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How to Measure Your Kitchen: The Step-by-Step Guide

How to Measure Your Kitchen: Step-by-step guide

Table of Contents

A kitchen renovation is one of the most significant financial investments you will make in your home. Prioritizing precision during the kitchen planning phase is crucial for achieving a high-end, custom aesthetic without the custom price tag.

However, a word of caution: 

⚠️Do not fall for the "Free Design" tools found on many websites. While they seem convenient, these services are often lead-generation tactics designed to get you to pay a substantial price for your kitchen design.

The reality is that learning how to measure kitchen cabinets yourself is not difficult. You do not need complex software to get professional results. In less than 30 minutes, this guide will make you a pro, empowering you to design your own kitchen layout, select your cabinets with confidence, edit your plan as you please, and save thousands in the process.

Measure Your Kitchen: Step-by-Step Guide 

You don't need to be an artist! Just grab a piece of grid paper and a pencil and follow these steps. Refer to the icons below. 

Measure Kitchen Cabinets: Buttons

Step 1: Draw Your Floor Plan

Start by drawing the rough shape of your room. Don't worry about scale yet; draw the lines of your walls.

Step 2: Measure Wall-to-Wall

Start at one corner of the room and pull your tape measure to the next corner. Write this number clearly on the outside of your drawing lines. Do this for every wall where you plan to install cabinets. 

Measuring the total length of a kitchen wall from corner to corner with a tape measure.

Always measure in inches (e.g., write down 140 inches, not 4 feet 7 inches). This is the standard language of the cabinet industry, ensuring your order will be accurate.

Step 3: Mark Obstructions

Now, locate the permanent fixtures in the room. Measure from the wall corner to the outside edge of the casing (trim) of the window or door. Mark this clearly on your layout.

Step 4: Place Appliances 

Identify where your major appliances will go: the refrigerator, stove, and dishwasher.

Kitchen floor plan layout showing the exact locations of stove, refrigerator, and dishwasher for cabinet planning.

Cheat Sheet: Standard Appliance & Kitchen Cabinet Sizes 

Standard kitchen appliance dimensions chart for refrigerators, ranges, and dishwashers to assist in cabinet planning.

If you don't have your appliances picked out yet, use these industry standards to plan your layout safely:

The "Center Point" Rule for Utilities:

Since you cannot easily move gas lines or sink plumbing, you must measure exactly where they are. Do not just measure to the edge of the stove. Measure from the nearest wall corner to the exact center of the gas pipe or sink drain. This process ensures that when you place your Sink Base or Stove Cabinet, it is perfectly centered over the connections.

Diagram: Measuring from wall corner to center of gas and sink plumbing for cabinet alignment.

The Fridge Box Pro Tip:
If you want your kitchen to look high-end, don't just leave a gap for the fridge. You should build your fridge in.

The Math: Plan for a 1.5" panel on each side (Total: Add 3" to your fridge width).

Diagram of refrigerator end panel dimensions showing 96-inch height and 24-inch or 27-inch depth options for a built-in fridge box.
Built-in refrigerator surround using side panels and overhead cabinets for a custom, high-end kitchen look.

Good to Know: Some cabinet lines come with wider fillers (up to 3" per side). Don't worry if they seem too wide; these are designed to be cut down on-site so you can trim them for a perfectly tight fit.

The "Subtraction Method"

This is the secret that professional designers use to figure out what fits. You don't need to guess cabinet sizes; you do the math.

Kitchen planning subtraction formula: Total wall length minus fixed items and corner cabinets equals playable space.

Total Wall Length - Fixed Items - Corner Cabinet = Playable Space

Step 5: Record Your Vertical Measurements 

Knowing your ceiling height is non-negotiable because it dictates exactly which wall cabinets you need to buy. Measure from the floor to the ceiling at least three times in the kitchen (floors in older homes are rarely perfectly level). Take the smallest measurement of the three.

Kitchen Cabinets Height Cheat Sheet

Step 6: The "Filler" Rule

This is the most common mistake first-time remodelers make. If you design a row of cabinets that ends directly against a wall, you cannot use the whole space. You must subtract 2 to 3 inches for a Filler.

Design comparison: Cabinet flush against wall vs. correct installation using a 3-inch filler for clearance

Pro Tip:
If a cabinet with a door is installed flush against a wall, the door handle will hit the wall, preventing the door from opening past 90 degrees. A filler strip pushes the cabinet away from the wall, allowing the door to swing freely and drawers to open without scraping paint.

Scribe molding trim covering a small gap between cabinet frame and wall where standard fillers won't fit.

Pro Tip:
You can use Scribe Molding (or Shoe Molding) to tie the Toe Kick to the floor. Instead of struggling to cut the toe kick board to match a wavy or uneven floor, simply install the toe kick straight and cover the bottom gap with a strip of this molding. It bends easily to follow the floor’s contours, instantly hiding gaps for a seamless finish.

Step 7: Master the Corners

You cannot design a kitchen without solving the corner first. The corner cabinet dictates the spacing for the rest of the run. You generally have four options:

Kitchen corner cabinet options: Lazy Susan, blind corner, diagonal cabinet, and dead corner diagrams.

Easy Reach Lazy Susan corner cabinet showing 36-inch wall dimensions and rotating storage trays.

Blind base corner cabinet diagram showing filler requirement and installation next to a sink base

Dead corner kitchen layout using two filler strips at a 90-degree angle for drawer clearance.

Option D: The Corner Sink Base (The Diagonal)

Unlike the sharp 90-degree turn of a Lazy Susan, this cabinet cuts across the corner at a 45-degree angle. It is designed specifically to house a sink, allowing you to stand comfortably in the corner while washing dishes. It is the best for kitchens with corner windows or specific plumbing layouts. 

In RTA cabinetry, this is often sold as a "Corner Sink Face" (a front frame) that connects two adjacent cabinets. You typically need to install 2x4 cleats on the wall and run the flooring all the way back to support it.

Diagonal corner sink base cabinet with 45-degree front face for corner sink installation.

Before you match your upper cabinets to your lowers, you need to solve a standard geometry puzzle: Wall corners are smaller than base corners.

If you select a standard 36" Lazy Susan for your base, the matching upper cabinet is usually a Diagonal Corner Wall (DCW).

1. The Math: A DCW only takes up 24 inches of wall space.

2. The Result: Since the base takes 36" and the wall takes 24", you are left with a 12-inch difference on each side.

The "Easy" Fix: You can place a 12" wide wall cabinet next to the corner to fill the gap. However, buying two extra-small cabinets adds to the cost of your project.

Kitchen layout diagram showing 12-inch wall cabinets filling the gap between a diagonal corner cabinet and adjacent uppers.

The "Pro" Fix: Instead of buying a separate 12" cabinet, take the cabinet that would have gone there and make it 12 inches wider.

Kitchen layout showing a wider adjacent wall cabinet aligned with the corner base to avoid small cabinet seams.

Example: If you planned for an 18" cabinet next to the corner, buy a 30" cabinet instead (18" + 12"). This looks cleaner and saves you money.

The Bridge Kitchen Cabinets

The cabinets above your sink (if there is no window) and above your microwave/stove need to be shorter to allow for head clearance.

Bridge Cabinets Cheat Sheet:

If you are using 30" Tall cabinets, use a 12-15" High bridge cabinet.

If you are using 36" Tall cabinets, use an 18" High bridge cabinet.

If you are using 42" Tall cabinets, use a 24" High bridge cabinet.

How to Measure Kitchen Island

Pro Tip: 
Standard kitchen cabinets are built with raw, unfinished plywood backs because they are designed to go against a wall. When you build an island, those raw backs are exposed. Whether you build Option A, B, C, or D you must order a 4'x8' Island Panel (Skin) to cut and cover the back and sides. Without it, your island will look unfinished.

The Final Kitchen Measurement Check

  • Toe Kicks: To cover the gaps between cabinets at the floor level.
Toe kick calculation formula: Total base cabinet width divided by 96 inches equals number of pieces needed.

Here is the formula to keep handy:

TOTAL BASE CABINET WIDTH (Inches) ÷ 96 = QTY NEEDED 

Pro Tip:
Since Shoe Molding runs along the same path as your Toe Kick, buy the same quantity as calculated above.

Achieving the Built-In Kitchen Look

Fillers: For any cabinet touching a wall.
Scribe Molding: To cover any small gaps between the cabinet and the wall/ceiling.
Shoe Molding: Installs at the very bottom of the toe kick to hide the seam where the cabinet meets the floor.

Graphic illustrating placement of cabinet fillers, scribe molding, toe kicks, and shoe molding at the floor.

Measuring your own kitchen isn't rocket science; it's just simple math. By taking 30 minutes to do this yourself, you have avoided the "Free Design" markup and gained total control over your renovation

Disclaimer: This guide is provided for educational purposes only. Since every home has unique structural conditions, Buy Wholesale Cabinets assumes no liability for measurement errors or ordering mistakes. The customer is solely responsible for verifying all final dimensions and site conditions before purchase.

FAQ

What are standard cabinet measurements?

For a complete breakdown of available widths, heights, and depths, see our Guide to Standard Kitchen Cabinet Dimensions.

What is the best way to measure kitchen cabinets?

Measure the full wall-to-wall width, the floor-to-ceiling height in three different spots (take the lowest number), and mark the exact center points of your plumbing and gas lines.

When is it necessary to hire a proffesional for measuring?

Hire a pro if your kitchen has non-90-degree corners, vaulted ceilings, or severely uneven floors.

How do I handle measurements if I can't remove old cabinets yet?

Measure the room, not the cabinets. Measure wall-to-wall above the backsplash or near the floor (toe-kick area). Always assume the walls are slightly tighter than they appear.

How do I ensure new appliances will fit if I plan to upgrade later?

Design for standard sizes, not specific units. Leave a 36-inch opening for the fridge, a 30-inch opening for the stove, and 24” for the dishwasher. You can use temporary fillers now, but this ensures future standard models will fit.

How do I measure corner kitchen cabinets correctly?

Measure the available space on both walls, starting from the corner. Remember that a standard Lazy Susan requires 36 inches of clear space on each wall to fit.

Should I measure cabinets in inches or centimeters?

Always use inches. The entire US cabinet industry uses inches for sizing, so using centimeters can cause conversion errors.

How many inches should cabinets be from the countertop?

The standard clearance is 18 inches between the top of the counter and the bottom of the wall cabinets.

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