Framed vs Frameless Cabinets: What We Build and Why

Framed cabinets have a hardwood face frame around the box opening, like a picture frame the doors attach to. Frameless cabinets, the European style, are boxes with doors mounted directly to the sides. Both can be excellent. They fail differently, they store differently, and they suit different houses, and that is the actual decision.

What Each Does Best

FramedFrameless
LookTraditional to transitionalModern, clean planes
StrengthFrame stiffens the box for decadesDepends entirely on box material quality
AccessFrame edge slightly narrows openingsFull-width access, a bit more interior room
Old housesForgiving to scribe into crooked wallsDemands flat, plumb conditions
Door stylesInset possible, the furniture lookOverlay only, by definition

The American tradition is framed; the European factory tradition is frameless. Industry definitions and testing standards for both live at the KCMA, and the joinery heritage behind face frames is a staple topic at Fine Woodworking.

Frameless lives or dies on the box. A frameless cabinet in quality plywood is a fine thing. A frameless cabinet in particleboard is a countdown timer, because there is no frame to save it when the material gives up around the hinges.

Our installation crew lead, Choice Custom Cabinetry

Our Position, Openly

We build framed cabinets, including inset, because Pennsylvania’s housing stock rewards them: the frame carries strength and gives our installers something honest to scribe against in houses where nothing is square. When a fully modern project calls for the frameless look, we get the same clean planes with full overlay doors on framed boxes, the appearance without giving up the skeleton. See how that plays out in our painted kitchens and white oak work.

Questions That Settle It

  • Is the house older than 1980? Framed will fit it better, structurally and visually.
  • Do you want inset doors? Framed is the only road there.
  • Is the style aggressively modern with slab doors? Honest frameless in quality plywood, or full-overlay framed, both work; judge the box material, not the label.
  • Whoever you buy from: what is the box made of? That question matters more than framed versus frameless ever will. Our box materials guide goes deep on it.

Deciding for your own kitchen? Bring the question to us directly: request a free consultation or visit the showroom at 3400 Horseshoe Pike in Honey Brook. We would rather help you choose well than sell you fast.

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