Ask most custom kitchen studios in Vancouver what a kitchen costs and you will get an invitation instead of an answer. Book a call. Come in for a consultation. Speak with a designer. The number arrives only after you have invested an afternoon, and by then the conversation is about justifying it.
We do it the other way. Our pricing ranges are on our site, in the open, before you have given us a minute of your time. A DADO kitchen runs from about $18,000 for a smaller kitchen to past $100,000 for a large luxury build, and most projects land in the $30,000 to $50,000 range. There it is, before you book anything. Here is why we put it there.
Say custom cabinetry and most people hear expensive. That reputation was earned by an industry that treats price as a secret, because a hidden number is easier to inflate than a published one. The result is that plenty of homeowners never seriously consider custom at all. They assume it is for someone else's budget and start at the big-box showroom instead.
That assumption is wrong, and it costs people better kitchens. Fully custom cabinetry, made to order for your exact space, regularly comes in comparable to, or only slightly above, semi-custom and imported alternatives. We can price that way because of how we build: invested manufacturing, direct supplier relationships, and standardized construction under the custom surface. Custom does not have to be expensive. Saying that out loud, with numbers attached, is the point of publishing them.
Kitchen projects live or die on trust, and trust starts badly when the first conversation is a negotiation. When the range is public, you can qualify us yourself, on your own couch, before anyone books anything. If our range does not fit your budget, you have lost thirty seconds. If it does, the consultation starts from honesty: you already know roughly where the project lands, and we spend the time on your layout and finishes instead of dancing around a number.
Transparency cuts both ways, and we like that. A studio that publishes its ranges has to live inside them. Every quote we write gets read against the numbers on our own site, which means the numbers have to be real, current, and conditioned on the things that actually move a price: space, finish, and interior organization. That discipline is good for you and, honestly, good for us. It keeps the quoting clean.
A published range orients you. It cannot price your kitchen, because your kitchen depends on your room, your layout, your finish choices, and your appliances. So treat the range as the map, not the quote. When you want the real number, we measure, design, and price your actual kitchen, and the quote itself reads like a parts list, not a mystery: what the boxes are, what the fronts are, what the hardware is, what it all costs.
We publish our pricing because we think you should be able to find out what a custom kitchen costs without surrendering your afternoon to find it. The ranges are on our pricing page. When you are ready to turn a range into your number, book a free consultation and we will price the real thing with you, openly, the same way we do everything else.