
Buying granite from a photo is easy. Bulk ordering from overseas is a different situation. The sample on your desk is one thing, what gets loaded into the container three months later is another, and if your supplier isn't working to documented standards, you have no real way to know what you're getting. Plenty of buyers find this out the hard way. If you're sourcing from a reputable Indian granite supplier in India the documentation behind the stone should be as easy to access as the catalog itself.
ISO 9001:2015 is the baseline. It's a quality management certification meaning the supplier has written-down processes for how they produce, inspect, and handle problems. It doesn't promise flawless granite. It does mean someone is accountable when things go wrong, which is more than you get without it.
European buyers have additional requirements. EN 1341, EN 1342, and EN 1343 cover dimensional stone used in paving and external construction. CE marking is mandatory for construction materials going into EU projects. Suppliers who export to Europe regularly carry this documentation already. If a supplier says they export to Europe but can't produce CE paperwork worth pressing on that.
Granite gets tested across several properties, and each tells you something specific about how the stone behaves in use.
Water absorption below 0.40% means the stone resists moisture damage over time. Compressive strength above 130 MPa tells you it can handle structural load. Flexural strength matters when you're working with thinner cuts. Abrasion resistance is the number to check for floors, especially high-traffic commercial ones. Frost resistance is relevant anywhere with cold winters, and it's worth asking about specifically if your project is in that climate.
Any supplier worth working with tests per batch and hands over reports without a fight. Chasing basic documentation is not a normal part of the process. If it feels like that, pay attention.
Every order at Tripura Stones goes through physical property testing water absorption, compressive strength, flexural strength, abrasion resistance with third-party lab results attached. Export clients get the full set: test reports, compliance certificates, and destination-specific documentation as standard.
Quarrying and processing both happen in-house. That matters because it removes the middlemen who tend to introduce the gap between what's quoted and what actually ships. Repeat clients across Europe, the US, and beyond mostly come back for one straightforward reason: the material that arrives matches what was discussed.
Lab-tested granite, clear pricing, and documentation that doesn't require three follow-up emails to receive. Granite is available in a wide range of Indian varieties with polished, flamed, bush-hammered, and honed finishes in slabs, tiles, or custom cuts. There's also a clear process if a shipment doesn't match the sample. That process is rarely needed, but the fact it exists is the point.
Request the ISO 9001:2015 certificate and check the issue date. Ask for lab reports specific to the material you're ordering, not a generic product datasheet. Confirm CE marking if the stone is going into an EU project. Ask whether testing is third-party or in-house both are fine, but the answer tells you how open the supplier is about their process. And ask what happens if the shipment doesn't match. A good supplier answers that one without hesitation.