Marble surface

Marble

Timeless veining, soft and reactive.

Marble is a metamorphic stone prized for its luminous depth and flowing veining. It is calcium-based, which makes it beautiful but reactive — acids etch it and oils stain it if left unsealed.

Telltale traits

  • soft veining
  • cool tones
  • polished sheen

Best for

  • Bathroom vanities
  • Fireplace surrounds
  • Low-traffic floors
  • Pastry stations

Avoid for

  • Heavy-use kitchen counters
  • Outdoor patios in freeze-thaw climates

Cleaning routine

Daily

Wipe with a soft cloth and warm water, or pH-neutral stone cleaner.

Weekly

Clean with a dedicated marble-safe cleaner; dry with a microfiber cloth to avoid water marks.

Deep clean

Apply a stone-safe poultice for stains; re-polish dull areas with marble polishing powder.

Sealing

Yes — Every 6–12 months

Use a penetrating impregnating sealer designed for marble.

What to avoid

VinegarLemon juiceBleachAmmoniaAbrasive padsGeneric bathroom cleaners

When to call a pro

Call a stone restoration pro for deep etches, large stains, or to refinish a polished surface.

Safe products & ingredients

Stone family: Calcium-based (acid-sensitive)

Use these products

  • pH-neutral stone cleaner (e.g. MB Stone Care MB-5, Granite Gold Daily Cleaner, Method Daily Granite)
  • Microfiber cloth + warm distilled water for daily wipe-downs
  • Impregnating penetrating sealer (e.g. Miracle 511, Aqua Mix Sealer's Choice Gold) every 6–12 months
  • Marble polishing powder for light etches

Look for these ingredients

  • Neutral pH 7–8 surfactants
  • Distilled or filtered water
  • Food-grade mineral oil (only on honed soap residue test patches)
  • Calcium carbonate / cerium oxide polishing compounds

Never use on this stone

Avoid these products

  • Vinegar, lemon juice, or any citrus cleaner
  • Bleach, ammonia, or all-purpose sprays (Windex, Lysol, 409, Mr. Clean)
  • Tub & tile or grout cleaners (CLR, Lime-A-Way, Soft Scrub)
  • Bar Keepers Friend, Magic Eraser, or any abrasive pad
  • DIY baking-soda + vinegar pastes

Scan labels for these ingredients

  • Acetic acid (vinegar)
  • Citric acid
  • Hydrochloric / muriatic acid
  • Phosphoric acid
  • Sodium hypochlorite (bleach)
  • Ammonium hydroxide (ammonia)
  • Oxalic acid

Do's and don'ts at a glance

Do

  • Blot — never wipe — spills immediately, especially wine, coffee, oil, and citrus
  • Use coasters, trivets, and cutting boards on counters
  • Dust mop floors before damp mopping with a neutral cleaner
  • Reseal on a 6–12 month cadence; test with a water bead

Don't

  • Don't let acidic foods sit — even a lemon slice etches in minutes
  • Don't scrub with green pads, steel wool, or scouring powder
  • Don't use 'natural' or 'green' cleaners without checking the pH
  • Don't apply waxes or topical sealers that build a film

Frequently asked questions

Does marble stain easily?

Yes — oils, wine, and dyes can stain unsealed marble. Reseal every 6–12 months and blot spills immediately.

Why does my marble have dull spots?

Those are etches caused by acidic substances (lemon, vinegar, some cleaners) reacting with the calcium carbonate. They can be polished out.

Can I use marble in a kitchen?

Yes, but expect a lived-in patina. Choose honed marble, seal regularly, and accept some etching as character.

Popular Marble varieties

Step-by-step guides

How to clean Marble
Marble is acid-sensitive — even a splash of lemon, vinegar, or wine can etch it. Here's the pH-neutral routine that won't dull the polish.
How to seal Marble
Marble drinks water and oil faster than most stones. Test, seal, dwell, wipe — here's the full process and how often to repeat.
How to polish Marble
Marble polishing powder fills micro-scratches and brings back the gloss. Here's the DIY method and when the damage is past saving.
How to remove oil stains from Marble
Oil sinks into marble fast and darkens the stone. A baking soda poultice draws it back out — here's the recipe and dwell time.
How to remove wine stains from Marble
Red wine stains marble within minutes. Hydrogen peroxide poultice + the right wait time pulls the color back out of the pores.
How to remove rust stains from Marble
Rust on marble is one of the toughest stains — and acid removers destroy the finish. Here's the only stone-safe method that actually works.
How to remove water rings stains from Marble
Water rings on marble are usually etch marks, not stains. Here's how to tell the difference and the polishing-powder fix for both.
How to repair etch marks on Marble
Etch marks are dissolved spots, not stains — polishing powder is the fix. Here's the DIY method and the etch depth that means you call a pro.
How to repair scratches on Marble
Light scratches on marble buff out with fine compound. Here's the technique that won't create a glossy "patch" visible in the light.
How to repair chips on Marble
Chips on marble are repaired with color-matched stone epoxy, not glue. Here's how to mix the color and feather the fill flush.
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