Water and moisture damage under and around kitchen worktops is a common but often underappreciated problem. While stone worktops themselves are largely unaffected by water, the surfaces around them — upstands, splashbacks, tiles, silicone joints and substrate materials — are vulnerable. Understanding what can be repaired versus what needs replacement is important for managing costs.
Where Water Damage Occurs
- Around the sink cutout — where water pools and seeps under the worktop edge
- Along the back edge between the worktop and upstand — silicone joint failure
- Around the tap holes — water tracking along the underside of the worktop
- Under the hob — condensation from cooking entering through gaps
What Can Be Repaired
Silicone Joint Failure
Failed or mouldy silicone joints between the worktop and upstand, or around the sink, can be removed and replaced. This is a maintenance task rather than a surface repair, but essential to prevent ongoing water ingress.
Surface Discolouration on Stone
Some natural stones can develop discolouration from prolonged water exposure. Granite is largely unaffected, but more porous stones like limestone or slate may darken or develop watermarks. These are typically addressed through cleaning and re-sealing rather than repair.
Laminate Worktop Swelling
Laminate worktops swell and delaminate when exposed to water — particularly at cut edges. Water-damaged laminate worktops cannot be meaningfully repaired; the damaged section typically needs replacement. If the damage is confined to an edge, a specialist can sometimes stabilise it, but the result is rarely invisible.
Prevention Is Better Than Repair
Maintaining silicone joints around sinks and upstands is the most effective way to prevent ongoing water damage under kitchen worktops. If you have existing surface damage from water ingress, contact us to assess what’s repairable →






