Scope size
Door and drawer count, island cabinets, tall pantry doors, and decorative panels affect labor and material planning.
Vero Beach cabinet painting
Understand what drives scope conversations before comparing cabinet painting and refinishing options.

Pricing
Cabinet painting pricing depends on cabinet count, door style, prep needs, coating system, color change, hardware changes, and access. A small vanity refresh is not comparable to a full kitchen with island, glass doors, pantry cabinets, and prior coating problems.
Door and drawer count, island cabinets, tall pantry doors, and decorative panels affect labor and material planning.
Grease, chipping, water swelling, laminate edges, and previous DIY paint can increase prep needs.
Dark-to-light changes, two-tone kitchens, new pulls, and hinge updates may change the scope conversation.
One cabinet update may include removing doors and drawers, careful labeling, degreasing, sanding, bonding primer, sprayed or brushed coating choices, and reassembly adjustments. Another may only describe paint application. When comparing pricing, ask what happens to damaged edges, old caulk lines, hinge holes, soft-close hardware, and panels that need extra sanding or filling before finish work begins.
Wide kitchen photos show layout and access. Closeups show failing finish, water swelling, chipped corners, and grease buildup. Door and drawer counts show cabinet update size. Color notes show whether the cabinet update is a light refresh or a dramatic change. Those details make the first scope conversation more useful while still avoiding unsupported promises about a final number.
Start with cabinet details
Send the cabinet layout, surface condition, color goal, and timing. The request is used to understand the scope; it does not promise price, availability, or a finished result.