Standard Cabinet Dimensions That Actually Work in the Shop
There are plenty of standard-dimension charts online. Most of them were not written for the people actually cutting parts, fitting hardware, and making cabinets go together clean.
There are a lot of “standard dimension” charts online.
Most of them are written for designers, DIY homeowners, or Pinterest boards. Not for people actually building cabinets.
This is what actually works in a shop.
Base cabinets
Typical starting point:
- Height: 34 1/2" before countertop
- Depth: 24"
- Width varies with the layout
Why 34 1/2"
- 1 1/2" countertop lands you at a finished height of 36"
- That is the ergonomic standard most shops are building toward
Toe kick
- Height: 3 1/2" to 4"
- Depth: 3"
Upper cabinets
Typical:
- Depth: 12"
- Height: 30", 36", or 42"
- 18" from countertop to the bottom of the upper
That spacing matters more than anything else.
Tall cabinets
Typical:
- Height: 84", 90", or 96"
- Depth: 24"
These are where layout issues show up fast.
- Ceilings vary
- Floors are not level
- Fillers become critical
Standard outside sizes are helpful, but tall units are usually where real-world conditions force the most adjustments. This is why fillers, reveals, and installation tolerance matter as much as nominal dimensions.
Internal dimensions matter more
Most people focus on outside dimensions. The real game is internal space.
Example:
- A 30" cabinet with 3/4" sides has an internal width of 28 1/2"
That affects:
- Drawer sizing
- Shelf fit
- Hardware
Face frame vs frameless impact
Face frame
- Reduces openings
- Adds rigidity
- More forgiving
Frameless
- Maximizes space
- Requires tighter tolerances
Your dimensions have to reflect that.
The mistake most people make
They copy “standard dimensions” without understanding material thickness, joinery, or reveals.
That’s how you end up adjusting in the field, trimming parts, and losing time.
CabinetCalc lets you lock the dimensions and build logic your shop actually uses.
Instead of rechecking every height, depth, toe kick, and construction assumption on each job, you can set your standards once and build from there.
How to use dimensions the right way
Dimensions are not rules. They are starting points.
Your shop should define:
- Standard cabinet heights
- Material thickness
- Construction method
Then everything flows from that.
Where CabinetCalc fits
Instead of memorizing all of this, you define your shop defaults once:
- Material thickness
- Toe kick
- Construction style
Then every cabinet uses that system. No guessing. No recalculating.
Bottom line
Standard dimensions are only useful if they’re consistent in your shop.
Consistency is what makes production smooth.
Lock your standards once and stop second-guessing every cabinet.
CabinetCalc lets you define your shop defaults and generate cabinets that actually fit the way you build. If you want to keep going, read the cut list guide or the shop rate pricing guide.