Kitchen Cabinet Respray in Surrey

Kitchen Cabinet Respray in Surrey — A Complete Kitchen Transformation in Epsom

A kitchen cabinet respray is one of the most effective ways to transform a tired kitchen without the cost and disruption of a full replacement. This January, we completed a full kitchen respray project at a family home in Epsom, Surrey — and the results speak for themselves. Here’s what was involved, and why this kind of project is worth understanding before you commit.

What the Project Involved

This wasn’t just a quick coat of paint on the cabinet doors. It was a complete kitchen respray — cabinets, shelving, storage units, and the surrounding surfaces all prepared and finished to the same standard. That level of consistency is what separates a professional spray finish from a brush-and-roller job.

The full scope included:

  • Thorough preparation of all surfaces — walls, floors protected, cabinets cleaned and degreased
  • Cabinet doors removed and taken to our off-site workshop for spraying
  • All door furniture removed before finishing
  • Shelving and storage units sprayed in situ
  • Full reassembly and reinstallation of all units on completion

The total project time, from stripping down to final reassembly, was one week. That includes taking the doors off-site, spraying them in controlled workshop conditions, and returning them for fitting. It’s a process we’ve refined over 20 years. Fast isn’t the goal — quality is. But the two aren’t mutually exclusive.

Why Preparation Makes or Breaks a Kitchen Respray

The finish is only as good as what’s underneath it. That’s not a cliché — it’s the single most important thing I can tell you about spray painting kitchen cabinets.

Before a single coat goes on, every surface needs to be clean, degreased, and properly primed. Kitchen cabinets accumulate grease over years of cooking. If that isn’t removed completely, the paint won’t bond properly. You’ll get adhesion failures within months — peeling, chipping, and a finish that looks worse than what you started with.

We use professional-grade preparation products and apply a bonding primer suited to the substrate — whether that’s MDF, solid wood, or a previously painted surface. The topcoat we use is a water-based, low-VOC professional finish that’s hard-wearing and designed specifically for high-use surfaces. Tikkurila’s kitchen and furniture coatings are among the products we work with regularly — formulated for exactly this kind of environment.

Do You Need to Empty Your Cupboards?

No. This is one of the most common questions we get, and the answer is straightforward. Because we remove the doors and take them off-site for spraying, the cupboard interiors stay untouched. You don’t need to clear out your kitchen before we arrive. Life carries on — which matters when you’re living in the home throughout the process.

The Result — and What the Client Said

The transformation was significant. A kitchen that had become dated and worn was brought back to life with a consistent, factory-quality finish across every surface. No brush marks. No roller texture. Just a clean, even coat that looks like the kitchen was built that way.

The homeowner summed it up simply:

“Thank you so much, I can’t believe the transformation.” — Mrs Smith, Epsom

That reaction is common. People are often surprised by how much a respray changes the feel of the entire space — not just the cabinets, but the room as a whole.

Kitchen Respray vs. Full Kitchen Replacement

A new kitchen is a significant investment. If your cabinet carcasses are structurally sound and your layout works for you, a respray delivers a result that’s visually comparable to a replacement — at a fraction of the cost. The quality of the finish, the colour choices available, the durability — all of it holds up.

We can colour-match to Farrow & Ball, Little Greene, and most major paint ranges, so you’re not limited to a standard palette. If you have a specific shade in mind, we can work with it.

Our kitchen resprays come with a 10-year guarantee. That’s not a figure we arrived at lightly — it reflects the quality of the materials we use and the process we follow. You can see more about what that means in practice at TrustMark, the government-endorsed quality scheme we work within.

Based in Surrey — Working Across the Region

We’re based in Surrey and cover South London and the surrounding area. Epsom is typical of the kind of projects we work on — family homes where the kitchen is central to daily life, and where a week’s disruption is far preferable to the months a full replacement takes.

If your kitchen is looking tired and you’re weighing up your options, a respray is worth serious consideration. Take a look at our kitchen respray service for more detail on the process, or visit our Surrey spray painting page to see the areas we cover.

To discuss your kitchen or get a quote, call us on 0203 355 1495. We’re straightforward to talk to, and we’ll give you an honest assessment of what’s involved.


Frequently Asked Questions

How long does a kitchen cabinet respray take in Surrey?

Most kitchen cabinet respray projects in Surrey take around five to seven days from start to finish. This includes preparation, removing and taking doors off-site for workshop spraying, finishing the carcasses in situ, and full reassembly. The exact timeline depends on the size of the kitchen and the complexity of the finish required.

Do I need to empty my kitchen cupboards before a cabinet respray?

No. Because we remove the cabinet doors and spray them off-site in our workshop, the interiors of your cupboards are not disturbed. You don’t need to empty or relocate the contents — the kitchen remains functional throughout the project.

How durable is a professionally sprayed kitchen cabinet finish?

A professionally applied spray finish on kitchen cabinets is highly durable when the preparation and products are right. We use water-based, low-VOC professional coatings designed for high-use surfaces, applied over a proper bonding primer. Our kitchen resprays are backed by a 10-year guarantee — which reflects both the quality of the materials and the preparation process we follow on every job.

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