AJ FINISH CARPENTRY LLC
4302 S 300TH ST, Auburn, WA 98001
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
Get multiple get multiple cabinet refacing quotes quotes in Federal Way — one request, 70 competing bids. Comparing at least 3 quotes is the single fastest way to avoid overpaying on your project.
Typical cost in Federal Way
$3,000–$12,000 / project
70 contractors in Federal Way
4302 S 300TH ST, Auburn, WA 98001
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
PO BOX 3513, Federal Way, WA 98063
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
29535 21st Ave S B4, Federal Way, WA 98003
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
1995 SW 352nd St, Federal Way, WA 98023
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
1006 SW 347th St, Federal Way, WA 98023
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
2013 S 372ND ST, Federal Way, WA 98003
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
24104 16TH AVE S, Des Moines, WA 98198
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
1302 W MAIN ST STE 16, Auburn, WA 98001
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
37301 28TH AVE S #12, Federal Way, WA 98003
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
35530 52ND AVE S, Auburn, WA 98001
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
33625 27TH Place SW, Federal Way, WA 98023
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
3906 S 301ST PL, Auburn, WA 98001
Cabinets, Millwork and Finish Carpentry. WA State Licensed Contractor.
Serves: 98001, 98003, 98023, 98063 +1 more
Federal Way sits at the geographic and economic middle of the South King County corridor — between Seattle's premium west-of-I-5 market and Tacoma's lower-price working-class market. The city's housing stock reflects its 1970s–1990s planned-subdivision development era: most Federal Way single-family homes were built between 1975 and 1999, during the era when particleboard-and-foil laminatecabinets were standard in tract construction. These cabinets — found in virtually every Federal Way kitchen built through the mid-1990s — are at or past their natural upgrade window, making Federal Way one of South King County's most active cabinet refacing markets. BLS SOC 47-2031 carpenter wages in the Seattle MSA average $35–$58 per hour, with cabinet specialty work running at the high end of that range.
| Refacing Type | Small Kitchen (15–20 doors) | Medium Kitchen (20–30 doors) | Large Kitchen (30+ doors) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rigid thermofoil (RTF) doors + veneer | $3,500–$6,000 | $5,000–$8,500 | $7,000–$12,000 |
| Wood veneer doors (painted) | $5,000–$9,000 | $7,500–$13,000 | $10,500–$18,000 |
| Solid wood doors (alder, maple) | $7,500–$13,000 | $11,000–$18,000 | $15,000–$25,000 |
| Full cabinet replacement (comparison) | $18,000–$35,000 | $25,000–$50,000 | $35,000–$75,000+ |
Prices include door replacement, drawer front replacement, exposed side panel veneering, new hinges, and adjustable drawer slides. Hardware (pulls, knobs) is typically priced separately at $5–$30 per piece.
| Component | Cost Range |
|---|---|
| New cabinet door (RTF/thermofoil) | $55–$130 each |
| New cabinet door (solid wood, unfinished) | $80–$200 each |
| Drawer front (matching door style) | $45–$120 each |
| Exposed end panel veneer (per panel) | $80–$250 |
| New hinge (soft-close Blum, Grass) | $15–$35 each |
| New drawer slide (full-extension, soft-close) | $30–$70 per pair |
Federal Way's dominant housing construction era (1975–1999) delivered kitchens with 5/8" particleboard frameless cabinet boxes covered in plastic laminate or veneer foil. The cabinet boxes in these homes — though cosmetically dated and often with sagging doors from gravity fatigue on European hinges — are structurally intact if no water damage has occurred. This is the ideal refacing candidate: solid, square boxes in poor cosmetic condition. Refacing at $5,000–$10,000 delivers modern doors, new hardware, and new veneer exteriors on boxes with 10–20 years of remaining structural life.
Federal Way's marine climate (33+ inches of annual rainfall, 60–85% RH for 7–8 months) creates a specific material risk for Rigid Thermofoil (RTF) doors. RTF doors use a PVC film heat-bonded to MDF substrate — and the PVC delamination risk accelerates in high-humidity environments, particularly in kitchens where steam from cooking cycles the humidity. In Federal Way:
This is the same climate consideration documented for Tacoma cabinet refacing — the guidance applies equally to Federal Way's environment.
Federal Way's median home price ($450,000–$550,000 for a 3-bedroom single-family in 2024) positions it below the threshold where full kitchen replacement ($25,000–$50,000) achieves typical ROI. Cabinet refacing at $5,000–$12,000 that transforms the visual condition of a Federal Way kitchen delivers a stronger return-on-equity than full replacement in this price band — particularly for homeowners planning to sell within 5 years.
Cabinet refacing contractors performing work for hire in Federal Way must be registered with Washington State L&I under RCW 18.27. This registration requires:
Verify any Federal Way cabinet refacing contractor at verify.lni.wa.gov. Cabinet installation is woodworking/carpentry — it falls within the RCW 18.27 contractor registration scope even when framed as a "reskinning" or "renovation" service rather than new construction.
Why this matters in Federal Way specifically: The cabinet refacing market in South King County includes a significant number of informal operators — furniture makers, handymen, and unlicensed renovation contractors who perform refacing work without WA L&I registration. An unregistered operator's work:
Federal Way was incorporated in 1990, but its residential development began in the late 1950s and 1960s in older areas near Pacific Highway S. Homes built before 1978 in Federal Way neighborhoods like Twin Lakes, Dash Point, and the older Lake Geneva area may contain lead-based paint on cabinet exteriors. Any refacing work that sands, scrapes, or disturbs painted surfaces on pre-1978 cabinets is subject to EPA RRP regulations (40 CFR Part 745), requiring:
Ask any Federal Way cabinet refacing contractor whether your home was built before 1978 and whether they hold EPA RRP certification.
Box structural assessment: Before committing to refacing over replacement, a competent Federal Way contractor assesses the existing cabinet boxes for:
Written contract specifying material brands: Ask your Federal Way refacing contractor to name the door brand, veneer supplier, contact cement product, and hinge manufacturer in the written contract. Vague contracts ("quality materials") don't protect you when RTF doors begin delaminating in 18 months because peel-and-stick adhesive was used instead of solvent-based contact cement.
The choice between refacing and replacing cabinets in Federal Way hinges primarily on the structural condition of the existing boxes, the homeowner's budget relative to Federal Way home values, and timeline for a sale. Here's a practical framework:
| Factor | Cabinet Refacing | Full Replacement |
|---|---|---|
| Cost (medium kitchen) | $5,000–$13,000 | $25,000–$50,000 |
| Project duration | 3–5 days | 3–6 weeks |
| Kitchen downtime | 1–3 days | 2–4 weeks |
| Box structural requirement | Existing boxes must be sound | New layout/size freedom — boxes rebuilt |
| Layout reconfiguration | Not possible — existing box locations fixed | Full reconfiguration possible |
| ROI in Federal Way market | Strong (below-average home values benefit from cost-effective upgrade) | Variable — may exceed market value increase |
| Countertop replacement needed | Optional — can be done simultaneously or separately | Usually required (new boxes affect countertop dimensions) |
| Permit required (Federal Way) | Typically no | Building permit required for structural changes |
| WA L&I registration | Required for both | Required |
| Pacific NW climate material | RTF caution near steam; wood veneer preferred | Semi-custom or stock cabinets from PNW-aware suppliers |
Your existing boxes are structurally sound. The most critical assessment for any Federal Way refacing project: is there water damage under the sink, behind the refrigerator, or at the kick base? A qualified Federal Way contractor checks these areas with a moisture meter before committing to refacing. Particleboard boxes with readings above 19% moisture content are candidates for replacement.
Your kitchen layout is functional. Refacing delivers beautiful new visual surfaces on the same box layout. If you hate your kitchen's L-shape, lack of island, or inadequate pantry, refacing cannot fix these — only replacement can.
You plan to sell in the next 3–7 years. Federal Way's median sale price ($450,000–$550,000) doesn't support a $40,000 full kitchen replacement from a pure investment standpoint. Refacing at $6,000–$10,000 that modernizes dated 1990s laminate doors to a clean Shaker RTF or painted wood look captures the visual "new kitchen" impression for listing photos at a fraction of the price.
Your timeline is short. Refacing takes 3–5 days vs. full replacement's 3–6 weeks. If you're preparing a Federal Way home for sale with a spring listing deadline, refacing is the only realistic kitchen upgrade that fits a 2–4 week pre-listing schedule.
Significant water damage under the sink or at base cabinets. Federal Way's wet climate + older plumbing (1970s–1990s compression fittings that eventually fail) means under-sink water damage is common. A refacing contractor who discovers the particleboard box is soft and delaminated should tell you: these boxes need replacement. Covering damaged boxes with new doors is money poorly spent.
You want to reconfigure the kitchen footprint. Adding an island, moving the sink to a window, or opening a galley to a living space requires full replacement to accomplish the structural changes. Refacing is cosmetic by definition.
The existing European hinges are failing across multiple doors. On 1980s–1990s Federal Way tract kitchens, clip-on European hinges sometimes fail the door face-frame connection when the particleboard around the mounting cup has crumbled. This is a sign of broader box degradation that may point toward replacement.
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