One of the first questions customers ask when they discover damage to a bath, worktop, tile or floor is: how much will this cost to repair? The honest answer is that surface repair costs vary significantly depending on what’s damaged, how severely, and where in the UK you are — but this guide gives you realistic ranges so you can plan and budget effectively.
How Surface Repair Pricing Works
Surface repair pricing is based on the time required to do the job well. The main factors are: the type and size of the damage; the material being repaired (some are more complex to match and finish than others); the number of items being repaired in a single visit; and location (travel costs affect pricing in remote areas). Most repairs are priced on a per-item or per-visit basis.
Bath Chip Repair Cost
A single chip in an acrylic or enamel bath — the most common repair request — is priced after a free assessment, depending on size, location and accessibility. Multiple chips on the same bath are usually more cost-effective per chip. A full bath enamel re-spray is a larger job and is priced after a free assessment, depending on bath size and condition — still far less than a new bath and installation.
Worktop Chip Repair Cost
Kitchen worktop chip repair — on laminate, granite, quartz or solid wood — is priced after a free assessment, depending on size, material and accessibility. Burn repair on laminate worktops tends to be at the lower end. Stone chip repair can be at the higher end due to material cost and colour-matching requirements.
Tile Chip Repair Cost
A single chip repair on a ceramic or porcelain tile — wall or floor — is priced after a free assessment. Multiple tile chips in the same visit are more cost-effective per chip. Specialist tiles (large format, stone-effect, heavily textured) may be at the higher end due to the difficulty of achieving an invisible repair.
Floor Damage Repair Cost
Hardwood, LVT and laminate floor scratch and chip repair is priced after a free assessment, depending on the extent of the damage and material. Larger areas of scratching on hardwood may warrant refinishing rather than spot repair — we’ll advise accordingly.
Comparing Repair vs Replacement Cost
The true cost comparison isn’t just material cost — it’s the total cost of replacement including labour, installation, redecoration and the disruption involved. A new bath with installation typically costs £800–£2,500+. A new kitchen worktop with fitting costs £400–£1,500+. Tile replacement (finding matching tiles, removing grout, removing and relaying tiles, regrouting) costs typically £150–£400 per tile area. Against those comparisons, surface repair is almost always the better financial choice for localised damage.
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