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Cabinet Refacing in Redmond, WA

Cabinet refacing gives Redmond homeowners a kitchen transformation at roughly one-third the cost of full cabinet replacement. We replace the doors, drawer fronts, and apply matching veneer to the cabinet boxes — keeping your existing layout and saving thousands. If your cabinet frames are solid but the style is dated, refacing is the smartest move.

Cabinet Refacing in Redmond, WA costs from $5,000 to $14,000 for homes at the $900,000 median value. Redmond homeowners typically choose quartz countertops, custom cabinetry, and modern fixtures, with projects taking 3-12 weeks depending on scope. With homes averaging 28 years old in Redmond, most cabinet refacing projects include updates to plumbing, electrical, or structural elements. 4.9★ rated by 355+ homeowners. Licensed, bonded & insured. Free estimates: (206) 666-4370.

Why Redmond Homeowners Choose Cabinet Refacing

Cabinet refacing exists because of a simple reality: the boxes behind your doors are usually the most expensive and durable part of the cabinet system. In Redmond's 1990s builder-grade homes, those 28-year-old boxes were built with plywood that outperforms today's particleboard alternatives. What ages poorly is the visible surface — peeling thermofoil, yellowed oak, dated cathedral-arch profiles. Refacing replaces all of it. At Redmond's median home value of $900,000, projects typically cost $5,000 to $14,000, saving homeowners $45,000+ compared to full replacement.

Redmond's identity as a tech hub — anchored by Microsoft's sprawling campus along NE 40th Street and Nintendo of America's headquarters — heavily influences its remodeling market. The city's housing stock skews newer than most Puget Sound communities, with large swaths of 1990s and 2000s construction in neighborhoods like Education Hill, Idylwood, and Bear Creek. These homes were built during the tech boom with builder-grade finishes that are now showing their age: laminate countertops, basic tile surrounds, and oak cabinetry that looked fine in 2002 but feels dated in 2025. The Overlake neighborhood near the soon-to-expand light rail station is experiencing rapid densification, while the historic downtown Redmond area along Leary Way and Cleveland Street preserves a small-town charm with older cottages and mid-century homes. Redmond's well-known Marymoor Park and the Sammamish River Trail attract active families who want functional kitchens with prep space for meal prepping and mudroom-adjacent organization. The city's strong school districts (Lake Washington School District) drive family home purchases and subsequent remodeling investments. With median home values around $900,000, Redmond homeowners are strategic about remodeling dollars, often focusing on the kitchen as the highest-ROI renovation.

Here's how a Redmond refacing project unfolds: Day one, we remove existing doors and hardware. Days two through three, precision-cut veneer gets applied to every exposed cabinet surface using commercial-grade contact adhesive. Days three through five, new doors and drawer fronts are installed with soft-close Blum or Grass hinges and full-extension slides. Material choices include real wood veneer, high-pressure laminate, or rigid thermofoil — each with different price points and aesthetic characteristics we'll walk through during consultation. Your kitchen remains fully functional throughout: sink, dishwasher, oven, and refrigerator never get disconnected.

Redmond's kitchen remodeling market is dominated by a single theme: upgrading builder-grade homes that the tech boom built. Neighborhoods like Education Hill, Idylwood, and Bear Creek are filled with homes constructed between 1995 and 2010 when builders used the same palette everywhere — flat-panel oak cabinets with exposed hinges, laminate countertops in granite-print patterns, white appliances, and vinyl sheet flooring. These kitchens were serviceable when new but now look a generation behind. The typical Redmond kitchen remodel replaces everything in a coordinated upgrade: painted shaker cabinets with soft-close hardware, quartz countertops in a veined pattern, stainless appliances with smart connectivity, and luxury vinyl plank or porcelain tile flooring. Microsoft and Nintendo employees frequently request integrated technology: USB-C outlets in the island, tablet mounts for recipe displays, and smart lighting systems controllable from their phones. The historic downtown Redmond area along Leary Way presents a different challenge — 1940s-1960s cottages with original kitchens half the size of what modern families expect.

Redmond's Housing Stock

Redmond's housing stock skews younger than most Puget Sound cities. The historic downtown core preserves a small collection of 1930s-1960s cottages and ramblers, but the vast majority of residential construction dates from the 1990s-2010s tech boom. Education Hill, Idylwood, and Bear Creek were developed as master-planned communities with consistent builder-grade construction: engineered truss roofs, vinyl siding, and three-tab asphalt shingles — functional but generic. The homes along the Sammamish River corridor tend toward slightly older 1970s-1980s construction on larger lots, while North Redmond preserves some rural character with hobby farms and equestrian properties on multi-acre parcels. The newest construction in the Overlake urban center and along the light rail corridor features modern condos and townhomes with smaller footprints and contemporary finishes that compete with Bellevue's condo market.

Local Market Conditions

Redmond's economy is one of the most tech-concentrated in the United States: Microsoft's campus alone employs over 50,000 people, and Nintendo, Facebook Reality Labs, and dozens of startups add thousands more. This creates a remodeling clientele with high incomes, analytical decision-making processes, and a preference for technology integration that goes beyond aesthetics. Kitchen and bathroom projects in Redmond frequently include smart home prewiring, motorized window shades, and app-controlled lighting — features that add $3,000-$8,000 to project costs but are considered standard by the local market. The median home value of $900,000 supports investment in $40,000-$75,000 kitchen remodels that deliver strong ROI.

Cabinet Refacing Across Redmond's Neighborhoods

Redmond's neighborhoods each have their own character and remodeling profile. In Bear Creek, we frequently work on homes with honey oak cabinets from the 1990s that are structurally excellent but aesthetically outdated. Over in North Redmond, the common scenario is original hardwood cabinet boxes built to a quality standard rarely seen in modern construction. And in Marymoor, we typically encounter custom-depth cabinets that make stock door replacements impossible — refacing with custom doors is the solution. These neighborhood-level differences are why we always start with an in-home assessment rather than quoting sight-unseen — the specifics of your home's location within Redmond directly affect scope, timeline, and cost.

Cabinet Refacing ROI in Redmond's Housing Market

With Redmond homes valued at a median of $900,000, a well-executed cabinet refacing project typically recovers 75-95% of its cost in added home value. In Redmond's competitive real estate market, the cost-to-impact ratio of refacing is among the highest of any kitchen project because buyers see the dramatic visual change without knowing you invested a fraction of full replacement cost. The 2000s traditional and 1990s builder-grade homes that make up much of Redmond's housing stock are at the sweet spot where remodeling investment makes the most financial sense — the homes are established enough to need updating, and the neighborhood values are strong enough to support the investment.

Neighborhood Remodeling Profiles in Redmond

Downtown Redmond along Leary Way and Cleveland Street preserves a small-town charm that is disappearing elsewhere on the Eastside. The 1940s-1960s cottages here have kitchens with original hardwood floors, double-hung wood windows, and plaster walls that require different renovation techniques than the drywall-and-OSB construction in newer neighborhoods. Homeowners in this area often want to preserve the vintage character while adding modern functionality — reclaimed-wood open shelving instead of upper cabinets, farmhouse sinks, and butcher-block islands that complement the original built-ins.

Overlake is transforming from a suburban office park district into a transit-oriented urban center as the Link light rail extension reaches the Microsoft campus. New apartment and condo construction is adding thousands of units with compact kitchens designed for efficiency rather than entertaining. The remodeling opportunity here is in the existing 1980s-1990s apartment complexes along 156th Avenue NE, where property owners are gutting and modernizing units to compete with new construction. These projects move fast — two to three weeks per unit — with standardized finishes that keep costs predictable.

Popular Cabinet Refacing Styles in Redmond

Redmond's 1990s builder-grade homes often have good cabinet bones that just need a modern face. Here are the refacing projects we complete most in this area.

Builder-grade kitchen modernization with quartz countertops

A common request from Redmond's 1990s builder-grade and 2000s traditional homeowners.

Kitchen island additions in open floor plans

A common request from Redmond's 1990s builder-grade and 2000s traditional homeowners.

Mudroom and kitchen entryway renovations

A common request from Redmond's 1990s builder-grade and 2000s traditional homeowners.

Cabinet Refacing Pricing for Redmond Homes

Cabinet refacing costs in Redmond depend on kitchen size, door style, and material. A typical 20-cabinet kitchen falls in these ranges:

Basic Cabinet Refacing

$5,000

Rigid thermofoil (RTF) doors, matching veneer on boxes, new hinges

Mid-Range Refacing

$10,000

Wood veneer or laminate doors, soft-close hardware, new pulls

Premium Refacing

$14,000

Solid wood doors, dovetail drawer boxes, custom crown molding

Prices for Redmond based on a standard 20-cabinet kitchen. Includes new doors, drawer fronts, veneer on exposed boxes, soft-close hardware, and installation. Does not include new countertops or backsplash — though many homeowners pair refacing with a countertop upgrade for a complete refresh at a fraction of full remodel cost. These figures reflect current King County market rates. We provide exact pricing during your complimentary in-home assessment.

Redmond Permit Requirements for Cabinet Refacing

Understanding Redmond's permit requirements before starting your cabinet refacing project prevents delays and ensures your work is fully compliant. The City of Redmond requires permits for kitchen and bathroom remodels involving structural, electrical, or plumbing changes. Redmond offers an expedited review program for straightforward residential projects with typical turnaround of 2-4 weeks. Online permitting is available through the MyBuildingPermit.com portal.

Good news for Redmond homeowners: cabinet refacing is classified as cosmetic maintenance, so no building permit is required. The work involves only surface replacement — doors, drawer fronts, and veneer — without touching plumbing, electrical, or structure. If you choose to add under-cabinet lighting with new wiring as part of the project, that specific element needs an electrical permit, which we handle if applicable.

Cabinet Refacing in Redmond: Common Questions

How much does cabinet refacing cost in Redmond, WA?

Cabinet refacing in Redmond costs between $5,000 and $14,000 for a standard 20-cabinet kitchen. Where you land in that range depends on door material — RTF and laminate sit at the lower end, solid wood Shaker or raised-panel doors at the top. The typical Redmond project averages $10,000, which includes new doors, drawer fronts, veneer on cabinet boxes, and soft-close hardware. For comparison, full cabinet replacement in Redmond's market would run $36,000 to $72,000 — making refacing the clear winner when your 28-year-old cabinet boxes are still structurally sound.

How long does cabinet refacing take in Redmond?

Most Redmond cabinet refacing jobs take 3-5 days. Day one is removal of old doors, drawer fronts, and hardware. Days two and three are veneer application to the cabinet boxes — this requires precision cutting and contact cement work. Days three through five are new door and drawer front installation, hardware mounting, and final adjustments. Your kitchen is usable every evening — we don't disconnect plumbing or remove countertops. Compare that to a full cabinet replacement which takes 4-8 weeks and leaves you without a functional kitchen for most of it.

What's the difference between cabinet refacing and refinishing in Redmond?

Two distinct processes that Redmond homeowners often confuse. Refinishing preserves your existing door style — we sand, prime, and repaint or restain them ($2,000-$5,000 for a typical kitchen). The door profile stays the same. Refacing is more comprehensive: we replace every door and drawer front with new ones in whatever style you choose, plus cover all visible cabinet box surfaces with matching veneer. If your 1990s builder-grade home has outdated cathedral arch or flat-slab doors, refacing lets you switch to modern Shaker or slab profiles — a change refinishing cannot achieve. Refinishing makes sense only when you already like the door style and just want a new color.

What door styles are popular for cabinet refacing in Redmond?

About 60% of our Redmond refacing clients choose Shaker-style doors — the clean recessed panel works in everything from Craftsman bungalows to modern townhomes. White and warm greige are the top color choices. Another 25% go with flat slab doors for a contemporary European look, especially popular in newer Redmond homes. The remaining 15% choose raised-panel or beadboard styles that suit the traditional character of older 1990s builder-grade homes. We bring door samples to every consultation so you can see and feel the actual materials in your kitchen's lighting.

All Services in Redmond

Considering a full kitchen remodel instead? Or pairing refacing with new countertops? We do both — and bundling saves 5-8% on combined projects.

View Redmond Services

Cabinet Refacing Details

See our full cabinet refacing process, material options, and what to expect from start to finish.

Cabinet Refacing Service Details

Cabinet Refacing Cost Guide

See detailed pricing, budget tiers, and money-saving tips for cabinet refacing in the Seattle area.

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What Our Customers Say

4.9

Based on 355+ verified reviews

“Whole-home tile installation — entryway, kitchen, laundry room, and two bathrooms. About 950 sq ft of large-format porcelain. They handled all the floor prep, backer board, and waterproofing in the wet areas. Heated floors in the master bath were the cherry on top. Outstanding work.”
Chris & Devon R.
“They refaced our kitchen cabinets and installed new quartz countertops. Fast, clean, looks brand new. The crew protected our hardwood floors throughout the whole project. Would hire again in a heartbeat.”
Tom H.
“Aging-in-place modifications in our parents' bathroom — walk-in shower conversion, grab bars, raised toilet, and non-slip flooring. Everything was done to code and looks modern, not medical. The only reason for 4 stars is scheduling took a bit longer than expected to lock down. Work itself was A+.”
Dan O.

Transform Your Redmond Kitchen Cabinets

Redmond homeowners who choose refacing over replacement save an average of $15,000-$25,000 — and get their kitchen back in days instead of months. We'll bring door samples to your home, assess your cabinet box condition, and provide a fixed-price quote with no hidden charges. Every project includes soft-close hardware as standard.

★ Licensed, Bonded & Insured • 15+ Years Experience • 500+ Projects Completed

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