Custom cabinets & countertops in Port St. Lucie
Cabinets and countertops do more to define a kitchen than anything else. We design, fabricate and install both: custom cabinetry in the style, wood and finish you want, and quartz or granite counters fit precisely to your room.
When you walk into a kitchen, your eye lands on two things first: the cabinets and the countertops. They cover the most surface area, they get touched every day, and they carry most of the room's style and function. Getting them right is the difference between a kitchen that simply looks updated and one that genuinely feels custom to your home.

Custom cabinets, built around your kitchen
Stock cabinets come in fixed sizes and force your layout to work around them. Custom and semi-custom cabinetry does the opposite: it is built to your room and the way you cook, so you gain usable storage and a cleaner look with fewer awkward fillers and dead corners.
Door styles
From crisp Shaker and clean flat-panel doors for a modern look, to raised-panel and inset styles for something more traditional, the door profile sets the whole tone. We help you choose a style that fits both your home and the rest of your finishes.
Woods and materials
Maple, oak, hickory and birch each take stain and paint differently and bring their own grain and character. For painted cabinets we often use smooth, stable materials that hold a flawless finish. We will walk you through what looks and wears best in a coastal Florida home.
Finishes and hardware
Painted, stained or a natural clear finish, in warm whites, soft greens, deep navies or rich wood tones. Add the right pulls and knobs, soft-close hinges and smart interior storage (deep drawers, pull-outs, a dedicated pantry) and the cabinetry starts working as hard as it looks.
Stock, semi-custom and fully custom
It helps to know where your cabinetry falls on the spectrum, because it drives both fit and budget. Stock cabinets come in fixed widths, usually in three-inch jumps, and you fill the gaps with filler strips. Semi-custom starts from standard sizes but lets you adjust dimensions, door styles, finishes and interior accessories, which covers most kitchens beautifully. Fully custom is built to any dimension for your exact room, ideal when you have an unusual footprint, want floor-to-ceiling cabinetry, or are chasing a specific look with no compromises. We will tell you honestly which tier gets you the result you want for the least money.
Construction quality
The part you do not see is what separates cabinets that last from cabinets that sag. Look for plywood boxes rather than thin particleboard, dovetailed solid-wood drawer boxes, full-extension soft-close glides and sturdy mounting rails. In a humid Florida home this matters even more, because cheaper substrates swell and delaminate over time. We build and specify cabinetry that stays square and true for the long haul.
Countertops: quartz, granite and butcher block
Once the cabinets are set, the countertop is your next big decision. Quartz, granite and butcher block are all excellent in the right spot. The right one comes down to the look you want and how you like to maintain things.
Quartz
Quartz is an engineered surface made from natural stone blended with resin. It is non-porous, so it resists stains and never needs sealing, and it offers a remarkably consistent color and pattern, including convincing marble looks. For busy kitchens that want low maintenance and a predictable appearance, quartz is hard to beat.
Granite
Granite is 100 percent natural stone, quarried in slabs, so every piece is unique. The depth and movement of real stone is something engineered surfaces only imitate. Granite is very heat and scratch resistant; it benefits from periodic sealing to keep it performing its best. If you love the idea of a one-of-a-kind surface, granite delivers.
Butcher block
Solid wood brings warmth that stone cannot, and it is friendly on the budget. The trade-off is upkeep: it wants periodic oiling and is happiest on an island, a coffee station or a baking zone rather than the wet run around the sink. Many homeowners mix it in as a warm accent against quartz or granite elsewhere in the kitchen.
Edges and care
The edge profile is a quiet detail that changes the whole feel. A square eased edge reads modern, a beveled or ogee edge feels more traditional, and a mitered edge gives the look of a thick slab. Day to day, quartz wipes clean with mild soap and water, granite likes a stone-safe cleaner and a yearly seal check, and wood gets a wipe-down and an occasional re-oil. We go over all of this so the surface you choose fits the way you actually keep house.
How we make the choice easy
We bring samples to your home so you can see them against your cabinets and in your own light, not under showroom bulbs. We talk through edge profiles, how each material handles daily life, and how the cost compares. Then we template, fabricate and install for a tight, seamless fit.
Designed and installed together
Because we handle cabinets and countertops as part of one project, the details line up: cabinet heights, counter overhangs, sink and cooktop cutouts and backsplash transitions all get planned at once. That coordination is exactly what you give up when you buy pieces separately and hope they work together. See how it all comes together in a full kitchen remodel, or use the same materials and team for bathroom remodeling.
Pairing cabinets and counters that work together
The most successful kitchens treat cabinets and countertops as a duo, not two separate purchases. A few combinations come up again and again because they simply work. Bright white or soft-green Shaker cabinets with a marble-look quartz read clean and timeless. Warm wood-tone cabinets with a movement-rich granite feel grounded and natural. A two-tone scheme, lighter perimeter cabinets with a deeper island, lets you bring in a butcher-block top on the island as a warm focal point. We help you land on a pairing that suits your home rather than chasing whatever happens to be trending this year.
Frequently asked questions
Is quartz or granite better for a Florida kitchen?
Both perform well in our climate. Quartz wins on low maintenance because it is non-porous and never needs sealing, while granite offers natural, one-of-a-kind veining and excellent heat resistance with a periodic seal. We bring samples to your home to help you decide.
Can you reface my existing cabinets instead of replacing them?
If the cabinet boxes are structurally sound, refacing with new doors, drawer fronts and hardware can be a budget-friendly refresh. If the layout or storage is the problem, new cabinetry usually makes more sense. We will tell you honestly which path fits your kitchen.
What is the difference between semi-custom and fully custom cabinets?
Semi-custom starts from standard sizes but lets you adjust dimensions, finishes and accessories, which suits most kitchens. Fully custom is built to any dimension for an exact fit, ideal for unusual footprints or floor-to-ceiling designs.
How long do new countertops take to install?
Stone is templated only after your cabinets are set, then fabricated and installed, typically a week or two later. We coordinate this within the larger project so it does not become a bottleneck.
Wondering how cabinets and counters affect your budget? Our kitchen remodel cost guide breaks down where the money goes and where it pays off.
Choose cabinets and counters you'll love
Tell us about your kitchen and a local remodeler will reach out to schedule your free in-home consultation, samples included.
- Real samples in your own light
- Quartz and granite options
- Fabrication and install in-house