Kitchen Cabinets San Antonio Homeowners Actually Want: A Practical Guide to Styles, Costs, and Showrooms
May 5, 2026
If you are somewhere between “we need new cabinets” and “we have no idea where to start,” this guide was written for you. Choosing kitchen cabinets in San Antonio is not as complicated as most suppliers make it sound, but it does require a few honest answers up front: what your kitchen needs, what the product differences are worth paying for, and what a realistic budget looks like before you walk into any showroom.
We at Cabinet Bazaar have helped homeowners across San Antonio, Stone Oak, Alamo Heights, New Braunfels, and the wider Hill Country make this decision without the runaround. What follows is the clearest, most practical breakdown we can give you.
What San Antonio Homeowners Are Actually Looking for in Kitchen Cabinets:
Most people start this process thinking about colour or style, and that is fine. But the buyers who end up happiest with their kitchens are the ones who answer three practical questions before they get attached to any finish.
What is wrong with what you have right now? Be specific. If the answer is “it looks outdated,” a style change will fix it. If the answer is “there is never enough storage,” a style change alone will not help you. The configuration and layout of the cabinets matter as much as the finish.
How long are you planning to stay in this home? If you are renovating to sell within two years, your priorities are different than if you are renovating for the next fifteen. Resale-focused renovations favour neutral colours and proven styles. Long-term renovations give you more room to make choices that suit how you specifically use the space.
What is your actual total budget, not just your cabinet budget? Cabinets are only one part of the cost. Countertops, hardware, installation labor, and any plumbing adjustments that come with a new layout all add to the final number. Knowing the total budget from the start prevents the very common situation where a homeowner spends their full budget on cabinets and then has nothing left for installation.
San Antonio’s housing stock spans a wide range, from historic homes in King William and Monte Vista to newer builds in Stone Oak, Boerne, and the growing suburbs along Highway 281. The right cabinet choice for an 80-year-old bungalow with nine-foot ceilings is genuinely different from the right choice for a 2019 new build with an open plan kitchen. One size does not fit all here, and any supplier who tells you otherwise is not paying attention to your actual situation.
Kitchen Cabinet Styles San Antonio Buyers Choose Most:
White Shaker Kitchen Cabinets
White shaker cabinets are the most requested style across every price point we see at our San Antonio showroom, and the reason is not complicated. A five-piece shaker door in white works in almost every kitchen, pairs with almost every countertop material, and holds its resale appeal better than any other style currently available.
Shaker-style cabinets and other recessed-panel doors continue to be the top choice for homeowners, with 57 percent of renovating homeowners selecting them according to Houzz research. That number has stayed remarkably consistent because shaker is genuinely adaptable, not because it is trendy. Houzz
Our Franklin White is a warm white with a slight cream undertone that reads beautifully against quartz countertops, natural stone, and warm wood flooring. Our Shaker White offers a crisper, brighter white for kitchens with good natural light and a more contemporary design direction. The difference between these two is subtle in a photograph and significant in person, which is one reason we always recommend seeing them in the showroom before ordering.
For a deeper look at everything white shaker cabinets can do in a San Antonio kitchen, read our full guide: White Shaker Cabinets San Antonio: Styles, Pairings, and What to Know Before You Buy.
Navy Blue Shaker Kitchen Cabinets:
Navy blue has become the most popular bold cabinet colour in San Antonio kitchens, and it has earned that position for practical reasons, not just aesthetic ones. Unlike sage green or terracotta, which tend to date faster, navy functions almost like a neutral. It pairs with warm metals, cool hardware, light countertops, and dark countertops without requiring a coordinated update every few years.
Our Shaker Navy Blue is the top-selling bold finish we carry. The most requested combination in our showroom right now is this cabinet paired with white quartz countertop and brushed gold hardware, which creates a finished result that looks considerably more expensive than it costs.
Navy also works in two-tone kitchen configurations, where the navy covers the lower base cabinets and white or off-white covers the upper wall cabinets. This approach gives the kitchen visual depth without committing to navy on every surface.

European Dark Wood Kitchen Cabinets:
For San Antonio homes where the kitchen connects to a dining or living area with natural materials, wood-tone cabinets read as intentional and warm in a way that painted cabinets simply cannot replicate. The grain texture adds depth that no painted finish achieves.
Our European Dark Wood cabinet uses a frameless box construction, meaning the door covers the full face of the cabinet without a visible face frame. This produces a cleaner, more seamless look when the doors are closed and provides marginally more interior storage than a framed American-style cabinet of the same dimensions.
For the full breakdown on this style, including countertop pairings, hardware choices, and how to use dark wood in a kitchen without it feeling heavy, see our guide: European Dark Wood Kitchen Cabinets: Design Guide, Costs, and Where to See Them in San Antonio.
Gray Shaker Cabinets
Gray held the top position in American kitchen design for most of the past decade and remains a strong choice for San Antonio homeowners who want something with more character than white but more flexibility than a bold color. Our Shaker Gray and Franklin Gray cover the range from light silver-gray to deeper cool gray, and both pair well with the quartz and stone countertop materials that are standard across most San Antonio renovations.
Shaker Cinder and Shaker Espresso
For homeowners who want something darker than gray without going to a full navy or a wood grain finish, our Shaker Cinder and Shaker Espresso are worth considering. Cinder reads as a sophisticated deep charcoal. Espresso is a warm dark brown that works particularly well in kitchens with warm-toned flooring and natural stone countertops.
Both are available in our showroom for in-person viewing.
Stock, Semi-Custom, and Custom Kitchen Cabinets: What the Difference Actually Means:
This is where a lot of buyers get confused, partly because suppliers use these terms inconsistently.
Stock Kitchen Cabinets
Stock cabinets are manufactured in fixed sizes and held in inventory, ready to ship or pick up immediately. They come in standard width increments, typically 3-inch steps from 9 inches to 48 inches wide, and standard heights. If your kitchen layout works with those dimensions, stock cabinets offer the fastest turnaround and the lowest price.
The tradeoff is flexibility. Gaps between cabinets and walls are filled with filler strips rather than cabinets sized to fit precisely. This works fine in most kitchens but can produce a less refined result in kitchens with unusual dimensions or specific layout requirements.
Semi-Custom Kitchen Cabinets
Semi-custom cabinets are built to order within a manufacturer’s range of available sizes and options. You can specify widths in 1-inch increments rather than 3-inch increments, choose from a wider range of finishes and door profiles, and often add interior accessories like pull-out shelves, drawer organizers, and specialty storage configurations.
About one-third of homeowners renovating their kitchens choose semicustom cabinets, making it the second most common choice after custom, according to Houzz research. For most San Antonio homeowners, semi-custom assembled cabinets represent the best balance of quality, customization, and cost. Houzz
Assembled Kitchen Cabinets vs. RTA
This distinction matters for your renovation timeline and your installation budget. Assembled kitchen cabinets arrive at your home or job site fully constructed and ready to install. The cabinet box is already built. Your installer attaches it to the wall and hangs the doors.
RTA, which stands for ready to assemble, cabinets ship flat-packed. The buyer or their installer puts the box together on site before installation can begin.
According to The Family Handyman, RTA cabinets start at around $2,000 shipped for a standard kitchen, while installation typically costs $1,500 to $3,000 on top of the cabinet cost. Assembled cabinets cost more upfront but reduce job site labor significantly. For most San Antonio homeowners working with a contractor on a defined schedule, assembly is the more practical choice. Family Handyman.

Full Custom Kitchen Cabinets San Antonio:
Full custom means the cabinets are built specifically for your kitchen, in whatever dimensions your space requires. There are no standard sizes, no filler strips, and no compromises on configuration. Custom is the right choice when your kitchen has an unusual layout, ceiling heights that don’t match standard cabinet sizes, or when you want interior configurations that semi-custom manufacturers do not offer.
Custom kitchen cabinets in San Antonio cost more and take longer. If your kitchen works well with standard dimensions and your renovation timeline is defined, semi-custom assembled cabinets will almost certainly serve you just as well at a meaningfully lower price.
We at Cabinet Bazaar can walk you through exactly which option fits your kitchen during a free design consultation at our showroom. There is no obligation. You leave with a clear recommendation based on your actual measurements and budget.
How Much Do Kitchen Cabinets Cost in San Antonio?
This is the question most buyers have before any other, and it deserves a straight answer rather than a range so wide it tells you nothing.
Stock Cabinet Cost Range
For a standard San Antonio kitchen, stock cabinets run from roughly $3,000 to $8,000 for the cabinet units alone. Retailers and manufacturers typically base minimum pricing on a 10-foot by 10-foot kitchen, with standard kitchen cabinets from a home improvement store ranging from $1,500 to $7,000 for that footprint. A larger kitchen or a more complex layout with an island, pantry tower, or corner units will push the cost toward the upper end of this range or beyond it. Family Handyman
Semi-Custom Assembled Cabinet Cost Range
Semi-custom assembled cabinets in San Antonio typically fall between $8,000 and $15,000 for a full kitchen, depending on size, configuration, and the specific finish and interior options chosen. This is the range where most Cabinet Bazaar buyers land, and it is where the quality difference over stock becomes clearly visible in the construction.
Full Custom Kitchen Cabinet Cost Range
Expect to pay $30,000 or more at a custom cabinet shop or high-end custom kitchen designer for a fully custom project. For San Antonio homeowners with larger kitchens, non-standard layouts, or high-end finish requirements, this number is realistic. For most renovation projects, it is more than necessary. Family Handyman
What Drives the Cost Beyond the Cabinet Price
The cabinet price is only one number in the total project cost. Here is what else to account for before you finalize a budget.
Countertops: Quartz countertops in San Antonio run from $50 to $120 per square foot installed, depending on the material and edge profile. A standard kitchen can easily add $3,000 to $8,000 to the project total from countertops alone.
Hardware: Drawer pulls and cabinet knobs range from $3 to $40 per piece, depending on finish and quality. A full kitchen with 30 to 50 hardware pieces adds $150 to $2,000, depending on what you choose.
Professional installation: Installation for kitchen cabinets in San Antonio typically runs $1,500 to $4,000, depending on kitchen size and layout complexity. Frameless European cabinets require more precision during installation and tend toward the higher end of this range.
Plumbing adjustments: If your new cabinet layout moves the sink location or requires plumbing changes, add $500 to $2,000, depending on complexity.
The Hidden Costs Most Buyers Discover Mid-Project
These are the line items that catch buyers off guard most often.
Filler strips and trim pieces: Gaps between cabinet runs and walls require fillers. Corner cabinets require specific transition pieces. Crown molding for upper cabinets is a separate material cost. These items are rarely included in a basic cabinet quote.
Under-cabinet lighting: If your current kitchen does not have under-cabinet lighting and you want to add it, plan for this before installation rather than after. The wiring is far easier to handle before the cabinets go up.
Inside finish on cabinets with glass doors: If you choose any glass-front upper cabinets, the inside of adjacent cabinets needs a finished interior. This is an upcharge that many buyers do not factor in.
A Realistic All-In Budget for San Antonio
A complete kitchen cabinet project in San Antonio, covering assembled semi-custom cabinets, countertops, hardware, and professional installation, realistically starts at $12,000 to $15,000 for a modest kitchen. Mid-range projects in larger San Antonio kitchens with quality assembled cabinets and stone countertops typically run $20,000 to $35,000 all-in. Custom projects in larger homes can exceed $50,000 when full custom cabinets, premium stone, and high-end appliances are part of the same renovation.
Having a realistic all-in number before your first showroom visit is genuinely useful. It helps our design team recommend the right product tier from the start rather than showing you options that do not fit what you are working with.
Kitchen Cabinet Financing in San Antonio
A full kitchen renovation is a significant investment, and financing allows you to make the right decision for your home rather than a compromised decision based on what you can pay in a single amount right now.
Why Financing a Full Project Makes More Sense Than a Partial Upgrade:
The most common mistake in kitchen renovation budgeting is splitting the project into phases to manage cost. New cabinets installed alongside old countertops that will be replaced “later” rarely works as intended. The later replacement costs more because the countertop fabricator must work around existing cabinets rather than templating in a clean space. The kitchen looks unfinished for months or years. And the disruption of a second renovation round is significant.
Financing the full project upfront, cabinets, countertops, and installation together, produces a better result at a lower total cost than phasing it.
How to Estimate a Monthly Payment Before You Visit
A rough rule of thumb: at current financing rates, a $15,000 kitchen project financed over 36 months carries a monthly payment in the range of $400 to $500 depending on the interest rate and your credit profile. A $25,000 project over 48 months runs approximately $550 to $700 per month. These are estimates, not quotes, but they give you a practical sense of what a financed project costs monthly before you commit to a specific product tier.
Financing Options Through Cabinet Bazaar
We at Cabinet Bazaar offer financing options for San Antonio buyers who want to move forward with the right project without paying the full cost upfront. Visit our showroom at 5601 Bandera Road or call us at 1 (210) 773 2799 to discuss the specific financing structures currently available and find a payment plan that fits your situation. We can also point you toward our free design consultation as a first step, where our team builds a detailed project plan and cost estimate before you make any financial commitment.
Cabinet Construction Quality: What Separates Good from Average
Two cabinets can look identical in a photograph and perform very differently over ten years of daily use. The construction details that matter are not always visible until something goes wrong.
Plywood Box vs. MDF Construction
The cabinet box, meaning the sides, bottom, top, and back panels, is where construction quality lives or dies. Plywood boxes resist moisture, hold screws more reliably over time, and maintain their structural integrity better than medium-density fiberboard boxes under normal kitchen conditions.
MDF boxes are less expensive to manufacture and perform acceptably in dry environments, but they are more susceptible to swelling near sinks and dishwashers. In San Antonio’s climate, with its humidity variation between summer and winter, plywood box construction is the more durable long-term choice.
According to This Old House, semi-custom and custom options typically step up to plywood boxes with solid wood doors featuring mortise-and-tenon joinery, giving Shaker details sharper definition compared to stock options built on MDF or particleboard. All Cabinet Bazaar cabinets are built with plywood box construction as standard. This Old House
Dovetail Drawer Joints
A dovetail joint is a woodworking connection where interlocking trapezoidal shapes lock two pieces together mechanically. A drawer box built with dovetail joints at the corners will outlast a stapled or dowel-joined drawer box significantly, because the joint resists the racking force that drawers experience when pulled open repeatedly over years of use.
This is a detail you can check in any showroom by looking at the corner of an open drawer. If you see the characteristic wedge-shaped interlocking pieces, the drawer box is dovetail-joined. If you see staples or dowels, it is not.
Soft Close Hardware
Soft-close hinges and drawer slides use a hydraulic mechanism that slows the door or drawer in the final inch of closing travel. The door decelerates and closes completely without slamming. You push it to within an inch of closing, and the mechanism does the rest.
Shaker-style cabinet doors often cost less than raised panel or inset styles, which means the budget for soft-close hardware is often easier to accommodate in a shaker-style kitchen than in a more elaborate design. At Cabinet Bazaar, soft-close hardware is standard on every kitchen cabinet and bathroom vanity we sell. It is not a premium upgrade. It is the baseline. Houzz
Full Overlay Doors
A full overlay door covers the full face of the cabinet box, leaving only a small gap between adjacent doors. This produces the clean, furniture-like appearance that most buyers are looking for in a modern kitchen. It is the door style used on virtually every kitchen cabinet we carry.
The alternative, partial overlay, leaves more of the cabinet frame visible between doors. It is a less refined look and is primarily seen on older or lower-cost cabinet lines.

What to Look for When You Visit a Kitchen Cabinet Showroom in San Antonio:
We hear from buyers regularly who say they ordered cabinets online and were disappointed when they arrived. The most common reason is that the finish looked different in person than it did in the product photograph. The second most common reason is that the quality of the hardware did not match the quality implied by the price.
Both problems are avoidable if you see the product in person before ordering.
Five Things to Check Before Placing Any Order
- Open and close the doors and drawers. Check that the soft close mechanism engages smoothly and that the door closes flush without wobbling. Doors that feel loose or uneven in a showroom will feel worse after installation.
- Look at the cabinet box interior. Pull open a base cabinet and look at the sides, bottom, and back. Plywood shows a cross-grain pattern on the edges. MDF is a uniform gray-brown with no grain. You can tell the difference immediately once you know what to look for.
- Check the drawer box corners. As described above, look for dovetail joinery at the corners of drawer boxes. This takes five seconds and tells you a great deal about the overall construction standard.
- View the finish under different lighting. Showrooms use a combination of natural and artificial light. Look at the cabinet door color near a window and under overhead LED lighting. Some finishes shift noticeably between the two. White cabinets are particularly prone to this, and seeing them in person removes the guesswork.
- Ask about lead times and what is in stock. For an active renovation with a contractor schedule, knowing whether your chosen cabinets are available from current inventory or require a production run makes a significant difference in project planning.
What to Bring to Your Showroom Visit
Your kitchen measurements. Width and height of each wall with cabinets, ceiling height, window and door locations, and the distance between appliance locations. Our design team can work with rough measurements and refine them, but having something to start with makes the consultation much more productive.
A photo of your current kitchen. Even a phone photo helps our team understand what you are starting with and what the renovation needs to address.
Your countertop sample or reference if you have one. If you have already chosen a countertop material, bringing a sample or a photograph to compare against cabinet finishes saves a significant amount of back-and-forth.
A realistic budget range. Not a specific number you are locked into, just a range. Knowing whether you are working with $10,000, $20,000, or $40,000 helps our team direct you toward the right product tier from the start of the conversation.
The Questions Most Buyers Forget to Ask
“Is this finish a standard stock color or a custom order?” Standard colors ship faster. Custom colors take longer and sometimes cost more.
“What is the warranty on the cabinet box and hardware?” Quality assembled cabinets typically carry a one to five year warranty on construction defects. Hardware warranties vary by manufacturer.
“Does installation include adjustment after the countertops go in?” Cabinet doors sometimes need minor adjustment after countertops and appliances are installed. Knowing whether this is included in your installation quote prevents a later dispute.
Why We at Cabinet Bazaar Are the Kitchen Cabinet Store San Antonio Trusts
There are a number of places to buy kitchen cabinets in San Antonio. What we at Cabinet Bazaar offer that the big box stores and online-only suppliers cannot is a combination of real product you can see in person, design expertise that is specific to your kitchen, and service that continues through delivery and installation rather than ending at the point of sale.
Our San Antonio Showroom Locations
We operate two locations in San Antonio.
Our main showroom is at 5601 Bandera Road, San Antonio, TX 78238. This is where you can view our full range of kitchen and bathroom cabinet styles, meet with our design team, and work through a detailed cabinet plan for your specific kitchen.
Our warehouse is at 5634 Randolph Boulevard, San Antonio, TX 78233. This location handles assembly, staging, and delivery coordination for the San Antonio and Central Texas area.
You can reach our showroom team at 1 (210) 773 2799 during business hours. Walk-ins are welcome. For a dedicated design session, booking a time through our online calendar ensures you have uninterrupted time with one of our designers.
We also serve homeowners across the wider San Antonio region, including Stone Oak, Alamo Heights, New Braunfels, Boerne, Helotes, Schertz, and Bulverde.
Free 3D Kitchen Design Consultation
Before you spend anything, our design team will work through your kitchen layout, your measurements, your style preferences, and your budget with you. We produce a 3D design that shows you what your kitchen will look like with the cabinet configuration we recommend. This service costs nothing. It exists because buyers who see a clear plan before ordering make better decisions and end up with kitchens they are genuinely happy with.
Book your free consultation here.
Our Construction Standards
Every kitchen cabinet and bathroom vanity we sell at Cabinet Bazaar is built to the same baseline: plywood box construction, dovetail drawer joints, soft close hinges and drawer slides, and full overlay doors. These are not tier-specific features. They apply to every product in our showroom.
Delivery, Assembly, and Installation
We deliver anywhere in Texas. For San Antonio buyers, we coordinate delivery directly to your home or job site on a schedule that works with your contractor. Our assembly service handles any flat-pack preparation before delivery if needed. Our installation team fits cabinets with the precision a project of this investment deserves.
Our Contractor Program
If you are a contractor, designer, or remodeler working on client projects in the San Antonio area, we at Cabinet Bazaar offer a structured contractor program with trade pricing, priority scheduling, and delivery terms designed around project volume. Contact us to discuss the program and how it fits your business.
For everything related to bathroom cabinetry and vanity selection, our detailed Bathroom Cabinets Guide covers materials, space-saving configurations, and buying tips specific to San Antonio bathrooms.
Come See It in Person Before You Decide:
Reading about cabinet finishes and construction standards only gets you so far. The decisions that matter most, which white works with your countertop, whether the navy blue reads as rich or flat under your kitchen lighting, whether the drawer action feels the way you want it to for the next fifteen years, those are decisions that require being in the room with the actual product.
We at Cabinet Bazaar carry real stock in a real showroom that you can visit today. Our design team is not there to sell you the most expensive option. They are there to help you figure out what works for your kitchen, your home, and your budget.
Visit us at 5601 Bandera Rd, Suite 100, San Antonio, TX 78238, call us at 1 (210) 773 2799, or email us at info@cabinetbazaar.com. You can also book a free 3D design consultation online and let us put a real plan together before you commit to anything.
Your kitchen deserves a product that performs as well on day five thousand as it did on day one.
FAQs:
1. What kitchen cabinet styles are most popular with San Antonio homeowners right now?
White shaker cabinets remain the most requested style across San Antonio because they work in virtually every home, pair with nearly every countertop material, and hold their resale appeal better than most alternatives. Navy blue shaker cabinets have become the top choice for homeowners who want a stronger design statement without committing to a color that will feel dated within a few years. European dark wood cabinets are growing steadily in popularity, particularly in open-plan San Antonio homes where the warmth and grain texture of the finish adds depth that painted cabinets cannot replicate.
2. How much do kitchen cabinets cost in San Antonio?
Stock kitchen cabinets for a full San Antonio kitchen typically range from $3,000 to $8,000 for the cabinets alone, not including countertops, hardware, or installation labor. Semi-custom assembled cabinets, which offer more flexibility in sizing and finish, generally fall between $8,000 and $15,000, depending on kitchen size and configuration complexity. Full custom kitchen cabinets can exceed $20,000 and are best suited for non-standard layouts or homeowners with very specific design requirements that stock sizing cannot accommodate.