Cabinet Painting in St George, Utah

Good cabinet painting in St. George is mostly a prep and process job. If prep is rushed, finishes chip early around handles, edges, and sink areas. This guide helps you compare cabinet bids based on durability, not just price.

Cabinet prep steps that should be in every estimate

Spray vs brush/roll: what to ask

Many premium cabinet projects use spray finishing for smoothness, but process quality matters more than tool choice. Ask where spraying happens, how masking is managed, and what quality checks are done before reinstall.

Timeline expectations

How to compare cabinet quotes fairly

  1. Compare exact surface count (doors, drawer fronts, frames, island panels).
  2. Confirm whether interiors, toe-kicks, and end panels are included.
  3. Get primer and topcoat line details in writing.
  4. Ask about warranty and touch-up policy.

Cabinet repaint vs replacement: quick decision framework

Repainting is usually the stronger value when cabinet boxes are structurally sound and layout still works. Replacement can make more sense if hinges, drawer hardware, or internal box damage is widespread. Ask each contractor to separate cosmetic refinishing from hardware or carpentry upgrades so you can model budget scenarios without mixing scope types.

Cabinet painting FAQ

How long before cabinets can be used normally?

Cabinets are often reinstall-ready before they are full-cure ready. Light use may be possible early, but heavy cleaning and frequent impact should wait until manufacturer cure guidance is met. Ask your contractor for a day-by-day handling plan so expectations are clear.

If you are deciding between full replacement and repaint, request both options with clear scope. Then submit through the quote form to compare local contractor responses.

Compare cabinet painting options

Get contractor follow-up based on finish quality, process, and timeline.