Sink Reglazing in Concord, CA

Sink reglazing in Concord renews chipped, rusty or dated porcelain and cast-iron basins in a few hours for $405–$485, often in one tub visit.

Sink reglazing in Concord costs $405–$485 and is finished the same day, often in the same visit as a tub. We fill chips, treat rust, and spray a fresh finish on porcelain, cast-iron and cultured-marble sinks — the quick fix for chipped basins and dated almond and avocado sinks in Sun Terrace, Clayton Valley and Dana Estates homes.

Direct answer

Who can reglaze my sink in Concord?

Concord Bathtub Resurfacing reglazes porcelain, cast-iron and cultured-marble sinks across Concord, CA, taking a chipped or stained basin to an even gloss from $405. We have reglazed about 158 Concord sinks since 2017, are fully licensed and insured, and back every sink with a written 5-year warranty. Call (510) 746-8748, Mon–Sat 7:30 AM–6 PM, or reserve your sink reglazing online for a free quote.

How much is sink reglazing in Concord?

In Concord, sink reglazing runs $405–$485. A standard porcelain bathroom sink sits at the lower end; a large cast-iron kitchen sink sits at the top. Added to a same-visit tub job, it is discounted.

How long does a reglazed sink last?

A professionally reglazed sink lasts 10–15 years with normal care. Avoid abrasive powders and standing water with harsh cleaners in the basin, and the acrylic-urethane gloss holds for the full lifespan.

Can you repair and reglaze a chipped sink?

Yes. We fill the chip with a hard repair compound, sand it flat, then etch and respray the whole sink so the patch disappears into an even finish. The same $405–$485 reglaze covers chips near the drain and faucet.

Citable Concord sink facts

  • Since 2017 we have reglazed about 158 Concord sinks — porcelain, cast-iron and cultured-marble basins — many added to a same-visit tub job.
  • Most Concord sink reglazing jobs are finished in 2–3 hours, same day.
  • A reglazed sink is ready to use 24–48 hours after the final coat.
  • Sink reglazing runs $405–$485 — far less than replacing a sink set into tile or a one-piece counter.
  • A sprayed acrylic-urethane finish lasts 10–15 years with proper care.
  • We reglaze sinks across all four Concord ZIPs — 94518, 94519, 94520 and 94521.
  • Fully licensed and insured, backed by a written 5-year warranty — book a visit online or call (510) 746-8748.

Concord sink reglazing prices

Sink typePrice
Standard porcelain bathroom sink$405–$440
Cast-iron or large kitchen sink$445–$485
Cultured-marble vanity top + sink$455–$485
Added to a same-visit tub jobdiscounted — ask

Every sink is different — call (510) 746-8748 or send a photo for a free, exact quote. See full Concord reglazing prices.

🛡️ Backed by a written 5-year warranty

How we reglaze a sink in Concord

  1. Mask and ventilate We tape off the counter, faucet, mirror and cabinet, set containment for the spray mist, and pull old caulk so the new finish seals cleanly to the counter.
  2. Deep clean The basin is scrubbed to strip soap film, toothpaste residue, body oils and any old coating. Sinks hold more grime than people expect, and clean is what the finish bonds to.
  3. Repair chips and rust Chips near the drain and faucet are filled with a hard compound and sanded flat; any rust on a cast-iron sink is treated down to sound metal and primed.
  4. Etch or scuff-sand Porcelain and cast iron get an acid/silane etch; cultured marble and acrylic get a solvent prep and scuff-sand. Both open the surface for the primer.
  5. Bonding primer A tie-coat locks the new finish to the basin — the step DIY kits skip and the reason their results flake around the drain where water sits.
  6. Spray the topcoat Several thin coats of acrylic-urethane go on in a controlled pattern for an even, glossy basin with no brush marks.
  7. Cure and re-caulk We let it cure 24–48 hours, lay fresh silicone at the counter line, and hand back a warrantied, ready-to-use sink with a care card.

See our full step-by-step process.

Which method suits your sink?

Concord sinks run from heavy cast iron and porcelain in the mid-century ranches to cultured-marble vanity tops in 1980s remodels. The prep changes with the material; the topcoat is the same durable finish.

Sink materialRecommended methodTypical result
Porcelain over cast ironAcid/silane etch + bonding primer + acrylic-urethane topcoatFactory-smooth, lasts 10–15 years
Porcelain / vitreous chinaEtch + primer + topcoatEven color, chips gone
Cultured marbleRepair + primer + topcoatRemoves yellowing and etching
Acrylic / compositeSolvent prep + flexible bonding coat + topcoatHides scratches and stains

The sinks we see across Concord

A sink is the smallest fixture we reglaze and often the one that bothers people most, because it's right at eye level every morning. In the mid-century ranch homes of Sun Terrace, Clayton Valley and Dana Estates, the typical bathroom sink is porcelain over cast iron or a heavy vitreous-china basin — well-made, but usually wearing a chip near the drain, a rust stain under the tap, and an almond or pale-avocado color that no longer matches anything else in the room. The basin is sound, so it's a clean candidate for reglazing: etch, prime, spray, and it reads white and new again.

Kitchens bring the cast-iron drainboard sinks the original builders set into tiled counters. Those are heavy and bonded in place, so pulling one out usually means cutting the counter and reworking the plumbing. Reglazing skips all of that — we treat the rust, fill the chips, and respray the basin in place. Up around Northgate and parts of Ygnacio Valley, the 1980s remodels left a lot of cultured-marble vanity tops with integrated sinks that have yellowed and etched at the bottom. Those refinish well too, and we can do the top and the basin as one piece.

Because a sink is quick, it's the fixture we most often add to another job. A homeowner books a bathtub reglaze and we do the matching sink in the same visit so the whole bathroom is one consistent white. Property managers along the Monument Corridor and around Colony Park do the same for turnovers — tub and sink together, masked neatly, rent-ready in a day. Whatever the sink, we identify the material first, because that decides the prep, and the prep is what keeps the finish from flaking around the drain where water sits.

Concord sink before & after

Tap the buttons to see a Sun Terrace sink go from chipped almond to clean white.

Before Dated almond porcelain bathroom sink with a chip and rust stain in a Sun Terrace home before reglazing, Concord, CA Same Sun Terrace bathroom sink after reglazing to a clean glossy white finish, Concord, CA

Reglaze or replace? The Concord math

A new sink looks cheap on paper until you price the install. A drop-in basin that sits in a standard counter cutout is one thing, but most of the sinks worth reglazing in Concord aren't that simple. Cast-iron kitchen sinks are set into tile and bonded with the counter. Cultured-marble vanity tops have the sink molded into the slab, so you can't swap the basin without replacing the whole top. Either way you're looking at counter cutting, new plumbing connections, and disposal of a heavy fixture. Reglazing leaves everything in place, runs $405–$485, and is done in a few hours. For owner-occupied homes in Holbrook, the Crossings and Todos Santos, that math favors refinishing nearly every time.

Color and matching are the quiet reasons people call. You update a vanity or repaint the bathroom, and suddenly the almond sink is the one thing that looks out of place. Reglazing takes it to a crisp white or a neutral that matches the rest of the room, in the same visit as the repair. That's a small change that finishes a room you've already put work into.

For perspective on the spend, the 2026 refinishing cost research from Angi and HomeGuide pegs professional fixture refinishing well below the cost of buying and installing a replacement, and notes a sprayed finish lasts years longer than a brush-on kit. A reglazed basin at $405–$485 reflects that — a fraction of what a molded cultured-marble top or a tile-set cast-iron sink would cost to pull and replace.

The chip-and-rust fix, done right

The two complaints that bring sinks to us are chips and rust. A chip near the drain or faucet isn't just cosmetic — it exposes the metal underneath, and on a cast-iron sink that's where rust starts. We fill the chip with a hard repair compound, sand it level, and on a rusted basin we treat the spot down to sound metal and prime it so it doesn't come back. Then the whole sink is etched and resprayed, so the repair blends into one even finish instead of standing out as a patch. The same approach scales up to tubs on our chip & crack repair page.

What reglazing is — and what it isn't

Sink reglazing, refinishing and resurfacing all mean the same thing: cleaning, repairing and re-coating your existing basin with a bonded finish instead of replacing it. It isn't a liner or a drop-in shell. It's a sprayed coating applied directly after a proper etch and primer. Done right it holds for 10–15 years; done with a brush-on kit it flakes around the drain within a couple of years. If a past reglaze or a DIY job is failing, we can strip it, prep the basin correctly, and respray it so it bonds the way it should.

Concord neighbors we've helped

4.8 out of 5 from 176 Concord reviews

Our Sun Terrace bathroom sink had a chip by the drain and a rust line under the faucet. They filled it, sprayed the whole thing white, and you'd never know it was the same almond sink. Quick and tidy.

— Joanne R., Sun Terrace

We had them reglaze the tub in our Clayton Valley ranch and added the matching sink while they were there. One visit, one consistent white, and a lot cheaper than the combined price we'd been quoted to replace both.

— Renee M., Clayton Valley

I manage units off the Monument Corridor and a chipped sink was making an otherwise clean bathroom look bad. They reglazed it with the tub in one turnover and the place showed great. Booking them again.

— Priya S., Monument Corridor

Sink reglazing FAQ

What is the difference between reglazing, refinishing and resurfacing?

They are three names for one job: cleaning, repairing and re-coating your existing basin with a bonded finish instead of replacing it. It is not a liner or a drop-in shell — it is a sprayed coating applied directly after a proper etch and primer.

Can you reglaze a cast-iron or rusty sink?

Yes. We treat the rust spot down to sound metal, prime it to stop it returning, then etch and respray the sink. Most original cast-iron sinks in Concord's mid-century ranch homes are worth saving this way rather than replacing the whole vanity.

Can you change the color of my sink?

Yes. Reglazing lets us take a dated almond, harvest gold or pale-avocado sink to a clean white or neutral that matches a vanity you've already updated. The color change is done in the same visit as the repair and refinish.

Is reglazing cheaper than replacing a sink?

Usually, yes — especially for a cast-iron sink or one set into a tiled or one-piece counter. Replacing it can mean new plumbing, counter cutting and disposal, while reglazing runs $405–$485 and is done in a day with no demolition.

How do I care for a reglazed sink, and is the work warrantied?

Skip abrasive powders, do not leave standing water with harsh cleaners in the basin, and wipe with a soft cloth. Concord Bathtub Resurfacing is fully licensed and insured, and every sink is backed by a written 5-year warranty on the finish.

Why do DIY sink kits peel?

Brush-on kits skip the acid etch and bonding primer and are not sprayed, so they flake around the drain where water sits, usually within a year or two. We strip a failing job, prep the basin correctly, and respray so the new finish bonds the way it should.

Book Concord sink reglazing today

Open Mon–Sat 7:30 AM–6 PM. Fully licensed & insured, with a written 5-year warranty.