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How Much Does a Custom Epoxy Resin Table Cost? A 2026 Pricing Guide

How Much Does a Custom Epoxy Resin Table Cost? A 2026 Pricing Guide

If you've been searching for a custom epoxy resin table, you've probably noticed the prices are all over the place. One table is $1,800, another is $14,000, and it's not always clear why. This guide breaks down exactly what goes into the cost of a custom epoxy table in 2026, so you know what to expect before you reach out for a quote.

The short answer

Most custom epoxy resin tables fall between $2,500 and $13,000. Smaller pieces like coffee and side tables start lower, while large live-edge dining tables and statement pieces sit at the higher end. The final price depends on five main factors: size, wood, resin work, base, and design complexity.

Here's a rough guide based on the kind of pieces we make in our workshop:

Piece type Typical price range
Coffee & side tables $2,500 to $3,500
Small to mid dining tables $3,000 to $6,000
Large live-edge dining tables $6,000 to $13,000+
Conference tables $4,000 to $7,000
Credenzas & consoles $2,300 to $9,000

These are starting points, not fixed prices. Every piece is made to order, so the exact figure depends on what you want. Let's look at what actually moves the number up or down.

What drives the price of an epoxy resin table

1. Size

Size is the single biggest factor. A larger table needs a bigger slab of wood, more resin, more pouring time, and a stronger base. The jump from a 6-seat to a 10-seat dining table can add several thousand dollars on its own, because everything scales up at once: material, labor, and curing time.

2. Wood

The type of wood you choose changes both the look and the cost. We work with three main woods:

  • Walnut: A deep, warm brown with strong grain. The most popular choice, and priced accordingly.
  • Olive: A light, golden wood with dramatic figure that varies slab to slab.
  • Poplar: A lighter, figured wood, especially striking in burl form.

Each slab is sourced individually, so a large, highly figured slab with a clean live edge costs more than a smaller, plainer one. The wood is the foundation of the piece, and the better the slab, the better the result.

3. Resin work

A simple single-color pour is one thing. A detailed ocean scene with layered blues, wave detail, embedded islands, or metallic shimmer is another. The more complex the resin work, the more time it takes, since resin is poured in stages and each layer has to cure before the next. Special effects like glow-in-the-dark pours or embedded objects add to both the time and the cost.

4. The base

A table is only as good as what holds it up. Options range from powder-coated steel legs to solid hardwood bases that match the top. Heavier and more intricate bases cost more, but they're what keep a large slab stable for years of daily use.

5. Design complexity

A clean rectangular table with a single river is more straightforward than a round table with multiple channels and shaped wooden islands. The more custom the design, the more hand-work goes into it, and that's reflected in the price.

Why custom epoxy tables cost what they do

It's a fair question: why does a custom epoxy table cost more than a mass-produced table from a big-box store? The answer is in how it's made.

Every piece is built by hand, one at a time. The wood is dried, stabilized, and sanded by hand before any resin is poured. The resin is mixed in small batches and poured in stages over days. Finishing, including sanding, polishing, and oiling, is done entirely by hand. A single table takes between 3 and 8 weeks to complete.

You're not paying for a product off a shelf. You're paying for a piece made specifically for your space, in the dimensions, wood, and colors you choose, with no two ever exactly alike.

Custom vs ready-made: which is right for you?

If you need a table this week and don't mind that thousands of identical ones exist, a ready-made table is the practical choice. But if you want a piece built to your exact space, with the wood and resin colors you have in mind, custom is the way to go.

The trade-off is time. A custom piece takes weeks to make, but you get something designed around you, not around a factory's production line. For many people, a dining table is something they'll gather around for a long time, and that makes the wait worth it.

How to get an exact price for your table

Because every piece is made to order, the best way to get an accurate price is to tell us what you have in mind. Here's how it works with us:

  1. Share your space, dimensions, and inspiration through our Quote Request form.
  2. Within 48 hours, we send you an AI-rendered preview of your piece and a full quote.
  3. We refine the design together until it's exactly what you want.
  4. Once you approve, production begins, and you receive photo updates at every stage.

There's no cost or obligation to get a quote. It's simply the clearest way to see what your specific piece would cost.

Start your custom quote here →

Frequently asked questions

Is shipping included in the price?

Yes. Delivery is on us. Every piece is shipped worldwide in a custom-built crate, insured for safe transit.

Do I pay everything upfront?

No. Payment is split into two parts: a one-third deposit when you approve the design, and the balance before delivery.

How long does a custom table take?

Production takes 3 to 8 weeks after design approval, depending on the size and complexity of the piece, followed by 1 to 3 weeks for shipping.

Can I get a table in a specific color?

Yes. We pour almost any color you can imagine, from deep ocean blues to emerald greens, blacks, ambers, and custom blends. Share a reference and we'll match it.

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