My Kitchen Cabinets Are From the ’90s – Is It Too Late to Save Them?

If your Los Angeles area kitchen was built between 1985 and 2005, you probably recognize at least one of these: honey oak raised-panel doors with a slight orange cast. Dark cherry laminate that seemed sophisticated in 2001. White thermofoil that started clean but is now lifting at the edges near the hinges. These are the three dominant cabinet types from that era in Southern California, and they’ve been sitting in kitchens across the San Fernando Valley, the Westside, and the South Bay for thirty-plus years. We see them almost everyday!

The question we hear constantly from homeowners with these cabinets is whether they’re past saving. The assumption is that old means bad. Most of the time, that assumption is wrong — and it’s costing homeowners tens of thousands of dollars in unnecessary replacement costs. Here’s the real assessment, broken down by material and condition.

Why Cabinets Built in the ‘90s Are Often BetterThan What You’d Replace Them With

This is the part that surprises most people. Cabinetry from the late 1980s through early 2000s, particularly in custom-built and higher-end tract homes, was frequently constructed from solid hardwood face frames and plywood boxes. These materials were the standard for quality construction at the time. The solid oak, maple, and cherry cabinets that now look dated were built to last decades — and many of them have. Here’s the uncomfortable comparison: many of the replacement cabinets at similar price points today are built from particle board boxes with MDF door panels. Particle board is cheaper, lighter, and significantly more vulnerable to moisture than the plywood and solid hardwood it replaced in the market. Replacing a structurally sound plywood-box cabinet with a particle board replacement because the doors look dated is, in many cases, a material downgrade disguised as an upgrade. Yuck!

The test is simple: open a cabinet and look at the exposed edge of the box wall. If you see wood grain running in alternating directions, that’s plywood — excellent material, worth keeping. Yay! We love that! If it looks like compressed sawdust, that’s particle board — evaluate based on condition, not age. Plywood boxes from the ’90s that are dry and structurally sound are ideal refacing candidates. The bones are fantastic, and they can support new doors and veneer for another thirty years.

Honey Oak: The Most Refaceable Cabinet in Los Angeles

Honey oak is the most common dated cabinet type we encounter in LA, and it’s also the most dramatic refacing transformation we produce. Just look at the before and after photo above! The reason is the combination of three simultaneous changes: the face frame color shifts from orange-toned natural wood to painted white or soft gray, the door profile changes from ornate raised-panel to clean shaker, and new hardware replaces the dated brass or bin pulls that were installed originally.

Oak’s open grain structure actually works in favor of painted finishes. When properly primed with a grain-filling primer and painted, the grain disappears almost entirely under the topcoat. The result is a smooth, clean surface that reads as painted rather than “painted wood.” Oak face frames are typically solid hardwood, which means they accept veneer adhesive extremely well and produce tight, durable bonds that hold for decades. The transformation from a honey oak raised-panel kitchen to a white shaker kitchen with matte black hardware is so dramatic that it genuinely qualifies as a new kitchen in all the ways that matter visually. We’ve done this conversion in Spanish revival homes in Pasadena, mid-century ranches in the Valley, and ’90s tract homes in Thousand Oaks — the results are consistently the kind of thing that makes guests ask if you moved.

Dark Cherry Laminate: What’s Salvageable and What Isn’t

Dark cherry laminate was the move in 2000–2007, and a lot of LA kitchens still have it. The assessment here depends on what part of the cabinet system is laminate.If the doors and drawer fronts are laminate, they’re being replaced anyway in a refacing project— so their condition is almost irrelevant. New custom doors solve that problem completely. The face frames are the variable. If the face frames are real wood (solid cherry or cherry-veneered MDF) and are still flat, un-warped, and firmly attached, they can be veneered with new material as part of a standard refacing process. If the face frames are laminate over particle board and are showing any swelling, the conversation changes. Laminate over particle board doesn’t accept veneer adhesive reliably, and a refacing company that tries it anyway is setting you up for failure.

The cabinet boxes behind dark cherry doors are often plywood in better-quality construction — check the edges as described above. If the boxes are solid and the face frames are real wood, refacing is the right call. If there’s particle board throughout, a frank conversation about replacement value versus refacing cost is necessary.

Thermofoil: The Honest Assessment

Thermofoil cabinets are a heat-formed vinyl membrane pressed over MDF doors. They look clean and uniform when new and were popular through the ’90s and 2000s as a lower-cost alternative to painted or wood doors. The problem is that the membrane eventually lifts — almost always starting at the edges near hinges and handles, where heat and moisture are concentrated. Once lifting begins, it’s a progressive failure. You can’t re-adhere thermofoil reliably once it’s started peeling.

The good news: thermofoil doors being replaced is exactly what a refacing project does. The door is the component that gets swapped out. And the boxes behind thermofoil doors — in most quality construction — are plywood. Solid, stable, well-built plywood boxes that have decades of life left in them. Woo-hoo! Replacing these because the doors need to change is the kind of waste that refacing exists to prevent. Thermofoil face frames are the complicating factor. If the face frame wrapping is still firmly adhered and flat, it can be veneered over. If it’s starting to lift, it needs to be stripped before veneering, which adds time and complexity to the project. We assess this during the in-home consultation and give you a clear picture of what the project involves before you commit to anything.

The One Unfortunate Thing That Makes Any ’90s Cabinet Unsalvageable

Water damage, we hate to see it. Water damage to the cabinet box, not surface staining — actual moisture penetration that has caused the box material to swell, delaminate, or soften. The places to check: the bottom interior of base cabinets under the sink (the most common site of slow leak damage), the side walls of cabinets adjacent to the dishwasher, and any lower cabinet near exterior walls in older homes. Press the interior bottom panels firmly with your thumb, solid material doesn’t give. Particle board that has absorbed moisture will have a softness to it, sometimes accompanied by a darker color or visible swelling at edges.

If one or two boxes show this damage, they can often be individually replaced as part of a larger refacing project — a much cheaper approach than full kitchen replacement. If the majority of your base cabinet boxes are compromised, full replacement becomes the honest recommendation. We’ll tell you this directly because installing new doors on failing boxes is a project that fails within two to three years, and we’re not interested in doing work we can’t stand Behind.

What a Saved ’90s Kitchen Looks Like in 2026

Just check out that after picture above! White or off-white shaker doors on solid plywood boxes. New flat-slab lower cabinets if you’re going more contemporary. Two-tone with a darker island if the layout supports it. Brushed nickel or matte black hardware in a bar or cup pull profile. Face frames veneered to match the door color. The result is a kitchen that reads as completely current and was built on infrastructure that will outlast most of the new cabinets being installed today. How refreshing!

This is what we mean when we say the bones of your kitchen are fantastic — and why we’ve spent years doing this work in older LA homes rather than defaulting to replacement.
If you’re sitting in a 1990s kitchen wondering whether it’s worth saving, the answer in most cases is yes. Schedule a free in-home assessment with Cabinet Refresh at (888) 885-2058. We’ll look at what you actually have and tell you honestly what it’s worth.