01
Stock cabinets: fast, affordable, fixed sizes
Built in standard sizes (typically 3-inch increments) and stocked in set door styles and finishes, so they ship in days to a few weeks. They are the right call for standard layouts and value-focused budgets. The tradeoff a lot of showrooms skip: fixed sizes mean filler strips and small gaps where your walls do not match the grid, which shows up more in older DFW homes than in newer Frisco or Prosper builds.
~$6K-$15K
02
Semi-custom: the DFW sweet spot
Stock construction with the freedom to change widths, depths, heights, door styles, and finishes, usually with soft-close and dovetail-drawer options. For most Dallas-Fort Worth kitchens this is the best balance of cost, fit, and lead time. You get a tailored look and proper fit around islands and tall pantries without paying full custom money or waiting full custom weeks.
~$12K-$30K
03
Custom: built to your exact home
Made to your precise dimensions, materials, and details, including odd ceiling heights, angled walls, and one-off storage. This is where older Lakewood and Fort Worth homes with out-of-square walls genuinely benefit, because nothing has to be forced to fit a fixed grid. Expect the longest lead time and the highest cost, and expect to need real shop drawings before anyone orders a thing.
~$25K-$60K+
04
Door styles: shaker, flat, and inset
Shaker (a recessed flat center panel with a square frame) is the safe, timeless DFW favorite and pairs with almost everything. Flat or slab doors read modern and clean, and they are easy to wipe down. Inset, where the door sits flush inside the frame, is the most refined and the most expensive, because it demands tighter tolerances and is less forgiving as wood moves with our humidity swings.
Style + cost driver
05
Box and door materials that actually last
The cabinet box matters more than the door. Plywood boxes hold screws and hinges better and shrug off moisture far better than particleboard, which is the upgrade worth paying for in a kitchen. For doors, solid wood and wood veneer look warm but move with seasonal humidity, while MDF paints dead-flat and resists cracking at the joints. Thermofoil is the budget wipe-clean option but can peel near heat over time.
Plywood vs particleboard
06
Finishes: painted, stained, and the texture trend
Painted finishes (white, off-white, and increasingly deep greens and navies in DFW) look crisp but show wear at high-touch edges over the years. Stained wood hides daily wear and fingerprints better and is making a comeback, especially white oak. Two-tone kitchens, often a painted perimeter with a stained or contrasting island, remain one of the most requested looks in our Plano and Frisco projects.
Look + durability
07
Why cabinets set your kitchen timeline
Cabinets carry a 4-week minimum lead time and often run 6 to 12 weeks once you add custom sizing, specialty finishes, or supply delays. Countertops cannot be templated until the boxes are set, so a slipped cabinet date pushes everything behind it. The honest move is to finalize your cabinet selection and order before demo starts, not during it, so the crew is never standing around waiting on a truck.
4-week minimum
08
Storage and hardware: where the budget hides
Soft-close hinges, full-extension drawers, pull-outs, deep pot drawers, and corner solutions are where semi-custom and custom quietly add up, and where a stock-only kitchen can feel cheap day to day. Decide these before you order, because retrofitting later costs more than building them in. We price these line by line in a fixed-price quote so there are no surprise add-ons mid-project.
Easy to under-budget