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Kitchen Backsplashes

Custom kitchen backsplashes installed across the Twin Cities since 1983. Subway tile, marble and quartz slab, mosaic, brick, and full-height stone — installed as part of a Knutson kitchen with the cabinetry, lighting, and outlet detail coordinated by one team.

The smallest design decision that defines the whole kitchen

A backsplash takes up maybe ten square feet of wall space, and it sets the personality of the entire kitchen. It is the surface your eye lands on between the cabinets and the countertop, the part of the room you look at while you cook, and the most photographed wall in any kitchen remodel. We treat it as a deliberate design decision, not a finishing afterthought — and we install it with the right substrate, the right grout, and the right outlet detail so it looks like it belongs.

  • Subway tile — ceramic, porcelain, handmade, beveled

  • Marble, quartz, and natural-stone slab backsplashes

  • Mosaic and pattern tile — penny round, hexagon, herringbone

  • Brick veneer and reclaimed brick

  • Full-height stone and tile to the underside of the upper cabinets or all the way to the ceiling

  • Coordinated outlet placement, edge trim, and grout color

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Kitchen Backsplashes

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Kitchen Backsplashes

Most kitchen backsplashes fall into one of four directions: traditional subway, natural-stone tile or slab, contemporary slab in marble-look quartz or porcelain, or mosaic and pattern tile. Each one tells a different story about the kitchen, and we walk you through how each will read against your specific cabinets and countertop before you commit.

Materials we install

  • Ceramic and porcelain subway tile — 3×6, 3×9, 4×12, with options for handmade and beveled finish
  • Marble tile — Carrara, Calacatta, Statuario in subway, brick, hex, and herringbone patterns
  • Natural stone — limestone, travertine, slate
  • Quartz and porcelain slab — full-height seamless backsplash, no grout lines, sometimes matched to the countertop
  • Mosaic tile — penny round, hexagon, fish-scale, picket, mother-of-pearl
  • Glass tile and metal accents — selectively, mostly for traditional kitchens
  • Brick veneer — real or thin-set reclaimed brick for industrial and farmhouse kitchens
  • Specialty patterns — handmade Zellige, terracotta, encaustic cement tile

Choosing the right backsplash for your kitchen

The first question is height. A 4-inch backsplash that runs only along the countertop reads dated; we almost never install that anymore. The current standard is full-height between countertop and upper cabinets, which is roughly 18 inches. Floor-to-ceiling behind the range is a common feature accent, especially with no upper cabinets above the cooktop. Wall-to-ceiling everywhere on a kitchen with floating shelves instead of upper cabinets is a strong look but requires more material and more careful tile layout.

The second question is tile vs slab. Tile gives you grout lines, pattern, and texture; it reads more traditional or hand-crafted. Slab — quartz, marble, or porcelain — gives you a continuous surface with no grout, often matched to the countertop for a deliberately seamless look. Slab is more contemporary, more expensive, and more dramatic in a small footprint.

The third question is color and finish relative to the rest of the kitchen. A monochromatic kitchen — white cabinets, white quartz counter, white subway backsplash — reads quiet and lets the architecture and lighting do the talking. A kitchen with painted cabinets and a marble or stone backsplash uses the backsplash as the visual focal point. A kitchen with stained-wood cabinets and a quiet backsplash makes the cabinetry the hero. There is no universal right answer; we will show you each option against your specific finishes.

Backsplash cost and timeline

Backsplash budgets in the Twin Cities depend mostly on material, height, and complexity of pattern. As a working guide for a typical kitchen with around 35 to 50 square feet of backsplash: standard ceramic subway tile typically runs $2,000 to $4,500 installed. Handmade or premium subway and patterned ceramic runs $3,500 to $7,500. Marble or natural-stone tile runs $5,500 to $12,000. Quartz or porcelain slab backsplash runs $3,500 to $9,000 depending on slab and seam complexity. Mosaic and high-end pattern tile runs $7,000 to $15,000+. Floor-to-ceiling installations roughly double the area and the cost.

Timeline: backsplash install runs two to four days for tile and one to two days for slab, after countertops are set. The whole phase fits cleanly inside a kitchen-remodel schedule. What most often adds time: handmade tile (longer fabrication and shipping), pattern tile that requires careful layout planning, and slab backsplashes that have to be templated separately from the countertops.

Our Twin Cities service area

Knutson installs backsplashes as part of kitchen projects throughout the Twin Cities metro — Minneapolis, Saint Paul, Edina, Eden Prairie, Minnetonka, Wayzata, Maple Grove, Plymouth, Bloomington, Eagan, Burnsville, Lakeville. Style direction follows the kitchen and the house. 1920s Minneapolis bungalows are usually subway tile with classic grout. Highland Park colonials often go full-height marble with a traditional pencil-edge profile. 1960s ramblers in Edina or Bloomington frequently take quartz slab or large-format porcelain for a clean modern read. Transitional 1990s two-stories in Eden Prairie often do well with a hex-pattern or herringbone marble for a soft accent.

Ready to design your backsplash?

Request a consultation and we will visit the kitchen, talk through what you want the backsplash to do — focal point, quiet backdrop, design hero — and walk you through material options at our showroom. You will leave with a clear direction and a realistic install budget.

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Common Questions

Backsplash FAQ

The backsplash is part of our standard kitchen remodel scope, and we also install backsplashes as a standalone update on kitchens where the rest of the room is staying. The work behind a good backsplash is invisible: the substrate has to be flat, the tile layout has to be planned around outlets and cabinet edges, the grout color has to be picked under your kitchen's actual lighting, and the transition where the backsplash meets the countertop and the upper cabinets has to be detailed correctly.

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  • Full-height between countertop and upper cabinets is the current standard. Behind a range with no upper cabinets, taking the backsplash to the ceiling is a strong feature. A 4-inch counter-only backsplash reads dated and we rarely install it.
  • Different, not better or worse. Tile gives texture and grout pattern and reads traditional or hand-crafted. Slab gives a continuous, seamless surface and reads modern or dramatic. Slab is more expensive per square foot. We will show you both against your specific cabinets and countertop.
  • Match the tile color for a quiet, monolithic look — white grout with white tile, gray with gray. Contrast the tile color for a graphic, defined look — black grout with white subway tile pulls the pattern forward. Match for restraint, contrast for emphasis.
  • Less than marble countertops, because the wall does not sit in the spill zone. Splatters from oil and acidic foods can still etch and stain over time. Sealing helps with absorption. If you cook a lot of acidic and saucy foods, a marble-look quartz or porcelain slab gives you the marble look without the maintenance.
  • This is a design decision. Standard outlets cut into tile look fine when planned in symmetric locations. For a cleaner look, we use color-matched outlets and cover plates, or we relocate outlets under the cabinets via plug-mold strips so the backsplash itself stays uninterrupted.
  • Yes. A quartz, porcelain, or stone slab can be cut from the same material as the countertop, often as a continuous run that wraps the corner. This is the most expensive option and the most dramatic; it reads contemporary and minimalist.
  • For most installations, cement backer board over the studs, with appropriate moisture barrier. For slab installations, we verify the wall is flat and use the right adhesive system. The substrate determines the longevity of the backsplash; we do not cut corners here.
  • Photos of the kitchen, examples of backsplashes you like, your cabinet and countertop selections (or samples of those), and your budget range. If you have not picked cabinets and countertops yet, that is fine — we will work backward from the backsplash if it is the design lead.
Kitchen Backsplashes

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