Kitchen Cabinet Options Explained
Understand the difference between refacing, semi-custom, and custom cabinets.
Read More →If your cabinet boxes are in good condition but your kitchen looks dated, refacing delivers a dramatic visual transformation at 40–60% of full replacement cost.
Cabinet refacing makes sense when the bones are good but the face has aged out. If your existing cabinet boxes are structurally sound — no water damage, no sagging shelves, no warped frames — then replacing only the doors, drawer fronts, and applying veneer to the visible frame surfaces can completely transform how your kitchen looks.
For Boston condo owners in particular, cabinet refacing is often the most practical option. HOA restrictions on demolition scope, limited building access, and the desire to minimize renovation disruption all make refacing an attractive alternative to a full cabinet gut. The result is a kitchen that looks entirely new — without the timeline or cost of a complete replacement.
The process is cleaner and faster than full replacement. We remove the existing doors and drawer fronts, apply matching veneer to the exposed cabinet frames and sides, and install brand-new doors and drawer fronts in your chosen style. New hinges, soft-close hardware, and updated pulls complete the transformation.
The cost difference is significant. Full cabinet replacement for a typical Boston kitchen runs $12,000–$35,000 for materials and installation. Cabinet refacing for the same kitchen typically runs $5,000–$15,000. For homeowners who don't need a layout change, the refacing ROI is difficult to beat.
Understand the difference between refacing, semi-custom, and custom cabinets.
Read More →When refacing makes financial sense vs. full replacement in Boston.
Read More →Tell us about your project and we'll get back to you within 24 hours.
🔒 No spam. No obligation. 100% free consultation.
Prefer to call? (617) 634-8428