93 Kitchen Remodel Terms for 2026
Your contractor says "full overlay" and you nod. Here's what 93 kitchen remodeling terms actually mean in 2026 — before you sign anything.
Chris and Jessica break down the entire kitchen vocabulary using real data from the NKBA | KBIS 2026 Kitchen Trends Report, a survey of 634 industry professionals. Cabinet construction, countertop edges, smart tech, pantry types, and the contract terms that quietly cost homeowners thousands. Plus the real Reddit horror stories behind each mistake.
TIMESTAMPS (approximate — verify after merge):
0:00 — Intro
0:05 — Why this isn't just another glossary (and the 76% stat that changes everything)
1:08 — The 11 ideas shaping every 2026 kitchen
2:42 — The smart tech nobody actually adopts
3:42 — 2026 style names: Japandi, Quiet Luxury, Newstalgic, Warm Minimalism
4:30 — Cabinets: face-frame vs frameless, dovetail, dado, cope-and-stick
6:07 — OVERLAY: the #1 cabinet miscommunication homeowners report
8:01 — Doors & hardware: skinny shaker, soft-close, the handles that snag everyone
9:43 — Quartz vs quartzite (and why people feel like an idiot at the stone yard)
11:28 — Countertop edge profiles: where the hidden budget lives
12:30 — Statement splashbacks and zellige tile
12:58 — Smart kitchen tech: Matter, Thread, WiFi 6/7
13:41 — Induction + the electrical regret everyone has
14:37 — Why the work triangle is dead (kitchen work zones)
15:39 — Butler's pantry vs scullery vs messy kitchen vs "Costco pantry"
16:29 — Jewel tones, color drenching, and universal design
17:21 — Contract terms: lead times, tiers, change orders, contingency
19:10 — The one takeaway from all 93 terms
19:52 — How USA Cabinet Store closes the gap
21:02 — Close
Cabinets eat 30–50% of a kitchen budget, so overlay is the term worth saying out loud: full overlay hides nearly the whole face frame, partial overlay leaves the frame edges visible, and inset sits flush inside the frame (the priciest and hardest to build well). Frameless European cabinets give you roughly 10–15% more usable storage than face-frame.
Countertops run 10–15% of budget. Quartz is engineered (~93% ground quartz + resin), non-porous, heat-sensitive to about 300°F, $50–$150/sq ft. Quartzite is natural stone, harder than granite, needs sealing, $70–$200/sq ft. Edge profiles quietly add up: eased is free, bullnose +$5–10/LF, beveled +$10–15/LF, ogee +$15–25/LF, shark nose +$20–40/LF, mitered +$30–50/LF, and a waterfall edge is a $500–$2,000+ premium.
You can read more here or get a consultation for your next remodeling journey
https://usacabinetstore.com/new-kitchen-remodeling-terms [https://usacabinetstore.com/new-kitchen-remodeling-terms]
https://usacabinetstore.com/ [https://usacabinetstore.com/]
https://www.usacabinetstore.com/complimentary-consultation/ [https://www.usacabinetstore.com/complimentary-consultation/]
#KitchenRemodel #KitchenDesign #KitchenRenovation #HomeRenovation #KitchenInspo
#CabinetDesign #KitchenTrends #KitchenTrends2026 #ShakerCabinets #QuartzCountertops
#Quartzite #KitchenIsland #WarmMinimalism #Japandi #KitchenCabinets
#USACabinetStore #TheRemodelReport #RemodelTips
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