsh abrasives and leaving acidic spills (citrus, vinegar) sitting on the surface for extended periods.

Is White Carrara heat resistant?

Quartz handles brief heat contact well, but the resin binder can discolor under prolonged direct heat. Use a trivet for hot pots and pans straight off the stove. Don't set a heat-treated cast-iron skillet directly on the slab. No quartz is heat-proof in the way a true natural stone or solid-surface stone like soapstone is.

How does White Carrara compare to natural Calacatta or Carrara marble?

Engineered quartz mimics the look of natural marble but is dramatically more durable for a daily-use kitchen: non-porous, scratch-resistant, no etching from acids, no sealing. Natural marble has a softer, more living-stone feel but stains, etches, and needs sealing. Most South Florida clients pick quartz for the kitchen and reserve true marble for the powder-room vanity.

Countertop care, fabrication, and certification standards referenced on this page follow guidelines from the Natural Stone Institute, the NKBA — National Kitchen + Bath Association, and the ISFA — International Surface Fabricators Association.