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Design Guide Β· 2026

Kitchen Cabinet Styles That Are Working in 2026

Shaker is still king, but the throne is getting crowded. Here's an honest look at what's working in South Florida kitchens right now, what's quietly aging out, and how to choose a cabinet style your kitchen will still love in 2036.

Shaker β€” still the safest choice

Five-piece shaker doors with a clean inset panel have ruled kitchen cabinets for the better part of fifteen years for good reason. They look great in nearly every style of home β€” coastal Florida, modern, transitional, even farmhouse. Painted white shaker has become a clichΓ©, but painted shaker in a deeper color (Sherwin-Williams Iron Ore, Benjamin Moore Hale Navy, sage green, soft black) is having a real moment. If you can't decide on a cabinet style, this is the choice you'll regret the least.

Slab β€” modern, clean, and growing

Slab doors are flat with no frame β€” just a single flush panel. They read modern, they're easy to clean, and they make any kitchen feel bigger. In rift-cut white oak or walnut they look stunning. In painted lacquer they look custom. The downside: slab doors show every imperfection, so the material and finish quality matter enormously. A cheap slab door looks like a cheap slab door. A good one looks like a million bucks.

Two-tone kitchens

Painted upper cabinets in a light color, wood or darker painted lowers, sometimes a different color for the island. This look is everywhere right now and works particularly well in Florida light. Just don't pick three radically different finishes β€” two complementary tones plus a metal accent is the sweet spot.

Reeded & fluted fronts

Vertical reeded details on cabinet doors, panels, and islands are appearing in higher-end design work. Done well, they add texture and visual interest. Done poorly, they look fussy. We recommend reeded only as an accent β€” on the island, on a cabinet end panel, on appliance panels β€” not on every door.

Glass-front uppers

Glass cabinet doors are a great way to break up a long run of solid uppers and show off dishes. Mullion patterns (true divided lite, X-mullion, etc.) add character. Clear glass for display, fluted or seedy glass when you want the texture without the visible stuff inside.

What we'd avoid in 2026

  • Heavy raised-panel cabinet doors β€” they feel dated unless your home is genuinely traditional.
  • Honey-oak stains β€” they're slowly making a comeback as "natural oak," but mid-tone golden oak still feels 1998.
  • Bright cherry stains β€” same problem.
  • Open shelving as a replacement for upper cabinets β€” pretty in photos, impractical in real life. Use them as an accent, not a main strategy.

How to choose for South Florida

Florida light is bright. White and very light cabinets can wash out, while medium-tone wood or painted color cabinets often look richer here than they would in a darker northern home. A few principles we apply to every kitchen we build:

  1. Pick the floor first, then the cabinets. Cabinets are easier to repaint than floors are to replace.
  2. Choose hardware that doesn't fight the cabinet. Brushed brass, polished nickel, or matte black are the safest choices and pair with nearly anything.
  3. Stay neutral on the perimeter, get adventurous on the island. A bold island color is easy to repaint in five years if you want to change it.
  4. Soft-close everything. Soft-close hinges and drawer glides add maybe $300 to a whole kitchen β€” and you'll appreciate them every single day.

Want a kitchen built by a local team who knows what works? Read about our kitchen remodeling services or request a free estimate.

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