
Quick take: Shaker is the safe, resale-friendly all-rounder for most San Antonio homes, while flat-panel is the cleaner, more modern choice for newer open-concept kitchens — both available across our core collections.
Shaker vs flat-panel: the short version
If you're choosing kitchen cabinets in San Antonio, two door styles come up more than any other: Shaker and flat-panel (sometimes called slab). They sit at opposite ends of the same spectrum — one has a framed, recessed center panel, the other is a single smooth surface — and most of the decision comes down to the look you want and how you live in your kitchen.
Shaker is the most-requested door at our Bandera Road showroom, and flat-panel is a strong, growing runner-up in newer homes. Neither is 'better.' They just suit different houses, and this guide walks through the real differences so you can pick with confidence.
- Shaker: framed door with a recessed flat center panel — classic, flexible, resale-friendly.
- Flat-panel (slab): one smooth, frameless surface — clean, modern, minimal.
- Both come across our core collections in 30+ finishes.
Shaker vs. flat-panel at a glance
| What matters | Shaker | Flat-panel (slab) |
|---|---|---|
| Door | Framed, recessed center panel | Smooth, frameless surface |
| Style | Classic / transitional | Modern / minimal |
| Cleaning | Wipe; slight groove to dust | Easiest — one flat face |
| Best home fit | Traditional, two-tone, resale focus | Modern, open-concept builds |
| Finishes | 30+ across our collections | 30+ across our collections |
| Starting price | From $1,750 (10×10) | From $1,750 (10×10) |
Either way, hardware sets the final mood — choose it with the door, not after. Typical turnaround is about 1–3 weeks.
What each style actually is
A Shaker door is a five-piece door: four frame pieces around a flat recessed center panel. That single step of shadow line is what makes it read as 'classic but not fussy.' It works in traditional, transitional and modern-farmhouse kitchens and pairs with almost any countertop, which is a big part of why it's endured.
A flat-panel door is exactly what it sounds like — one flat slab with no frame and no detailing. With a thin bar pull, or handleless push-to-open hardware, it reads clean and European. It's the foundation of modern and contemporary design and tends to look right at home in the open-concept builds going up around Stone Oak, Cibolo and the newer Hill Country subdivisions.
At Cabinet Bazaar you'll find Shaker doors in our Shaker, Franklin, Bristol and Slim collections, a softer profile in the Dove collection, and a true slab in our European flat-panel collection — five collections in all, with more than 30 finishes between them.
Looks and cleaning, day to day
The biggest practical difference is that recessed panel. On a Shaker door, the inside edge of the frame collects a little more dust and cooking residue, so it takes a few extra seconds to wipe down — a minor thing, but worth knowing if you cook a lot. A flat-panel door is a single wipe, edge to edge, which is part of its appeal in a busy family kitchen.
Visually, Shaker brings a bit of texture and traditional warmth, especially in painted white or a two-tone layout (white uppers with a navy, green or charcoal base is popular here). Flat-panel leans calm and uninterrupted, which makes a smaller kitchen feel larger and lets a bold finish or a dramatic countertop do the talking. In South Texas light, both painted and wood-grain finishes hold up well; the choice is about the mood you want, not durability.
Cost, timeline and how we build them
Door style is only one of several things that move the price — finish, kitchen size and add-ons like a pantry, island or glass doors matter just as much. As a planning anchor, a standard 10x10 kitchen of cabinets at Cabinet Bazaar starts around $1,750, and Shaker and flat-panel are close enough in price that the look should drive your choice more than a small cost gap. Standard whites and grays are the most budget-friendly in either style; specialty colors and wood-grain finishes add a little.
On our core lines you get solid-wood doors and soft-close drawers and doors, with plywood boxes and dovetailed drawers on those lines — construction that holds up far better than particleboard over the years. Every estimate is free and itemized, so the number we give you reflects your exact layout and finishes, in writing, before anything is ordered.
Turnaround is typically about one to three weeks, we deliver across Texas, and ready-to-assemble (RTA) kits are available if you'd rather assemble and install yourself or use your own contractor.
- 10x10 cabinet package starts around $1,750; final price depends on style, finish and add-ons.
- Free, itemized estimates — no guesswork, no pressure.
- Typical turnaround about 1-3 weeks; delivery across Texas.
- RTA kits available for DIY installs.
How to choose — a quick framework
If you want a safe long-term bet, especially in an established San Antonio neighborhood or a home you may sell in a few years, Shaker in white or soft gray is hard to beat — it appeals to the widest range of future buyers and rarely looks dated. If your home is a newer open-concept build, or your taste runs modern and minimal, flat-panel will feel more 'you' and let a statement finish or countertop shine.
Still torn? Think about your kitchen's architecture and your cleaning patience. Crown molding, arched doorways and traditional trim lean Shaker; clean lines, large windows and an open floor plan lean flat-panel. And remember hardware does a lot of the work either way — bar pulls modernize a Shaker door, while a warm knob can soften a slab. The best way to decide is to handle the doors and compare finishes under real light, which you can do at the Bandera Road showroom or by laying out your kitchen in our free 3D designer first.
- Lean Shaker: traditional or transitional home, resale focus, two-tone look.
- Lean flat-panel: modern taste, newer open-concept build, easiest cleaning.
- Either way: hardware sets the final mood — choose it with the door, not after.
