How to Identify Your Stone - DIY Testing Guide
Stone Testing Guide
Not sure what type of stone you have? These simple tests can help you narrow it down. All tests are safe when performed correctly on a small, inconspicuous area. You do not need special equipment - just household items.
Water Drop Test
Purpose: Determine how porous your stone is ★☆☆
You need
- A few drops of clean water
- A timer or watch
How to do it
Place 3-4 drops of water on the surface and observe how quickly the water is absorbed. Start your timer.
What the results mean
| Result | Meaning | Likely stones | Care implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Water absorbed in under 1 minute | Very high porosity | Sandstone, Terracotta, Cotto, Cement Tiles | This stone MUST be sealed. Apply two coats of impregnator. Stains will penetrate within seconds on unsealed surfaces. |
| Water absorbed in 1-5 minutes | High porosity | Limestone, Travertine, Concrete, Onyx | Sealing is essential. One coat of impregnator minimum. Clean spills quickly. |
| Water absorbed in 5-20 minutes | Medium porosity | Marble, Bluestone, Dolomite, Ceramic | Sealing recommended, especially in kitchens and bathrooms. The stone has some natural resistance but is not stain-proof. |
| Water sits on surface for 20+ minutes or beads up | Low porosity or already sealed | Granite, Basalt, Slate, Quartzite, Porcelain, Sintered Stone, Soapstone | Stone is naturally dense or has been sealed. Sealing is optional for enhancement. Low maintenance. |
Note: If the stone was previously sealed, the water test shows the seal condition, not the stone's natural porosity. A sealed marble will behave like low-porosity stone.
Acid Test (Vinegar Test)
Purpose: Determine if your stone is calcareous (calcium-based) or siliceous (quartz-based) ★★☆
You need
- White vinegar (household, 5-8%)
- An eyedropper or small spoon
- Paper towel
How to do it
Place a few drops of white vinegar on the stone in a hidden spot. Watch closely for 30-60 seconds. Look for tiny bubbles (fizzing) where the vinegar contacts the stone. Wipe clean immediately after observing.
What the results mean
| Result | Meaning | Likely stones | Care implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vigorous fizzing (visible bubbles within 5 seconds) | Calcareous stone - contains calcium carbonate | Marble, Limestone, Travertine, Onyx, Dolomite, Bluestone | NEVER use acidic cleaners on this stone. No vinegar, no citrus-based cleaners, no acidic limescale removers. Use only pH-neutral products (Lithofin MN Wash & Clean). |
| Slow, slight fizzing (small bubbles after 15-30 seconds) | Partially calcareous - contains some calcium carbonate | Dolomite, Some Sandstones, Cement Tiles, Terrazzo | Use acidic products with caution. Test first. Prefer pH-neutral cleaners. |
| No reaction at all | Siliceous stone - quartz or silicate-based | Granite, Quartzite, Slate, Basalt, Gneiss, Porphyry, Soapstone | Stone is acid-resistant. You can safely use acidic cleaners for limescale removal. More cleaning product options available. |
- The vinegar WILL leave a small etch mark on calcareous stone - that is the point of the test. Only do this on a hidden area.
- Rinse the test area with water immediately after observing the result.
- On polished marble, even a few seconds of vinegar contact creates a visible dull spot. Choose your test location carefully.
Note: This is the single most useful test for stone identification. The acid-sensitive/acid-resistant distinction determines which entire product line you should use.
Scratch Test (Hardness Test)
Purpose: Estimate the hardness of your stone on the Mohs scale ★★☆
You need
- Your fingernail (Mohs 2.5)
- A copper coin (Mohs 3.5)
- A steel knife blade (Mohs 5.5)
- A piece of glass or quartz crystal (Mohs 7)
How to do it
Try to scratch the stone surface in a hidden spot, starting with the softest tool. Use firm, steady pressure. A scratch means the tool is harder than the stone.
What the results mean
| Result | Meaning | Likely stones | Care implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Fingernail scratches the surface | Very soft stone - Mohs 1-2 | Soapstone | Extremely soft. Scratches are normal and part of the patina. Can be sanded out with fine sandpaper. |
| Coin scratches but fingernail does not | Soft stone - Mohs 3-4 | Marble, Limestone, Travertine, Onyx, Dolomite | Use felt pads under furniture. Avoid dragging objects. Sand and grit are your enemy - use entrance mats. |
| Knife scratches but coin does not | Medium-hard stone - Mohs 4-5 | Sandstone, Slate, Bluestone, Concrete, Terrazzo | Reasonably scratch-resistant in daily use. Still avoid dragging heavy furniture. |
| Nothing scratches the surface (or only glass/quartz does) | Hard stone - Mohs 6-7+ | Granite, Quartzite, Basalt, Gneiss, Porphyry, Porcelain, Sintered Stone | Very scratch-resistant. Suitable for high-traffic areas. Minimal risk from daily use. |
- Do not test on a visible area - even if the stone is hard, the test can leave marks.
- A metal mark (grey line) is different from a scratch. Metal marks can be removed; scratches cannot.
- On glazed tiles, you are testing the glaze hardness, not the tile body.
Tap Test (Sound Test)
Purpose: Distinguish dense stone from porous stone, and solid tiles from hollow-mounted tiles ★☆☆
You need
- A metal key, coin, or small hammer
How to do it
Tap the stone surface gently with a metal object. Listen to the sound. Compare the sound in different areas of the same surface.
What the results mean
| Result | Meaning | Likely stones | Care implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clear, ringing 'clink' sound | Dense, vitrified material with good contact to substrate | Granite, Basalt, Quartzite, Porcelain, Clinker, Sintered Stone | Dense stone = low maintenance, good durability. |
| Dull, muted 'thud' sound | Porous material or tile with voids underneath | Sandstone, Limestone, Terracotta, Cotto, Concrete | If the thud is uniform: porous stone, needs sealing. If only in certain spots: possible hollow mounting (tile not fully bonded to substrate). |
| Hollow, drum-like sound in specific spots | Tile is not bonded to the substrate in that area | - | This is a mounting problem, not a stone type indicator. Hollow tiles can crack under pressure. Consult a tiler. |
Note: The tap test is especially useful for clinker identification - the name literally comes from the 'clink' sound. Clinker rings clearly; terracotta thuds.
Light Test (Translucency Test)
Purpose: Identify translucent stones (marble, onyx) vs opaque stones ★☆☆
You need
- A strong flashlight or phone torch
How to do it
In a dark room, hold the flashlight against the stone from behind (if a thin slab) or press it against the surface. Look for light passing through the stone.
What the results mean
| Result | Meaning | Likely stones | Care implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Light passes through - stone glows warmly | Translucent stone - crystalline calcareous structure | Onyx, Marble | Translucent stones are always calcareous and acid-sensitive. Handle with extra care. |
| Slight glow at edges of thin pieces only | Semi-translucent - thin marble or alabaster | Marble, Travertine | Confirms calcareous composition. Use pH-neutral products only. |
| No light passes through at all | Opaque stone - most stone types | Granite, Slate, Basalt, Sandstone, Limestone, Porcelain, Concrete | Does not narrow down the type much, but rules out onyx and very pure white marble. |
Note: This test is most useful for distinguishing real onyx from dyed marble or glass. Real onyx glows warmly and shows internal banding when backlit. Onyx is the only building stone that is routinely backlit as a design feature.
Weight Test (Density Check)
Purpose: Compare relative density - helps distinguish natural stone from engineered alternatives ★☆☆
You need
- A sample tile or offcut of your stone
- A sample of a known material for comparison
How to do it
Hold a tile or piece of stone in your hand. Compare the weight to a piece of similar size in a material you know. Natural stone varies significantly in weight.
What the results mean
| Result | Meaning | Likely stones | Care implication |
|---|---|---|---|
| Very heavy for its size | Dense stone - igneous or high-grade metamorphic | Granite, Basalt, Quartzite, Porphyry, Gneiss, Sintered Stone | Dense stone is generally more durable and lower maintenance. |
| Medium weight | Most natural stones and ceramics | Marble, Limestone, Slate, Bluestone, Porcelain, Terrazzo | Standard weight range - does not distinguish between types alone. |
| Surprisingly light | Porous stone or lightweight engineered material | Sandstone, Terracotta, Cotto, Pumice | Light weight usually means high porosity. Sealing is likely essential. |
Note: This test is rough and works best with sample tiles. It helps distinguish granite (heavy) from sandstone (light) or real stone from lightweight engineered alternatives.
Combining Tests for Best Results
No single test identifies a stone type definitively. Combine 2-3 tests for reliable identification.
White countertop - marble, quartzite, or quartz-composite?
Tests: acid-test, scratch-test
Acid fizzes + coin scratches = marble. No acid reaction + nothing scratches = quartzite. No acid reaction + perfectly uniform pattern = quartz-composite (engineered).
Dark floor tile - granite, basalt, slate, or porcelain?
Tests: scratch-test, sound-test, light-test
Very hard + rings clearly + speckled crystals = granite. Very hard + rings + uniformly fine = basalt. Layered cleft texture = slate. Perfectly uniform printed pattern + rings hollow = porcelain tile.
Rustic red-brown floor - terracotta, cotto, or clinker?
Tests: water-drop-test, sound-test
Water absorbs instantly + thud sound = terracotta or cotto. Water sits on surface + clear clink = clinker. The firing temperature determines everything: terracotta is porous and soft, clinker is dense and hard.
Beige floor - limestone, travertine, or sandstone?
Tests: acid-test, water-drop-test
Acid fizzes + visible holes/pits = travertine. Acid fizzes + uniform surface = limestone. No acid reaction + very porous = sandstone.
When to call a professional
If you cannot identify your stone after testing, or if the stone has unusual characteristics, consult a stone specialist or send a sample to a geological testing service. Misidentifying your stone and using the wrong products can cause permanent damage - especially confusing calcareous stone (acid-sensitive) with siliceous stone (acid-resistant).
Know your stone? Find the right products.
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