$2,500 - $10,000+
West Hollywood working range
These numbers reflect cabinet painting pricing in West Hollywood, not a generic Los Angeles average.

Cabinet painting in West Hollywood often happens in tighter kitchens where replacement would be too disruptive for the footprint and the budget. We price the job around the actual house, not around a generic LA average.
Cabinet Painting in West Hollywood usually starts around $2,500 to $4,500 for a basic small kitchen scope. Larger projects land closer to $6,500 to $10,000+, depending on prep, access, and how much of the surface package we are touching in one visit.
Why This Page Matters
$2,500 - $10,000+
These numbers reflect cabinet painting pricing in West Hollywood, not a generic Los Angeles average.
Custom
This page is built for homeowners pricing cabinet painting specifically in West Hollywood.
24 hr
Walkthroughs lead to a written quote quickly, with the scope grounded in the actual house and neighborhood conditions.
Quick Read
Cabinet painting in West Hollywood often happens in tighter kitchens where replacement would be too disruptive for the footprint and the budget.
Cabinet Painting only looks clean at the end when the prep plan fits both the service and the house.
Cabinet Painting pricing in West Hollywood starts around $2,500 to $4,500 for small kitchen work.
Cabinet painting in West Hollywood often happens in tighter kitchens where replacement would be too disruptive for the footprint and the budget.
We see that reality on streets like Santa Monica Boulevard, Sunset Boulevard, and Melrose Avenue. The houses around Sunset Strip and Pacific Design Center tell the same story. Surface condition, access, and finish expectations are what shape the job. That is why a good cabinet painting scope in West Hollywood starts with a walkthrough, not a copy-paste estimate.
The brief from West Hollywood owners tends to be simple. Make it look clean, look intentional, and hold up after the crew packs out. Reaching that finish takes scope decisions tuned to the specific house, because West Hollywood property types vary widely within a few blocks.
The housing stock here matters. condos, Spanish bungalows, duplexes, small apartment buildings each behave differently once prep starts. A few want more masking, some larger patching, some heavier primer, and others simply more crew time because finish expectations are stricter. A contractor who blurs those distinctions either underprices the work or delivers a finish that always looks slightly wrong.
Cabinet Painting only looks clean at the end when the prep plan fits both the service and the house. For jobs in West Hollywood, we usually begin with remove and label every door and drawer, then degrease cooking residue and hand oils, then sand or degloss the factory coating, and finally prime with adhesion primer before enamel topcoats. That sounds straightforward, but each step has to be adapted to the actual conditions in front of us.
In this city, the prep is shaped by strong sun, dense parking, and a lot of touch-up wear in rental and condo stock. Add in detail-heavy interiors in dense buildings where protection and cleanup are non-negotiable, and you get why the same service can feel simple in one neighborhood and surprisingly detailed in another. If the job is occupied, we also build around daily cleanup, protection of adjacent finishes, and the reality that homeowners still have to live in the space.
When the scope brushes into related work like Interior Painting in West Hollywood or Trim & Baseboard Painting in West Hollywood, we sequence everything so one trade does not undo the last one.
Cabinet Painting pricing in West Hollywood starts around $2,500 to $4,500 for small kitchen work. Larger scopes land around $6,500 to $10,000+. Those ranges reflect the city modifier, which matters because West Hollywood does not run on the same labor conditions as every other part of Los Angeles.
The biggest price swings come from prep and access. If the surface has contamination, failed caulk, old repairs, long trim runs, tight masking conditions, or staging limits, the labor grows. If the job is straightforward and the surfaces are already stable, it stays closer to the low end. That is true in every city, but the way it plays out in West Hollywood is different because of the local housing stock and site logistics.
For that reason we show a real range instead of a marketing number. Houses come with variables, and a useful estimate accounts for them up front instead of hiding them in fine print.
Our pricing is built around finishing properly, not winning the bid by hiding the prep gap. The estimate names the scope, the predictable trouble spots, and where the cost moves if surfaces are worse once we start.
Material choice in West Hollywood still comes back to use case. For cabinet painting, we pay attention to sprayed enamel on doors and drawers, fine-roll or spray finish on frames based on site conditions, grain fill when clients want a smoother profile, and longer cure planning before daily kitchen abuse starts. In other words, we do not just ask what color the client wants. We ask how the surface is used, how the light hits it, and how much wear it takes week to week.
designer feature walls, compact kitchens, and frequent turnover work. That pushes finish choices in a more practical direction. In a family-heavy house, washability and cure time matter. In a design-led home, side light and smoothness matter more. In rental or turnover work, speed and durability matter. The right answer changes with the property, which is why we do not pretend there is a single best coating for every job.
We tell owners exactly what the finish will and will not cover. Rough grain, old repairs, uneven texture, and tired substrate all improve, but none of it disappears. Naming that early is part of doing the job honestly.
We are after a finish that reads intentional rather than just new. That means it has to suit the room, the neighborhood, and the daily reality of how the owner lives in the property.
Most cabinet projects run 4 to 7 days including masking, removal, prep, spray time, cure windows, and reinstall. In West Hollywood, that timeline can tighten or stretch based on access, weather, occupancy, and the amount of real prep in the house. Condos bring elevator reservations and parking rules. Hillside homes bring staging limits. Gated properties bring entry coordination. Older homes bring more repair work than anybody hoped for. We account for those conditions early so the schedule still makes sense once work starts.
Condo associations and tighter urban parking usually set the pace for move-in paths, work windows, and material staging. That does not make the project impossible. It just means the schedule and staging plan have to be built around reality.
The schedule itself shapes finish quality. When crews are rushed because the sequence was sloppy, touch-ups multiply and cure times get cut. We would rather show the honest calendar and meet it than make promises that need fixing afterward.
The gap is obvious quickly. Crews who know the local conditions move cleanly, protect everything around the work, and finish on the day they said. Crews who do not lose time to predictable problems.
Pricing
A cleaner planning range for homeowners comparing this exact scope in West Hollywood.
| Service | Price Range |
|---|---|
| Small kitchen | $2,500 – $4,500 |
| Medium kitchen | $4,000 – $7,000 |
| Large kitchen | $6,500 – $10,000+ |
Free Estimate
If you are pricing cabinet painting in West Hollywood, send the basics here and Red Stag will come back with a real next step, not a vague canned response.
Built for West Hollywood homeowners comparing local pricing.
Service type is already preselected for cabinet painting.
FAQ
Cabinet Painting in West Hollywood usually starts around $2,500 to $4,500 for small kitchen work. Larger scopes land around $6,500 to $10,000+, depending on prep and access.
The biggest drivers are surface condition, access, and finish expectations. In West Hollywood, housing style and site logistics can change the labor a lot, especially if the property has tighter access, more prep, or higher finish standards.
Yes. We often pair cabinet painting with interior painting, trim & baseboard painting, or drywall repair & paint so the job is sequenced once and finished cleanly.