Contractor-grade cabinet doors are built for hard use and high turnover. The right product holds up under daily wear, fits standard face frames, and ships fast enough to keep your project on track. This guide explains how to choose the right doors, measure them correctly, and order them in a way that protects your timeline.
If you manage multifamily units, flip homes, or run a remodeling crew, every day a kitchen sits unfinished costs money. Qwikkit ships complete refacing kits in 5 to 8 business days. Doors arrive prefinished, presorted by unit, and packed with everything your team needs to install them.
Cabinet refacing replaces the visible parts of your cabinets without removing the cabinet boxes. New doors, drawer fronts, and matching paint cover the old structure. The result is a fresh kitchen at a fraction of the time and cost of full replacement.
For contractors, refacing means faster project turns and lower demolition costs. Most refacing jobs can be done in a few days. A full kitchen replacement often takes weeks. That gap matters when your schedule is full and your clients are waiting.
Refacing works when the cabinet boxes are sound. If the boxes are warped, water damaged, or pulling apart, you need to replace them. Otherwise, refacing is the faster and cheaper path.
For multifamily managers, refacing fits unit turns. Doors can be swapped in a few hours, even with residents nearby. For SFR investors and flippers, refacing keeps the budget tight and the schedule predictable. For remodeling contractors, it is a service you can offer without specialized cabinet skills.
The material you choose drives both the look and the long-term durability of the kitchen. Each option fits different budgets and use cases.
Thermofoil doors have a vinyl layer pressed onto an MDF core. RTF stands for rigid thermofoil and refers to the same construction. These doors clean easily, resist moisture on the front face, and come in a wide range of colors and finishes.
Thermofoil is not designed to be refinished. If a door is damaged, replacement is faster than repair. Quality varies across manufacturers, so finish thickness, edge sealing, and core density all affect long-term performance.
MDF doors offer a smooth, grain-free surface that takes paint well. The material is stable and does not expand or contract like solid wood. Many contractors use primed MDF when on-site color matching is required.
The catch is that MDF absorbs water through any unsealed edge. For rentals and humid climates, every cut edge and drilled hole needs to be sealed before installation.
Solid wood doors hold up for decades and can be refinished many times. They cost more than other options but bring real durability and natural grain. Cherry, maple, and oak are the most common species.
Wood veneer doors layer a thin slice of real wood over an MDF or plywood core. Veneer gives you the look of solid wood at a lower price, but it can chip or peel if hit hard.
Accurate measurement is what separates a clean refacing job from one that looks off. Two things matter most: the opening dimensions and the overlay style. Get these wrong and the doors will not align, close cleanly, or look uniform across the kitchen.
Overlay is how much the door covers the face frame. Partial overlay covers about 1/2 inch on each side, leaving roughly 1 inch of frame visible between adjacent doors. Full overlay covers most of the frame, leaving only about 1/4 inch visible.
Full overlay creates a more modern look. Partial overlay is common in older homes and works well when matching existing cabinetry. Your hinge has to match. Use a 1/2 inch hinge for partial overlay and a 1 1/4 inch hinge for full overlay.
Measure the opening, not the existing door. Old doors are sometimes cut wrong, so the existing door is not a reliable reference.
For width, measure from the inside edge of the left stile to the inside edge of the right stile. For height, measure from the inside edge of the top rail to the inside edge of the bottom rail.
For partial overlay, add 1 inch to both dimensions. For full overlay, add 2 1/2 inches to both dimensions. Cabinets in older homes can vary from one opening to the next, so measure each one rather than assuming.
For double doors, measure the full width of the opening including the center stile. Add your overlay allowance, then divide by two. Leave about 1/16 inch of gap between the two doors so they do not bind.
Drawer fronts work the same way. Measure the opening, add the overlay, and confirm that adjacent drawers will line up cleanly when installed.
Your project timeline depends on how fast doors show up. Lead times vary widely. Custom door makers often quote 3 to 6 weeks. Some kit suppliers ship in a couple of weeks. Qwikkit ships in 5 to 8 business days.
For a deeper look at how to evaluate refacing suppliers, see our guide on choosing a cabinet refacing vendor.
Material and finish drive most of the variation. Custom paint and stain colors take longer than standard finishes. Solid wood doors take longer than MDF or thermofoil. Order volume matters too. Peak renovation season can push standard lead times back across the industry.
Always confirm lead times before you commit to a project schedule. Published estimates do not always reflect what suppliers can actually deliver in a given week.
Qwikkit's production is built around one product line: refacing kits. Doors are prefinished, drawer fronts are prefinished, and orders are presorted by unit before they ship. There is no waiting for paint to cure on site. There is no sorting through boxes of mixed parts.
For property managers, those saved days drop straight to the bottom line. A unit that comes back on the rent roll a week early often pays for the kit. For contractors juggling multiple jobs, a reliable lead time means you can schedule with confidence.
Traditional door suppliers often require detailed specs for every door, drawer front, and accessory. You may also order hinges, knobs, and paint from separate vendors. Each of those orders has its own lead time. Each one is a chance for something to go missing.
All-in-one kit providers ship everything together. Qwikkit kits include doors, drawer fronts, hinges in your chosen overlay, knobs, pulls, matching primer and paint, screws, bumpers, and a drilling jig for hardware placement. One order, one shipment, one point of contact.
The right door style depends on your client base, your price point, and the look you are going for. Qwikkit offers four profiles: Shaker, Slab, Slide, and Fusion.
Shaker doors have a recessed center panel framed by simple straight rails and stiles. The look works in traditional, transitional, and modern kitchens. It is the most requested style across multifamily, SFR, and remodel work because it fits a wide range of tastes and does not date quickly.
For rental properties, Shaker doors signal quality without being trendy. Tenants recognize the style and connect it with updated, well-maintained units.
Slab doors are flat and frameless. The clean surface fits modern kitchens and small spaces. Slab doors also clean fast, which matters in high-turn rentals. With no panels to dust, the kitchen looks sharper for longer between cleanings.
Slide is an updated take on Shaker, with softer lines and a more refined edge. Fusion mixes slab drawer fronts with five-piece door fronts for a modern-traditional blend. Both options give you a way to differentiate higher-rent units or upscale flips from a standard Shaker package.
Color affects both first impression and long-term wear. Some colors hide marks better than others. Some date faster than others. Choosing well saves you a repaint cycle or two down the road.
White cabinets are still the dominant choice in kitchen design. They make the room feel larger, photograph well for listings, and pair with almost any countertop. Qwikkit's Flour color is a clean white available in all four door styles.
Light grey and warm off-white tones offer alternatives to pure white. They hide fingerprints and minor scuffs better than bright white while keeping the kitchen feeling open. For high-traffic rentals and student housing, these tones cut down on visible wear between cleanings.
Medium and dark greys create a more sophisticated look. They work well in upscale rentals and flips targeting buyers who want a modern aesthetic. Darker tones also hide everyday wear better than white.
The trade-off is that dark cabinets can shrink small kitchens visually. Pair dark lowers with lighter uppers, or save dark colors for kitchens with plenty of natural light and an open floor plan.
Wood grain options bring warmth that painted cabinets cannot match. Walnut and oak grains pair naturally with modern farmhouse, transitional, and classic schemes. They appeal to tenants and buyers who prefer a warmer aesthetic over the cooler feel of painted cabinets.
Qwikkit offers more than 30 colors and finishes, including a full range of wood grain options across all four door profiles.
Hardware finishes the look and decides how the kitchen feels in daily use. The right hinges keep doors aligned. The right pulls hold up to thousands of opening cycles.
Concealed cup hinges are the standard for refacing. They mount inside the cabinet box and stay hidden when the door is closed. They also adjust in three planes, so you can fine-tune door alignment after install.
Soft-close hinges add a damper that stops doors from slamming. The damper cuts noise, reduces wear on the door and frame, and adds a small upgrade signal that residents notice. For rentals, soft-close hinges often pay for themselves in reduced repair calls.
Knobs work on doors. Pulls work on drawers because they give you a better grip for the pulling motion. Many contractors run knobs on uppers and pulls on drawers, or pulls everywhere for a more modern look.
Standard placement puts the knob on the corner of the door opposite the hinge. Drawer pulls mount horizontally near the top of the drawer face. Qwikkit kits include a drilling jig that aligns hardware quickly and consistently across the kitchen.
Each Qwikkit kit ships with hinges in your chosen overlay, knobs and pulls, screws, rubber bumpers, matching primer and paint, false-front brackets, and the drilling jig. You can choose from more than 70 hardware options. Everything ships sorted, so your crew is not pulling parts from multiple boxes during the install.
A simple, repeatable ordering process keeps mistakes off the job site. Use these six steps to move from site visit to installed kitchen without surprises.
Multi-vendor sourcing creates points of failure. One late shipment can hold up an entire job. A kit model removes most of those risks by combining the parts into one delivery.
When you order doors, hinges, and paint from three suppliers, you depend on three delivery schedules. One late truck stalls the install. A kit ships once, with everything inside. If something is wrong, you have one phone number to call.
Matching new doors to repainted boxes is hard. Even small color differences show up under kitchen lighting. Qwikkit kits include primer and paint formulated for the door finishes. Boxes and doors blend instead of clashing.
Kits ship with printed and video instructions, the right hinges, pre-drilled doors on the slab profile, and a drilling jig for hardware. A crew with general handyman skills can install a Qwikkit kit. You do not need a cabinet specialist on the job.
Even experienced crews can stumble on refacing jobs. Knowing the most common mistakes helps you build them out of your process.
Most refacing problems trace back to rushed measurements. Always measure the opening, not the existing door. Measure each opening separately. Have a second person verify any critical measurement, especially for tight runs near walls or appliances.
Refacing only fixes the surface. If the boxes are damaged, new doors will not save them. Inspect under sinks, behind appliances, and inside lower cabinets where water damage is common. Replace what cannot be reused.
MDF absorbs water through any unsealed edge or hole. New cuts, hinge cups, and pull holes all need primer or edge banding before installation. Skip this step in a humid kitchen and you will see swelling within months.
Qwikkit was built for contractors, property managers, and SFR investors who need to renovate kitchens fast and at scale. Since 2017, more than 50,000 homes have been refreshed with Qwikkit kits.
Qwikkit's DuraBuild doors are prefinished, so there is no on-site painting, drying, or color matching. Doors arrive ready to install. Color and finish stay consistent across every unit in your portfolio. Because Qwikkit kits also include matching primer and paint for the cabinet boxes, the new doors and the existing boxes blend cleanly.
Qwikkit kits include doors, drawer fronts, hinges in your chosen overlay, knobs, pulls, primer, paint, screws, bumpers, brackets, and a drilling jig. Orders ship in 5 to 8 business days, presorted by unit. Domestic manufacturing keeps lead times short and quality consistent.
The Qwikkit 3-Way Guarantee covers the full lifecycle of your project. Full warranty terms are listed at qwikkit.com.
Property managers running multi-property portfolios need suppliers that can scale. Qwikkit's account team works with you to standardize materials across properties, set up repeat order templates, and coordinate deliveries for multi-unit jobs. The goal is a process that runs cleanly across your whole footprint, not just one site. Ready to get started? Contact us!
The right cabinet doors are about more than the look. They are about timing, consistency, and the cost of every day a kitchen sits unfinished. Pick a material that fits your use case. Measure carefully. Pick a supplier whose lead times match your schedule. Use a kit model when you can to cut coordination and reduce risk.
Qwikkit was built to make all of this easier for contractors and property teams. One kit, one shipment, 5 to 8 business days.
Thermofoil, MDF, solid wood, and wood veneer are the most common materials. Thermofoil offers a smooth, low-maintenance surface. MDF takes paint well but needs sealed edges. Solid wood is the most durable but costs more. Veneer gives a wood look at a lower price.
Look at how much your existing door covers the face frame. If the door overhangs about 1/2 inch on each side, you have partial overlay. If it covers most of the frame and leaves about 1/4 inch visible, you have full overlay. Qwikkit offers hinges in both sizes.
Lead times across the industry range from a couple of weeks to several weeks for custom doors. Qwikkit ships in 5 to 8 business days, which is one of the fastest options available for a complete kit.
Kits bundle every part of the job into a single shipment. That cuts coordination across vendors, reduces the risk of missing parts, and keeps the color and finish consistent from doors to boxes. Qwikkit kits also arrive presorted by unit, which speeds up installation.
Yes, with the right materials and proper installation. Thermofoil and prefinished doors handle moisture well. MDF needs sealed edges and holes. Qwikkit doors are built and finished for kitchen environments.
Qwikkit's account team helps standardize materials across portfolios, set up repeat order templates, and coordinate delivery schedules for multi-property jobs. The goal is a repeatable process so every site looks the same and ships on the same timeline.