Painting Cabinets

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Painting cabinets is one of the most transformative and cost-effective kitchen upgrades — at a fraction of the cost of replacement. However, cabinet painting is significantly more involved than wall painting and requires careful preparation, the right materials, and patience for proper curing.

Is Cabinet Painting Right for You?

Cabinet Type Paintable? Notes
Solid wood Excellent Best candidate — takes paint beautifully
MDF (Medium Density Fiberboard) Very good Smooth surface, primes and paints well
Plywood Good Sand and prime; quality varies
Thermofoil/Vinyl wrap Difficult Adhesion challenges; bonding primer essential; may peel
Laminate (Formica) Challenging Requires bonding primer; results can be mixed
Metal Good Sand, prime with metal primer, paint

Choosing Paint

Paint Type

Paint Type Dry Time Finish Quality Durability Recommended
Hybrid alkyd (water-based alkyd) 16-24 hrs between coats Excellent self-leveling Very high Best choice overall
Cabinet-specific acrylic 2-4 hrs between coats Very good High Good alternative
Traditional alkyd/oil 24 hrs between coats Excellent Highest High VOCs; yellowing risk
Standard latex 2-4 hrs Moderate Moderate Not recommended — too soft

Top products: Benjamin Moore Advance, Sherwin-Williams Emerald Urethane Trim Enamel, Benjamin Moore Scuff-X, Behr Alkyd Semi-Gloss Enamel.

Finish

  • Semi-gloss: Traditional, most durable, easy to clean
  • Satin: Modern look, still durable, more forgiving of imperfections

The Complete Process

Phase 1: Removal and Organization

  1. Number every door and drawer — use painter's tape with numbers on the hinge side
  2. Create a diagram of cabinet layout with matching numbers
  3. Remove all doors, drawers, and hardware (hinges, pulls, knobs)
  4. Bag and label hardware by cabinet number
  5. Remove shelves if painting inside cabinets
  6. Photograph the kitchen before starting for reference

Phase 2: Cleaning (Critical)

Kitchen cabinets accumulate years of grease, cooking oil, and grime that prevents paint adhesion:

  1. Mix TSP (trisodium phosphate) solution per directions
  2. Scrub all surfaces thoroughly — fronts, backs, edges, and frames
  3. Pay special attention to areas around stove and above dishwasher
  4. Rinse with clean water
  5. Allow to dry completely
  6. This step is non-negotiable — grease under paint causes failure

Phase 3: Sanding

  1. Sand all surfaces with 120-grit sandpaper (creates adhesion "tooth")
  2. Follow with 150-grit for smoother results
  3. Use a sanding sponge for profiled/routed details
  4. Sand in the direction of the wood grain
  5. Remove ALL sanding dust with tack cloth — critical for smooth finish

Phase 4: Fill and Repair

  1. Fill nail holes, dings, and damage with wood filler
  2. For ultra-smooth results, fill wood grain with grain filler (optional)
  3. Sand filler smooth with 220-grit when dry
  4. Fill gaps at joints with paintable caulk

Phase 5: Priming

Surface Condition Recommended Primer
Clean, sanded wood Bonding primer or oil-based primer
Stained/dark cabinets Shellac-based (Zinsser BIN) — blocks tannin bleed
Thermofoil/laminate Bonding primer (Zinsser Bulls Eye 1-2-3, STIX)
Previously painted Bonding primer
  1. Apply one even coat of primer
  2. Allow to dry completely (per manufacturer's directions)
  3. Sand primer with 220-grit — this is key to smooth results
  4. Remove dust with tack cloth

Phase 6: Painting

For doors and drawer fronts:

  1. Set up a drying rack system (screw hooks into top or bottom edges, or lay across sawhorses)
  2. Paint the back side first
  3. Allow to dry, flip, paint the front side
  4. For panel doors: paint panels first, then rails (horizontal), then stiles (vertical)

For cabinet frames (boxes):

  1. Mask countertops, walls, and appliances
  2. Paint inside edges first
  3. Paint face frames
  4. Avoid drips at corners and edges — check back after 10 minutes

Application method:

  • Spraying produces the smoothest factory-like finish — use HVLP or airless sprayer
  • Brush + mini roller combo works well — roll flat areas, brush details
  • Foam roller (4-6 inch) produces very smooth results on flat panel doors
  • Apply two thin coats (three if needed for coverage)
  • Sand lightly (220-grit) between coats for best results

Phase 7: Curing (The Hard Part)

  • Cabinets can be reinstalled after 3-5 days of drying
  • Handle doors very gently for the first 2 weeks
  • Full cure takes 30 days — the paint continues to harden
  • During the 30-day cure:
    • Don't slam doors
    • Don't scrub surfaces
    • Avoid placing heavy objects on shelves
    • Use only a damp cloth for cleaning
    • Don't attach adhesive-backed organizers

Phase 8: Reassembly

  1. Install new hardware (pulls, knobs) — this is a great time to upgrade
  2. Rehang doors using your numbered diagram
  3. Adjust hinges for proper alignment
  4. Replace shelves
  5. Install soft-close bumpers to prevent chipping

Common Cabinet Painting Mistakes

  • Insufficient degreasing — the #1 cause of cabinet paint failure
  • Skipping primer — paint peels within months
  • Using wall paint — standard latex is too soft for cabinets; use cabinet-specific products
  • Too thick coats — causes drips, takes forever to cure, stays soft
  • Not sanding between coats — rough finish, poor adhesion between layers
  • Rushing the cure — slamming doors on uncured paint causes sticking and peeling
  • Not removing doors — painting in place leads to drips, missed spots, and poor coverage

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to paint kitchen cabinets?

A typical kitchen takes 3-5 days of actual work time spread over 1-2 weeks (to allow for drying between coats). The breakdown: Day 1 for removal and cleaning, Day 2 for sanding and priming, Day 3-4 for two coats of paint (with drying time between), and Day 5 for reassembly. Add time if filling grain or applying three coats. Professional cabinet painters typically complete a kitchen in 3-4 days.

Is it better to spray or brush cabinets?

Spraying produces the smoothest, most professional finish — closest to factory quality. However, it requires extensive masking, specialized equipment, and practice. The brush + foam roller combination is more accessible for DIYers and produces excellent results: use a foam roller on flat surfaces and a quality angled brush for details. Foam rollers leave minimal texture that self-levels nicely with quality paint. Whichever method you choose, thin coats are essential.

How much does it cost to paint cabinets yourself?

DIY cabinet painting costs $200-500 for a typical kitchen: primer ($30-50), paint ($50-100 for 2 gallons of quality cabinet paint), sandpaper ($15-25), TSP cleaner ($10), brushes and rollers ($30-50), new hardware ($50-200 optional). Compare this to professional cabinet painting ($3,000-7,000) or cabinet replacement ($10,000-30,000+). DIY cabinet painting offers the best return on investment of almost any kitchen upgrade.

Can I paint over stained cabinets?

Yes, stained and varnished cabinets are excellent candidates for painting. The key is proper prep: clean thoroughly with TSP, sand with 120-grit to remove the sheen and create tooth, and apply stain-blocking primer (shellac-based like Zinsser BIN is best for blocking tannin bleed from wood stains). Without stain-blocking primer, the wood tannins will bleed through your paint as yellow or brown discoloration, especially with white and light colors.