u/CelebrationGlobal460

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I'm updating a few upstairs bathrooms in my house before eventually selling, and I'm trying to choose the best quartz look for resale value. The vanities will be painted in a light warm white/greige tone with brushed nickel fixtures (trying to keep everything clean, timeless, and appealing to buyers — not too trendy but still upscale).
Here are the 3 options I'm considering:
OPTION 1: White quartz with subtle gray veining (Calacatta-style look)
OPTION 2: White quartz with small sparkly speckles
OPTION 3: Solid clean white quartz with almost no pattern
My concern:
I feel like the fully plain white might look a little
"builder basic"
The speckled one feels safe/clean but maybe less upscale?
The veined one feels more custom/high-end, but I don't want it to look trendy or too busy for resale For a family home in a suburban market, which one would you personally choose for the best resale appeal?
Would also love opinions from: realtors flippers contractors
people who recently sold a house
Thanks!

u/CelebrationGlobal460 — 7 days ago

I'm updating a few upstairs bathrooms in my house before eventually selling, and I'm trying to choose the best quartz look for resale value. The vanities will be painted in a light warm white/greige tone with brushed nickel fixtures (trying to keep everything clean, timeless, and appealing to buyers — not too trendy but still upscale).
Here are the 3 options I'm considering:
OPTION 1: White quartz with subtle gray veining (Calacatta-style look)
OPTION 2: White quartz with small sparkly speckles
OPTION 3: Solid clean white quartz with almost no pattern
My concern:
I feel like the fully plain white might look a little
"builder basic"
The speckled one feels safe/clean but maybe less upscale?
The veined one feels more custom/high-end, but I don't want it to look trendy or too busy for resale For a family home in a suburban market, which one would you personally choose for the best resale appeal?
Would also love opinions from: realtors flippers contractors
people who recently sold a house
Thanks!

u/CelebrationGlobal460 — 7 days ago

I'm updating a few upstairs bathrooms in my house before eventually selling, and I'm trying to choose the best quartz look for resale value. The vanities will be painted in a light warm white/greige tone with brushed nickel fixtures (trying to keep everything clean, timeless, and appealing to buyers — not too trendy but still upscale).
Here are the 3 options I'm considering:
OPTION 1: White quartz with subtle gray veining (Calacatta-style look)
OPTION 2: White quartz with small sparkly speckles
OPTION 3: Solid clean white quartz with almost no pattern
My concern:
I feel like the fully plain white might look a little
"builder basic"
The speckled one feels safe/clean but maybe less upscale?
The veined one feels more custom/high-end, but I don't want it to look trendy or too busy for resale For a family home in a suburban market, which one would you personally choose for the best resale appeal?
Would also love opinions from: realtors flippers contractors
people who recently sold a house
Thanks!

u/CelebrationGlobal460 — 7 days ago

I'm updating a few upstairs bathrooms in my house before eventually selling, and I'm trying to choose the best quartz look for resale value. The vanities will be painted in a light warm white/greige tone with brushed nickel fixtures (trying to keep everything clean, timeless, and appealing to buyers — not too trendy but still upscale).
Here are the 3 options I'm considering:
OPTION 1: White quartz with subtle gray veining (Calacatta-style look)
OPTION 2: White quartz with small sparkly speckles
OPTION 3: Solid clean white quartz with almost no pattern
My concern:
I feel like the fully plain white might look a little
"builder basic"
The speckled one feels safe/clean but maybe less upscale?
The veined one feels more custom/high-end, but I don't want it to look trendy or too busy for resale For a family home in a suburban market, which one would you personally choose for the best resale appeal?
Would also love opinions from: realtors flippers contractors
people who recently sold a house
Thanks!

u/CelebrationGlobal460 — 7 days ago

I'm updating a few upstairs bathrooms in my house before eventually selling, and I'm trying to choose the best quartz look for resale value. The vanities will be painted in a light warm white/greige tone with brushed nickel fixtures (trying to keep everything clean, timeless, and appealing to buyers — not too trendy but still upscale).
Here are the 3 options I'm considering:
OPTION 1: White quartz with subtle gray veining (Calacatta-style look)
OPTION 2: White quartz with small sparkly speckles
OPTION 3: Solid clean white quartz with almost no pattern
My concern:
I feel like the fully plain white might look a little
"builder basic"
The speckled one feels safe/clean but maybe less upscale?
The veined one feels more custom/high-end, but I don't want it to look trendy or too busy for resale For a family home in a suburban market, which one would you personally choose for the best resale appeal?
Would also love opinions from: realtors flippers contractors
people who recently sold a house
Thanks!

u/CelebrationGlobal460 — 7 days ago

I’m updating a few upstairs bathrooms in my house before eventually selling, and I’m trying to choose the best quartz look for resale value. The vanities will be painted in a light warm white/greige tone with brushed nickel fixtures (trying to keep everything clean, timeless, and appealing to buyers — not too trendy but still upscale).
Here are the 3 options I’m considering:
White quartz with subtle gray veining (Calacatta-style look)
White quartz with small sparkly speckles
Solid clean white quartz with almost no pattern
My concern:
I feel like the fully plain white might look a little “builder basic”
The speckled one feels safe/clean but maybe less upscale?
The veined one feels more custom/high-end, but I don’t want it to look trendy or too busy for resale
For a family home in a suburban market, which one would you personally choose for the best resale appeal?
Would also love opinions from:
realtors
flippers
contractors
people who recently sold a house
Thanks!

u/CelebrationGlobal460 — 7 days ago