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Cabinet Painting in Nashville, TN
Lifetime
Transferable Warranty
- Serving: Nashville • Franklin • Brentwood • Belle Meade • Oak Hill • Green Hills • and surrounding Middle Tennessee areas
What We Paint
We paint kitchen cabinets, bathroom vanities, built-ins, and kitchen islands across Nashville and Middle Tennessee — using Renner Waterborne Lacquer for a factory-grade finish.
Kitchen Cabinets
Upper cabinets, lower cabinets, drawer fronts, cabinet frames, and end panels. We paint everything that shows. Color changes, wood-to-painted conversions, and refreshes of previously painted cabinets. Whether your kitchen has 20 doors or 50, we account for every component in the estimate.
Bathroom Vanities
Vanity cabinets take moisture and humidity every day. Standard wall paint on a bathroom vanity starts peeling within a year. We apply the same Renner Lacquer process to vanities that we use on kitchen cabinets, giving bathroom cabinetry the same factory-grade durability.
Built-In Cabinets and Shelving
Bookcases, entertainment centers, mudroom cubbies, laundry room cabinets, and custom built-ins. Any cabinetry surface that can be removed gets sprayed off-site. Fixed built-ins are prepped and sprayed on-site with proper masking and ventilation.
Kitchen
Islands
Islands often get a different color from the perimeter cabinets. A contrasting island is one of the most popular design choices in Nashville kitchens. We handle multi-color projects with separate spray passes for each color, ensuring clean lines and no bleed between finishes.
Why We Use Lacquer, Not Paint
Most painting companies apply the same wall paint to your cabinets that they use on your bedroom walls. It goes on with a brush or roller, leaves texture marks, and starts chipping where doors close against frames. Within two years, high-use areas like the cabinet pulls and the edges around the sink show visible wear.
We use Renner Waterborne Lacquer, a professional-grade cabinet coating designed for surfaces that take daily abuse. Renner is an Italian manufacturer that supplies coatings to furniture factories and commercial millwork shops. The same product that finishes factory cabinets is what we apply to yours.
What makes lacquer different from paint:
- Hardness. Lacquer cures to a harder film than latex or acrylic paint. It resists scratching from rings, keys, and everyday contact that wears through standard paint within months.
- Smoothness. Applied with professional spray equipment in a controlled environment, lacquer dries to a surface with no brush marks, no roller stipple, and no orange peel. The finish is flat and even across every door, drawer, and panel.
- Adhesion. Renner Lacquer bonds securely to properly prepared surfaces. It does not sit on top waiting to chip. Prep is critical, and we sand and prime every surface before spraying.
- Low VOC. Renner's waterborne formula produces significantly less odor and fewer airborne chemicals than solvent-based lacquers. Your home stays livable during the project.
- Yellowing resistance. White and light-colored cabinets painted with standard latex tend to yellow over time, especially in kitchens with gas stoves. Renner's formula resists yellowing, keeping whites and light tones clean for years.
Ready for your estimate?
How Cabinet Painting Works with AllBright
Step 1 — On-Site Consultation
We walk through your kitchen, bathroom, or any space with cabinetry and assess every surface. We count doors, drawers, and panels, check the condition of the existing finish (factory paint, stain, thermofoil, or bare wood), note any damage, and discuss color direction. If you are undecided on color, we offer digital render visualizations that show you what your cabinets will look like in your actual kitchen before any work begins. Aaron Villanueva reviews every cabinet estimate personally. You receive a detailed written estimate within 48 hours.
Step 2 — Scope & Schedule
Approve your estimate, sign the agreement, and submit a 25% deposit to lock your project date. We finalize colors, order materials, and schedule your project. Cabinet projects follow a separate timeline from wall and trim work — if you are combining cabinet painting with a full interior repaint, we coordinate both schedules to minimize disruption. The remaining 75% is collected only after the final walkthrough.
Step 3 — Prep & Removal
Our crew removes all cabinet doors, drawer fronts, and hardware. Each piece is labeled and cataloged so reinstallation is exact. Cabinet frames and boxes stay in place and are prepped on-site: cleaned, scuff-sanded, and primed. Your kitchen remains usable during this phase — your shelves, countertops, sink, and appliances remain fully accessible throughout the project.
Step 4 — Off-Site Spray
Doors and drawer fronts are transported to our spray facility where they are sanded, primed, and sprayed with Renner Waterborne Lacquer in a dust-free, climate-controlled environment. Multiple coats are applied with drying time between each. This controlled setting is what produces the factory-smooth finish that cannot be achieved on-site with a brush or roller. Cabinet frames are sprayed on-site with proper masking to protect countertops, backsplash, appliances, and flooring.
Step 5 — Curing
Lacquer needs time to reach full hardness. We allow proper curing time before handling or reinstalling any component. Rushing this step risks fingerprints, marks, or adhesion issues in the finished product. We do not cut curing time to accelerate the schedule.
Step 6 — Reinstallation & Final Walkthrough
Doors and drawer fronts are reinstalled with original hardware. We check every door for alignment, every drawer for smooth operation, and every surface for finish quality. Final payment is collected only after you have inspected every cabinet and confirmed the work meets your standards. Every cabinet project is backed by our 2-year limited workmanship warranty and a lifetime product warranty from the manufacturer.
What Affects the Cost of Cabinet Painting in Nashville
Cabinet painting cost depends on four main factors. Every kitchen is different — we complete an on-site assessment and provide a detailed written estimate covering labor, materials, and timeline within 48 hours.
Factor
Why It Matters
Number of Doors & Drawers
More components means more labor, more material, more spray time
Current Finish Condition
Damaged, peeling, or multi-layered finishes need more prep
Number of Colors
Multi-color projects (island vs perimeter) require separate spray passes
Cabinet Material
Thermofoil, melamine, and MDF require different primers than solid wood
Door & Drawer Count
This is the biggest variable. A small kitchen with 20 doors and 8 drawers is a fundamentally different project than a large kitchen with 40 doors, 15 drawers, and a full island. Many Nashville homes in Belle Meade and Brentwood have oversized kitchens with 40 or more cabinet doors. We count every component during the initial visit so your estimate reflects the actual scope.
Current Finish Condition
Factory-finished cabinets in good condition need light sanding and primer before lacquer. Cabinets with chipping paint, multiple previous coats, or water damage near sinks require more extensive prep. Stained wood cabinets being converted to painted need a bonding primer to prevent tannin bleed. We assess condition on-site and include all necessary prep in the estimate.
Number of Colors
A single-color kitchen — all cabinets the same — is the standard scope. Adding a second color for the island or a contrast upper/lower scheme adds a separate spray pass, additional masking, and more material. Each additional color adds time to the project.
Cabinet Material
Solid wood and plywood cabinets accept primer and lacquer readily. Thermofoil (vinyl-wrapped MDF) and melamine require specialty primers designed for non-porous surfaces. We identify the material during the initial visit and specify the right primer system in your estimate.
Meet Aaron Villanueva
Aaron learned to paint alongside his father on job sites across Tennessee, where quality was not optional. In 2015, he founded AllBright Pro Painting to build a painting company in Nashville and Middle Tennessee that operates with that same standard on every project.
2,100+ projects and a 5.0 Google rating later, Aaron still walks job sites, still reviews estimates, and still takes calls from homeowners who want to talk through their project before committing.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much does cabinet painting cost in Nashville?
How long does a cabinet painting project take?
What is the difference between cabinet painting and cabinet refinishing?
Will my kitchen be usable during the project?
Can you paint cabinets that are currently stained?
Is cabinet lacquer safe for homes with children and pets?
Do you paint the inside of cabinets?
Can you paint thermofoil or laminate cabinets?
Your Go-To for Cabinet Painting in Nashville, TN and Surrounding Areas