Absolute Black Granite: A Buyer's Guide to Indian Origins & Quality

Mohit Poddar
Auteur Équipe Stone Galleria
info Contenu rédigé et vérifié par l'équipe Stone Galleria — combinant une expertise pratique de l'industrie de la pierre avec des informations basées sur la recherche.
Revu Par Mohit Poddar Responsable du Développement Commercial — Stone Galleria Inde
info Vérifié par l'expert Mohit Poddar — avec une expérience pratique dans l'approvisionnement, le traitement et la consultation client de pierres naturelles.
Publié : juin 03, 2026 — 10:32 IST Mis à jour : juin 03, 2026 — 12:04 IST Temps de Lecture : 5 lecture min 5 Nombre de vues Vérifié Vérifié
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The sourcing of Absolute Black granite reveals complexities in quality and origin. Variations exist across multiple quarries, affecting price and appearance. Understanding these differences is crucial for buyers seeking specific characteristics in their stone selections.

  • Absolute Black granite is a term used for various dark stones, often misleadingly categorized under granite despite differing geological compositions.
  • Indian quarries, particularly in Karnataka and Andhra Pradesh, produce distinct varieties of Absolute Black, each with unique qualities and price points.
  • The quality of Absolute Black varies significantly due to factors like grain size and mineral presence, influencing both appearance and cost.

Buyers should prioritize quarry origin and stone grade over generic labels when sourcing granite.

For over 30 years, Stone Galleria has worked in natural stone from Rajasthan. Absolute Black has never been part of our own range—our region simply doesn't quarry it. So when a client asked us to help source it, we expected a straightforward job.

It wasn't. The deeper we looked, the more tangled it got: the same name covering dozens of different stones, wildly varying quality and price, and very little clear, honest information to guide a buyer. We were surprised how complicated something so seemingly simple turned out to be.

So we did what 30 years in stone teaches you to do—we dug in. This guide is what we gathered along the way: an honest, practical look at what "Absolute Black" actually means, where it comes from, and how to tell good from ordinary.

Most stone sold as "black granite" isn't geologically granite at all. True granite is rich in quartz and feldspar; the deep blacks are usually basalt, gabbro, dolerite or diorite — darker, denser rocks coloured by their high iron content.

The trade groups them all under "granite" for convenience, and that's accepted practice. In fact the American standard (ASTM C119) formally allows these dark igneous rocks to be quarried and sold as "black granite," even though their composition differs from real granite.

What is Absolute Black Granite?

Absolute Black is a natural stone quarried in many countries around the world. The colour runs from a dark, slightly lighter black to deep jet black — sometimes with fine flecks — depending on the quarry. It's a hugely popular choice for countertops.

One thing it isn't 

It's sometimes confused with black quartz, which is a man-made (engineered) surface, and with black marble, which is a softer stone that scratches and etches more easily. Absolute Black is neither — it's a hard, dense, natural granite-type stone, formed in the ground over millions of years.

Need a specific grade or shade?

Different quarries give different blacks, at different prices. Tell us your project and budget, and we'll help you match the right Absolute Black to it — honestly, including which grade you don't need to pay for.

Get sourcing help

While "Absolute Black" started as the name of one specific granite, it has effectively become a category label for black granite from many different sources.

Think of it like the word "sparkling water." That tells you what kind of drink it is, but not the brand or where it's from. "Absolute Black" works the same way: it tells you the stone is black, but not where it's from or how good it is.

  • Multiple quarries across India, South Africa, Zimbabwe, China and many other countries produce granites sold under this name or similar trade names
  • The quality, texture, and shade vary significantly between sources — some are true fine-grained blacks, others have slight grey veining or brown undertones
  • Suppliers and buyers both use it as a grade/type label rather than a single-origin product
Large Absolute Black granite slab, polished

Major Variations within the "Absolute Black" category:

  • Indian Absolute Black 
  • Zimbabwe Black / African Black
  • China Black / Shanxi Black

Absolute Black Granite Quarries In India

Within Indian Absolute black, there are large number of quarries spread across four southern states produce different varieties, each with its own characteristics, quality grade and price points.

 The largest and most well-known deposits are in Karnataka (particularly the Chamarajanagar district) and Telangana/Andhra Pradesh (around Warangal and Khammam). 

S. NoLocationCharacteristicsBest use caseRemarksPrice Tier
1Chamarajanagar

Jet black,

  

Chamarajanagar Ultimate Black — near zero grain, great consistency. No treatments needed.

Statues, monuments, artefacts, tombstones, slabs & tiles for luxury & prestige projects3 large varieties: (i) Kotalwadi, (ii) Nagar, (iii) Alpha BlackHighest
Mysuru, Karnataka
2KanakapuraDark, Micro golden grains visible on close inspectionSlabs and tiles--Premium
Bangalore, Karnataka
3PochampalliDark, Micro golden grains visible on close inspection--Premium
Hosur, Tamil Nadu
4ChittoorVery dark with micro blue & white grain; No treatments needed.Separate Named as G20 and also regarded as Absolute Black GranitePremium
Andhra Pradesh
5SalemLight dark shadeMonumentsSmall block sizes — Not widely available in slab or tile formatMid range
Tamil Nadu
6TiruvannamalaiLight dark shadeMid range
Tamil Nadu
7KanigiriVery darkSlabs and tilesLarge variation between blocks — difficult to source in bulk with consistencyEconomical
Andhra Pradesh
8Khammam & WarangalLight dark shade with small silver flecks (Unlike Black Galaxy).Abundantly available; good for volume supply. Also Called Khammam Black.Most economical
Telangana

Need a specific grade or shade?

Different quarries give different blacks, at different prices. Tell us your project and budget, and we'll help you match the right Absolute Black to it — honestly, including which grade you don't need to pay for.

Get sourcing help

Names You will see for the same material (within India)

Khammam / Kunnam Black Granite, Z Black Granite, Zed Black Granite, Jet Black, Premium Indian Black Granite, Warangal Black Granite, Telephone Black Granite, Chamrajnagar Black Granite, Nero Abssoluto, Black Absoluto, Indian Black Granite, G20, Kanakapura Black, black mist, South Black (within India) and many more such names.

Also READ | Absolute Black vs Black Galaxy Granite

Why shade and quality vary between quarries?

Absolute Black isn't one stone from one place. It comes from different quarries, and each one looks a little different.

The main thing that changes is how dark it is. That depends on the grain — the finer the grain, the blacker it looks. Coarser grain, and it goes a bit lighter.

 You'll also see small flecks in some of them — a bit of gold shimmer, or tiny light specks. That's just the natural minerals in that particular quarry or it can even vary from one region to another. It doesn't mean the stone is lower quality, it's just how that deposit formed.

So a jet black with no flecks and a dark grey with a little sparkle can both be genuine Absolute Black. They're just from different ground. And that's roughly how the price works too — the darkest, most even stone costs more, the lighter and more easily available stone costs less.

Conclusion

"Absolute Black" isn't one stone — it's a name shared by many, from different quarries and different countries, at very different levels of quality and price. None of that makes it complicated to buy. It just means one thing matters more than the name on the quote: knowing where your stone actually comes from.

That's the whole reason we put this guide together. We went looking for clear answers as outsiders to this material, and found there weren't many. So if you take one thing away, let it be this — ask where it's from, ask which quarry and grade, and judge the stone, not the label.

Questions Fréquemment Posées

It's a natural black stone quarried in several countries, valued for its deep, even colour. Strictly speaking most "black granite" isn't true granite — see the section above for the full explanation.


Absolute Black is a dense, hard-wearing natural stone with a deep, even black colour. It has low porosity so it needs little sealing, takes an excellent polish, and stands up well to heat and scratches — which is why it's used for countertops, flooring, cladding and monuments, indoors and out.


Absolute Black is quarried in several countries, including India, South Africa, Zimbabwe and China. The bulk of it — and much of the best-known material — comes from the southern Indian states of Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Andhra Pradesh and Telangana.


Absolute Black is a natural stone, quarried from the ground. Quartz (the countertop kind) is engineered — crushed stone mixed with resin, made in a factory.


The full answer isn't short or simple, but in brief: Black Galaxy is a black granite flecked with silver or gold specks, while Absolute Black is a plain, even black with none of that sparkle. We've covered the full comparison in a separate article — read it here.


The answer is a straight no. Plain black is a long-standing classic — it doesn't go out of style.


Since we're based in India, we'll answer for Indian Absolute Black. It typically ranges (Ex-works) from around ₹160 to ₹450 per sq. ft (about USD 1.70 to USD 4.80), depending on the quarry, slab size and grade. There are too many variables to give one fixed price — for an exact quote on what you need, just contact us.


Reviewer: Mohit Poddar

À propos de l'évaluateur — Mohit Poddar

Responsable du développement commercial · Stone Galleria India

Know This Stone Better Than We Do? Tell Us.

We pulled this guide together as outsiders to Absolute Black — a 30-year stone house learning a material our own region doesn't quarry. So there's almost certainly someone who knows it better: a quarry operator from Chamarajanagar or Warangal, a fabricator who's cut hundreds of slabs, an architect who's specified it, or a homeowner who's lived with it for years.

If you can correct something, add a detail, or share what the field has taught you, we'd genuinely like to hear it — a quick note is just as welcome as a full article. We read every submission, and where it sharpens the guide, we publish it with full credit to you.

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En tant que fabricants, nous voyons ce qui se passe réellement — de la sélection des blocs bruts à la finition des dalles — y compris les défis, les compromis et les questions courantes qui se posent lors de projets réels. Ce que nous partageons ici est basé sur la production en temps réel, les conversations de l'industrie et nos opérations quotidiennes en usine — pas seulement sur la recherche en ligne.

C'est pourquoi les informations que vous trouverez ici sont pratiques, basées sur l'expérience et façonnées par les réalités du travail avec la pierre — chaque jour.

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