

Who Dekton is and what they sell
Dekton is a Cosentino brand focused on ultra‑compact sintered mineral surfaces. Think large‑format slabs that work for kitchens, baths, flooring, interior wall cladding, ventilated façades and custom furniture. The brand sits alongside Silestone and Sensa inside Cosentino’s porfolio.
For an overview of Dekton’s sustainability positioning, see the company’s Impact page, which summarizes initiatives across energy, water and circularity (Cosentino Impact, 2025).
Product ranges at a glance
Dekton comes in multiple thicknesses, most commonly 4, 8, 12, 20 and 30 mm, and in large slab sizes suited to low‑seam installs. Finishes include matte, glossy, velvet, and specialized options like Grip+ for higher‑traction surfaces. Collections span natural‑stone looks, concrete tones, and designer series.
In terms of breadth, Dekton covers several categories and likely offers hundreds of color SKUs when you add finishes and thicknesses. That gives specifiers many ways to keep a consistent aesthetic across counters, floors, walls and façades.
EPD coverage snapshot
Dekton has third‑party verified EPDs published with major operators. The global Dekton EPD on EPD International shows validity through 8 December 2026, covering slabs for indoor and outdoor uses such as flooring, façades, wall cladding and worktops (EPD International, 2025).
In Europe, Dekton also appears with FDES records in the French INIES framework that address typical applications like façades, interior floors and walls, and bathrooms. These records help French projects document EN 15804 compliance. We did not quote exact counts or dates here because the public entries can be hard to navigate and are updated periodically.
Work for Cosentino or competing against Dekton?
Follow us for a product-by-product analysis of Dekton's EPD coverage and see which SKUs get spec'd or VE'd out against Neolith and Laminam.
Where coverage is robust
For core slab applications, coverage is strong. The EPD International listing gives global teams a citation specifiers recognize, and the presence of FDES entries in INIES helps on RE2020‑sensitive jobs in France. For multinational product managers, that combination lowers friction when a project team asks for an EPD in either EN 15804 A1 or A2 contexts.
Likely gaps worth closing
Two places to review with your technical marketing and sustainability leads:
- Specialty formats. Fluted panels like Dekton Ukiyo or other pre‑profiled pieces sometimes lack their own dedicated EPD document. Teams often lean on the parent slab EPD, which may be acceptable or not depending on how the format changes mass per area and installation scope. Clarify what your priority markets will accept, then decide if a format‑specific declaration would pay off.
- Made‑to‑measure components. Items such as fabricated sinks, shower trays or furniture parts may ride on the slab EPD in practice. If those SKUs are strategic, a targeted EPD can prevent last‑minute substitutions when a project auditor asks for a product‑specific declaration.
If you need to move quickly, the right LCA partner will pick the prevailing PCR for your competitive set, run the data collection with minimal disruption on your side, and publish with your preferred program operator.
Competitive context you will meet on specs
In day‑to‑day bids, Dekton most often faces sintered stone and large‑format porcelain:
- Neolith has a current EN 15804+A2 EPD valid to 3 February 2027 on EPD International, which makes it an easy swap for specifiers who must check an A2 box (EPD International, 2025).
- Laminam states that all of its products carry EPDs, useful for façade and interior cladding alternates where tile standards are familiar to the review team (Laminam Certifications, 2025).
If a high‑volume Dekton format in your catalog does not have a clear, product‑specific EPD, those competitors can look lower‑risk to a project aiming for LEED v5 points or owner policies that prefer products with verified declarations.
Commercial takeaway
On projects where EPDs are requested, not having one creates paperwork drag for design teams and can trigger conservative carbon assumptions. That makes a competitor with a documented product an easier approval. Filling any Dekton format gaps with fresh EPDs protects margin, shortens Q&A cycles, and keeps you in the spec instead of becoming a swap candidate.
What to do next
Audit your top‑selling Dekton SKUs by application and format. Confirm which ones are covered by existing declarations and which ones need their own. Prioritize formats that drive revenue in healthcare, education, workplace and multifamily, since these segments most frequently ask for EPDs. Then choose a creation path that gets you to a verified, publishable declaration with the least internal lift. Done right, the data work happens once, the benefits pay off for years.


