It’s tempting to leave a small chip and deal with it “later”. But what actually happens if you leave a chip in your worktop, bath or tile unrepaired? In most cases, the answer is that the problem gets worse — sometimes significantly so.
What Happens to an Unrepaired Chip Over Time
On Stone Worktops (Granite, Quartz, Marble)
A chip exposes the raw substrate beneath the polished surface. On granite and quartz, the exposed material is extremely hard and porous — it absorbs oils, cleaning products and food residue, causing dark staining that spreads from the chip outward. On marble and limestone, the exposed stone is reactive to acids, causing etching to spread from the chip edge. The chip also has a sharp edge that can catch further impacts, causing it to grow.
On Acrylic and Enamel Baths
An unrepaired chip in an acrylic bath exposes the substrate to water. Over time, water seeps behind the surface layer, causing delamination — the surrounding area starts to peel or bubble away from the chip outward. What was a small chip becomes a much larger area of damaged surface. For enamel baths, exposed cast iron underneath a chip will begin to rust.
On Ceramic and Porcelain Tiles
In wet areas, an unrepaired chip allows water to penetrate behind the tile. This can cause the adhesive to fail (hollow tiles), grout to lift, and eventually moisture damage to the wall substrate. A repairable chip becomes a tile replacement job and potentially a replastering job.
The Cost of Waiting
Early repair is consistently cheaper than delayed repair. A chip repaired when first noticed costs a fraction of what the repair costs once staining, delamination or water ingress has set in.
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