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Browse All ProductsCabinet feet and legs for furniture-style islands and vanities
Cabinet feet and legs are decorative supports that lift a cabinet, island, or vanity off the floor. They turn a built-in into a piece that reads more like furniture. The piece replaces the standard toe-kick: instead of a recessed kick panel, the cabinet sits on visible legs that show off the lower few inches of the floor and the wood or metal of the leg itself. The visual effect is to lighten a heavy run of cabinetry by giving it air at the floor.
Where furniture feet read best
Islands are the most common installation. A kitchen island carrying a stone top and corbel detail at the counter often gets matching feet at the floor, finishing the furniture-style impression. Bathroom vanities use the same idea: a freestanding-furniture vanity on turned legs reads more like a console than a built-in. Bun feet suit traditional and English-country kitchens; tapered square legs read transitional; sleek metal legs read contemporary or industrial.
Materials and load
Wood feet (maple, cherry, oak) take stain or paint and let the joinery match the cabinet. Metal legs in stainless or matte black give the cabinet a lighter visual footprint and resist water in bathroom installs. Plan height carefully: most feet add four to six inches of clearance, which raises the working countertop and may need to be matched by reducing the base cabinet height. Each foot needs to be load-rated for the share of the cabinet weight (and any stone counter) sitting on it.
Tying back to the rest of the hardware
Metal feet should match the cabinet hardware finish family — a kitchen running matte black pulls reads cohesive on matte black legs. Wood feet should match the cabinet's stain or paint rather than the hardware. For a contrast, a polished brass tip cap on a wood leg ties the leg into a brass-hardware kitchen.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between cabinet feet and a standard toe-kick?
A standard toe-kick is a recessed panel at the base of a cabinet that hides the gap between the cabinet bottom and the floor. Cabinet feet and legs replace that panel with visible supports, lifting the cabinet off the floor and giving it the appearance of freestanding furniture rather than a built-in. The exposed floor beneath the cabinet and the visible leg material — wood or metal — create a lighter, airier look for a run of cabinetry.
Are cabinet legs suitable for bathroom vanities, or are they mainly a kitchen product?
Cabinet legs work in both kitchens and bathrooms, though the material choice matters by location. In kitchens, wood feet in maple, cherry, or oak are common because they can be stained or painted to match the cabinet. For bathroom vanities, metal legs in stainless or matte black are often preferred because they resist moisture better than wood, and they give a vanity the look of a console rather than a built-in.
How do bun feet compare to tapered square legs for cabinet style?
Bun feet — the rounded, squat wood supports common in traditional cabinetry — suit traditional and English-country kitchen styles. Tapered square legs read as transitional, bridging classic and modern aesthetics, while sleek metal legs are associated with contemporary or industrial design. The choice of leg profile is one of the primary signals of a cabinet's style, so matching the leg shape to the overall room design is as important as matching the finish.
How much height do cabinet feet typically add, and why does that matter for installation?
Most cabinet feet add four to six inches of clearance between the cabinet bottom and the floor. That added height raises the finished countertop surface, which can affect ergonomics and may require reducing the height of the base cabinet to keep the counter at a standard working height. Each foot also needs to be rated for the load it will carry — including the share of any heavy stone countertop — so load capacity is a practical specification to verify before selecting a style.
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