18 Inch Deep Base Kitchen Cabinets: Prices & Drawer Guide
I ordered 18 inch deep base cabinets for my island last year, thinking I’d save space. The cabinets arrived fine, but finding drawer slides that actually fit took three trips to Home Depot. Here’s everything I learned about pricing, drawer hardware, and when these shallow cabinets are worth it.
Quick Answer. 18 inch deep base kitchen cabinets cost $120-$450 each, depending on quality, about 15-20% less than standard 24 depth. They work great for narrow kitchens and islands, but need special 18″ drawer slides ($25-60 per pair) that aren’t standard at big box stores.
What Are 18 Inch Deep Base Kitchen Cabinets?

An 18 inch deep base kitchen cabinet is basically a slimmer version of the standard 24-inch cabinet. These cabinets keep the same 34.5-inch height but shave off 6 inches of depth.
I first saw them at my neighbor Sarah’s house during her kitchen renovation. Her contractor suggested them for the island to keep the walkway from feeling cramped. At the time, I thought, “Why would anyone want less storage?”
Turns out, there are plenty of reasons.
18, vs 24, Base Cabinets. The Real Differences

Here’s what actually changes when you go with 18-inch cabinets.
| Feature | 18. Cabinet | 24. Cabinet |
|---|---|---|
| Storage capacity | 25% less volume | Standard volume |
| Best for | Walkways, islands, tight kitchens | Full-size kitchens, main runs |
| Typical countertop depth | 19-22 inches | 25-26 inches |
| Dishwasher compatible | No (needs workaround) | Yes |
| Drawer slide availability | Limited—need 18″ slides | Standard—easy to find |
| Average price per cabinet | $120-$450 | $140-$550 |
The storage loss is real but not catastrophic. You’re trading depth for floor space, which matters more in some kitchens than others.
What 18, Cabinets Actually Cost, Real Numbers
Nobody gives you actual prices, so here’s what I found shopping around.
| Source | Price Per Cabinet | Quality Level | Lead Time | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| IKEA SEKTION | $120-$280 | Good | Same day/1 week | Limited styles, need an IKEA countertop |
| Home Depot (unfinished) | $150-$320 | Fair to Good | 1-2 weeks | You finish/paint them yourself |
| Lowe’s (Hampton Bay) | $180-$350 | Good | 1-3 weeks | Pre-finished, soft-close available |
| Online RTA (Cabinets.com, RTA Store) | $200-$400 | Good to Excellent | 2-4 weeks | Ships flat, you assemble |
| Custom cabinetry | $350-$650+ | Excellent | 6-12 weeks | Exact specs, premium materials |
The Hidden Costs That Surprised Me
Cabinets aren’t the whole story. Budget for these extras:
- 18″ drawer slides. $25-$60 per pair (cabinets often don’t include them)
- Custom countertop fabrication. Add $50-$100 vs standard depth cutting
- Professional installation. $40-$80 per cabinet if you’re not DIY-ing
My actual total for 4 island cabinets. $1,680 ($320 each for unfinished Home Depot cabinets + $240 for drawer slides + $160 extra for the countertop guy to adjust his template).
The Drawer Slide Problem Nobody Warns You About
Here’s what I wish someone had told me before I ordered.
Standard drawer slides come in 21-inch and 24-inch lengths. When I opened my cabinet boxes, there were no slides included—just holes drilled for them. I figured I’d grab some at Home Depot on my way home.
First trip. Sorry, ma’am, we only carry 21-inch and 24-inch.
Second trip different Home Depot. Same answer.
Third trip: I finally asked to speak to the cabinet department guy, who explained that 18-inch undermount slides are specialty items. He pointed me to Amazon.
Where to Actually Buy 18″ Drawer Slides

Skip the big box stores for these. Here’s what works:
| Brand | Price Per Pair | Quality | Where to Buy |
|---|---|---|---|
| Blum Tandem | $50-$60 | Excellent (soft-close) | Amazon, Rockler, cabinet suppliers |
| Hettich | $40-$50 | Excellent | Amazon, specialty hardware stores |
| King Slide | $25-$35 | Good | Amazon, eBay |
| Generic undermount | $20-$28 | Fair | Amazon (check reviews) |
I went with King Slide for $28 per pair, and they’ve been solid for nine months.
Can You Use 21″ Slides in 18″ Cabinets?
Technically, yes, but your drawer will only pull out about 15-16 inches before hitting the back of the cabinet. You lose the whole point of full-extension slides.
Where 18. Deep Cabinets Actually Make Sense
Don’t use these everywhere; use them strategically.
Kitchen islands. This is where they shine. My island is 18″ on the seating side, 24″ on the cooking side. The shallow cabinets give us 42 inches of walking space instead of 36, which sounds small but feels massive when two people are cooking.
Small kitchens under 100 square feet. If your kitchen is narrow, 18-inch cabinets on one wall can be the difference between comfortable and claustrophobic.
Galley kitchens. Especially if you need a 36-inch walkway between sides. Standard cabinets on both walls leave you with 36 – 48 = a tight squeeze.
Butler’s pantries and hallways. Sarah used these in her hallway pantry and loves them. You’re not storing sheet pans in a hallway anyway.
Laundry rooms. Perfect for front-load washers where you need to reach over the machines.
Where They DON’T Work (Let’s Be Honest)
I’m gonna save you some heartache.
If you’re a serious baker: Your half-sheet pans are 18 inches wide. They won’t fit front-to-back in these cabinets. You’ll need to store them vertically with dividers, which is annoying.
If you need a dishwasher on that wall, Standard dishwashers need 24-inch depth countertops to sit flush. More on that nightmare below.
If you store your KitchenAid mixer in the box. The box is 21 inches deep. Ask me how I know.
If you cook with large Dutch ovens or stockpots, my 12-quart pot is 14 inches in diameter but 11 inches tall. it technically fits, but barely.
If you want a 12-inch overhang for bar stools, the math doesn’t work. 18-inch cabinet + 12-inch overhang = 30-inch island, which is fine, but you need deeper cabinets on the other side for balance.
Real talk: These aren’t for every situation.
Storage Math: What You Actually Lose
Let’s talk specifics instead of vague, less storage nonsense.
An 18-inch cabinet gives you about 25% less volume than a 24-inch cabinet (check the table above for the exact comparison).
What WON’T Fit
I learned this the hard way.
- Full-size sheet pans, 18 × 26- too deep
- KitchenAid mixer boxes, 21 deep
- Large roasting pans, most are 20 + deep
- Bulk item boxes from Costco, many are 20 + deep
- Full-size dish drainer racks
What WILL Fit Perfectly
These cabinets are actually better for.
- Plates, bowls, and everyday dishes can reach them more easily
- Spices and pantry items in pull-out organizers
- Small appliances (toasters, blenders)
- Pots and pans under 10 inches in diameter
- Mixing bowls, measuring cups, and food storage containers
- Cleaning supplies
My favorite trick. I installed pull-out shelves in all four cabinets. Nothing gets lost in the back because there IS no “back.
The Dishwasher Depth Dilemma
This almost derailed my entire island plan.
Standard dishwashers are 24 inches deep. When the appliance installer showed up, he measured my island: 18-inch cabinet + 4-inch countertop overhang = 22 inches total depth.
He looked at me and said, “Your dishwasher’s gonna stick out two inches.
I said words I won’t repeat here.
Your Options If You Want a Dishwasher
Option 1. Use a deeper countertop (22-24 inches), so it extends past the cabinet face. This worked for me, but it cost an extra $160 for the granite guy to adjust.
Option 2. Buy a compact 18-inch dishwasher (yes, they exist). They’re pricier and hold fewer dishes.
Option 3. Put the dishwasher on a different wall with 24-inch cabinets. This is what Sarah did.
Option 4. Accept that your dishwasher will be “proud” (sticks out slightly). Some people don’t mind, I minded.
Honestly? If you’re planning a dishwasher, think twice about 18-inch cabinets in that section.
Countertop Depth for 18″ Cabinets
This is simpler than the dishwasher thing, I promise.
Standard countertops for 18-inch cabinets are 19 to 22 inches deep. I went with 22 inches (18″ cabinet + 4″ overhang).
Island Overhang Math
If you want seating, you need at least 10-12 inches of overhang for knees.
- My setup, 18″ cabinet + 12″ overhang = 30″ total island depth
- Sarah’s setup. 18″ cabinet + 10″ overhang = 28″ total (she says it’s tight)
- Linda’s setup. 24″ cabinet + 12″ overhang = 36″ total (more comfortable for eating)
Here’s the thing: You can make 18-inch cabinets work for seating, but the stools need to be low-profile. My kids love it; my husband says his knees hit the island when he turns the stool.
Where to Buy 18 Inch Deep Base Cabinets
Here’s where I actually shopped (prices in the table above):
IKEA
Best for tight budgets. Their SEKTION line has 18-inch depth options starting at $120. The catch: limited styles (mostly modern), and you’re locked into IKEA’s countertop system unless you want to DIY the mounting.
I almost went this route, but couldn’t find the Shaker style I wanted.
Home Depot & Lowe’s
Middle ground option. Home Depot’s unfinished Hampton Bay cabinets start at $150, and you can stain/paint them yourself. Lowe’s has more pre-finished options, but they’re pricier.
This is where I bought mine, picked them up the same day, and saved on shipping.
Online RTA, Ready-to-Assemble
Websites like CabinetsDirect.com and Cabinets.com have better selection and quality than big box stores. Prices are higher ($200-$400), but you get dovetail drawers, plywood boxes, and soft-close hardware included.
The trade-off: 2-4 week shipping and you assemble them yourself (not hard, just time-consuming).
Custom Cabinetry
If the budget allows, this is the dream. Custom cabinet makers can build exactly what you need, 18-inch depth, specific widths, your choice of wood, and finish.
My quote for custom was $550 per cabinet, which I couldn’t swing. But Sarah went custom for her whole kitchen and says it was worth every penny.
DIY Install vs Hiring a Pro

Installing 18-inch cabinets is exactly like installing 24-inch cabinets. If you’ve done it before, you can handle these.
The challenge. Leveling them on uneven floors. My kitchen floor had a half-inch slope over 8 feet, which meant shimming every cabinet.
My experience. I installed mine over a weekend with my drill (which died twice, charge your batteries, people). Took about 12 hours total for four cabinets, including shimming, leveling, and securing to the wall.
Cost to hire. I got quotes from $400-$800 for a pro to install 4-6 cabinets. Seemed reasonable if you’re not comfortable with leveling and wall anchoring.
Honestly? The install itself isn’t the hard part; it’s measuring everything beforehand and dealing with drawer slides.
Pros and Cons, The Stuff That Actually Matters

Pros of Living With Them
- More walkway space: This is huge in small kitchens. My kitchen feels bigger.
- Easier to reach items: Nothing gets lost in the back of the cabinet.
- Less expensive: Saved about $120 compared to 24-inch cabinets for my project.
- Perfect for tight spots: Islands, hallways, laundry rooms, where full depth is overkill.
- Countertop costs less: Smaller slab = lower price (not by much, but hey).
Cons: The Real Talk
- 25% less storage: That storage trade-off is noticeable if you have a lot of kitchen stuff.
- Drawer slide hunt: You’ll spend time finding the right slides; they’re not at Home Depot.
- Sheet pans don’t fit: Bakers, you’ve been warned.
- Dishwasher complications: Explained that nightmare already.
- Custom countertops needed: You can’t just grab a stock countertop; it needs to be cut to 19-22″ depth.
My Honest Take After Living With Them
After nine months with 18 inch deep base cabinets on my island, I’d do it again for this specific spot. The extra walking space makes cooking with my husband way less cramped, and I don’t miss the lost storage because we use those cabinets for everyday dishes anyway. If you’re tight on space and don’t need to store sheet pans, they’re a smart move.
FAQs About 18 Inch Deep Base Kitchen Cabinets
Can I cut down standard 24″ cabinets to 18″?
Technically, yes, if they’re unfinished wood, but you’ll need to rebuild the back panel and add reinforcement. A cabinet maker quoted me $85 per cabinet for this modification, which ended up more expensive than buying 18″ RTA cabinets online.
Do 18, cabinets look weird next to 24, cabinets?
Not if you plan it right, put the 18″ cabinets on your island or peninsula so there’s space between them and the 24″ wall cabinets. Linda next door mixed them on the same wall, and honestly, it looks fine because her countertop is continuous.
What about resale value?
Real estate agents I’ve talked to say buyers care more about total storage and layout flow than exact cabinet depth. One appraiser told me that well-designed 18″ cabinets in the right spots can actually help showings because the kitchen feels more spacious.
Can I use 18″ cabinets for a laundry room?
Perfect use case, you need the shallower depth to reach over front-load machines anyway. Just make sure to mount them at 42″ height instead of the standard 34.5″ so you have counter space above the washer/dryer.
Will I regret going with 18″ instead of 24″?
The only people I know who regret it are serious bakers who didn’t realize their half-sheet pans wouldn’t fit. Everyone else (including me) loves the extra floor space and says they should’ve done it sooner.
Where do I store large pots if I get 18″ cabinets?
Mix cabinet depths, use 18″ where you need the space savings and 24″ where you need the storage. My large pots live in the 24″ cabinets on the main wall; everyday stuff lives in the 18″ island cabinets.
