How to Laminate a Countertop

Photo:  Kolin Smith

Add new comment

The rules: Keep it clean, and stay on the subject or we might delete your comment. If you see inappropriate language, report the comment to us.

1000 characters remaining

  • 6 hours
  • About $275 to $500

Difficulty: Moderate though it takes finesse to keep from gluing the pieces together prematurely, and trimming with a router requires patience.

Okay, people, give us a little room to work here. Because we'd like to fold the laundry without having the delicates drop off the dryer into the dust bunnies, and we sure could use a place to lay out the parts of those "some assembly required" projects. Please, we beg of you, give us a proper countertop.

We're not holding out for granite—save that for the dream kitchen. All we really need is some smooth, clean laminate, a surface that can serve its purpose simply and with style. Laminate is inexpensive, comes in hundreds of designs (some to mimic that out-of-the-budget granite), and when glued onto particleboard makes a rather convenient work surface. As This Old House technical editor Mark Powers shows on the following pages, it's easy to turn a disorganized garage, mudroom, or shed into a multifunctional workroom in one quick weekend. With that kind of setup, we'd really be able to spread out and get something done.

Crystalline Dune laminate, about $3 per square foot, WilsonArt.

Cabinets from Omega Cabinetry, through Jilco Window Corp.

Next

Helpful Info

Skill Builder: How to Miter Corners in a Laminate Countertop
Video: How to Laminate a Countertop
Article: Where to Find Affordable Kitchen Counters
Skill Builder: Gluing Laminate Trim
Ask This Old House: Painting Over Plastic Laminate

Need More Info? Ask a question on Kitchens

Advertisement

This Old House > To Go

  • Add ThisOldHouse to my:
  • Add
Advertisement

Project of the Week

finished arbor bench with woman sitting in it

Weekend Remodel: How to Build an Arbor Bench

Go

See More on Kitchens

AMERICA'S MOST TRUSTED HOME IMPROVEMENT BRAND