Neolith is a sintered compact stone — an ultra-hard, non-porous surface made by compressing raw minerals at very high temperature. It’s available as worktops, floor tiles and wall cladding, and is increasingly popular in premium UK kitchens and commercial settings. When Neolith chips or cracks, professional repair is possible — though it requires different techniques to standard quartz repair. Here’s what you need to know.
What Makes Neolith Different to Repair?
Neolith’s sintered structure means it’s extremely hard and dense — harder than quartz. This means chips tend to have very clean, defined edges. It also means the material beneath the surface is homogeneous (no polymer binder like quartz), which affects how the repair compound bonds and cures. Specialist epoxy systems designed for ceramic and sintered stone are required.
Popular Neolith Series and Repair
Neolith’s popular UK ranges include the Iron, Classtone, Estatuario, Krater and Strata series. Pattern-heavy series like Estatuario (which mimics Carrara marble) require careful vein matching during repair. Solid colour series like Iron are more straightforward to match.
Edge vs Surface Chips on Neolith
Edge chips on Neolith — particularly on thin 6mm or 12mm sheet material used as wall panels — can be repaired but the very thin material creates some constraints. Worktop-thickness Neolith (20mm+) is more straightforward to repair at edges.
Get a Neolith Repair Assessment
For Neolith damage, we recommend sending clear photographs of the damage and the Neolith colour name before booking a visit so we can bring the most appropriate repair materials. Contact us for a Neolith repair quote →
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