What Is Dekton (3)
What Is Dekton and What Is It Made From?
Dekton is the ultracompact surface taking over modern British kitchens. Here is a plain-English look at what it actually is, the raw materials inside every slab, and why that recipe makes it one of the toughest worktops you can buy.
If you have been comparing kitchen worktops, you have almost certainly come across Dekton. It looks like natural stone, behaves better than most, and carries a premium price tag. But surprisingly few suppliers explain what it genuinely is. Below we break down the material itself, what goes into it, and why those ingredients matter the moment your worktop is fitted.
So, what is Dekton?
Dekton is a man-made ultracompact surface, a category of worktop material often described as sintered stone. It is produced by the Spanish manufacturer Cosentino, the same company behind the well-known Silestone quartz brand. Rather than being quarried as a single block like granite or marble, Dekton is engineered from a carefully chosen blend of natural minerals that are compacted and fused into a single, incredibly dense sheet.
The simplest way to picture it is this: Dekton takes the same raw ingredients used to make porcelain, glass and quartz surfaces, then puts them through extreme heat and pressure to recreate, in a matter of hours, the kind of transformation that natural stone undergoes deep in the earth over thousands of years. The result is a non-porous, highly durable slab that can be used for kitchen worktops, splashbacks, flooring, cladding and even outdoor kitchens.
What is Dekton made from?
Dekton is not a single material. It is a precisely measured mixture of around twenty natural minerals, drawn from the three families of surfaces that have dominated kitchens for decades: glass, porcelain and quartz. By borrowing the strongest characteristics of each, the blend is designed to outperform any one of them on its own.
The exact recipe is a closely guarded trade secret, and proportions vary between colours and collections. What stays consistent is the type of raw materials used and the job each one does. The table below sets out the main ingredients and why they are there.
| Raw material | Surface family it comes from | What it contributes to the slab |
|---|---|---|
| Quartz & silica minerals | Quartz surfaces | Hardness and resistance to scratching and abrasion |
| Feldspar & glass minerals | Glass | Helps the mix fuse and gives chemical and stain resistance |
| Porcelain clays (kaolin) | Porcelain | Body, structure and the ability to take colour evenly |
| Mineral oxides & pigments | Ceramics | Natural colour, tone and the realistic veined patterns |
| Recycled raw materials | Mixed | Reduces virgin material use and supports the carbon-neutral claim |
Worth knowing: Cosentino states that Dekton is produced using a significant proportion of recycled materials and that the product is certified carbon neutral across its lifecycle. That makes it a popular choice for homeowners who want a high-performance surface without ignoring sustainability.
How those ingredients become a worktop
The ingredients alone do not make Dekton special. The process does. Cosentino calls it Sinterized Particle Technology, but the principle is straightforward. The mineral blend is pressed under enormous force, then heated in a kiln at temperatures of roughly 1,200°C. Under that combination of heat and pressure the particles do not simply bake together; they partially melt and bond at a molecular level, leaving almost no gaps between them.
That density is the whole point. With virtually no air pockets or microscopic pores, liquids cannot soak in and the surface has nowhere to harbour stains or bacteria. We cover the full manufacturing journey in our guide on how Dekton is made, but the headline is that its toughness is built in from the raw material stage rather than added as a coating.
Why “non-porous” is the word that matters
A worktop’s porosity decides how much daily maintenance it needs. Porous surfaces drink in wine, oil and coffee, which is why many natural stones must be sealed regularly. Because Dekton is sintered to near-zero porosity, it does not need sealing, resists staining, and wipes clean with everyday products. The chart below shows how its water absorption compares with other popular worktops.
Indicative water absorption by surface (lower is better)
The lower the water absorption, the less a surface stains and the less maintenance it needs over its lifetime.
Is Dekton the same as porcelain or quartz?
This is the most common point of confusion, and the answer is no. Although Dekton borrows raw materials from both, it is its own category. Quartz worktops bind crushed quartz with around 7–10% resin, which is why they can be damaged by very high heat. Porcelain worktops are made mainly from clay. Dekton uses a wider mineral blend, contains no resin, and is sintered at higher intensity, which is why it handles heat and ultraviolet light better than either. If you want the full breakdown, see our dedicated guide on whether Dekton is porcelain, quartz or sintered stone.
Does the colour go all the way through?
For most Dekton colours, the body of the slab carries colour throughout, which keeps cut edges and mitred joints looking consistent. Some heavily veined designs concentrate the most dramatic patterning nearer the surface, much like natural stone, so a good fabricator will plan cuts and edges with the design in mind. We explain this in detail in does the colour run all the way through Dekton.
What sizes and thicknesses does it come in?
Dekton is produced in large-format slabs of roughly 3,200mm by 1,440mm, which means fewer joints across a typical kitchen run. It is available in a range of thicknesses, commonly 4mm, 8mm, 12mm, 20mm and 30mm. Thinner options suit cladding and splashbacks, while 12mm and 20mm are the usual choices for worktops, with thicker or mitred profiles used to create a chunky, solid look.
Is Dekton safe to have in my kitchen?
Yes. Once it is cut, polished and fitted, a Dekton worktop is completely inert and safe for food preparation and family use. Like quartz and many natural stones, Dekton does contain crystalline silica, and the relevant safety considerations relate to the dust created during cutting and fabrication, not the finished surface in your home. Reputable fabricators control this with wet-cutting and extraction. We cover this fully in our guide to Dekton silica content and safety.
Who is Dekton right for?
Dekton suits homeowners who want the natural-stone look without the upkeep, and who value long-term durability over the lowest upfront price. It is an excellent fit for busy family kitchens, for designs with large unbroken runs, and for anyone planning an outdoor kitchen where ultraviolet stability matters. If your priority is the cheapest possible worktop, other materials may suit you better, and our comparison guides on Dekton vs quartz and Dekton vs granite will help you weigh it up.
In short
Dekton is an engineered, sintered ultracompact surface made by Cosentino from a blend of glass, porcelain and quartz minerals, fused under extreme heat and pressure into a dense, non-porous slab. That recipe is exactly what gives it its scratch, heat, stain and ultraviolet resistance, and why it needs no sealing. It is not the same as porcelain or quartz, it is safe once installed, and it is built to last for decades.
Thinking about Dekton for your kitchen?
Our team at Precious Marble will help you choose the right colour, thickness and finish, and give you a clear, no-obligation price for supply and fitting.

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