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Pull-out Shelves: Gliding to a Hardworking Kitchen. Courtesy of Josh Gonzalez of Coldwell Banker Prime Properties in Clifton Park NY.

By
Real Estate Agent with Coldwell Banker Prime Properties

Pull-out Shelves: Gliding to a Hardworking Kitchen.  Courtesy of Josh Gonzalez of Coldwell Banker Prime Properties in Clifton Park NY.

Add pull-out shelves to your existing base kitchen cabinets and you'll stay organized, frustration-free, and never lose an item in the back of a cabinet again.

ShelfGenie slide-out kitchen shelving

Some pull-out shelves include slots for storing baking sheets or pans. Image: ShelfGenie® Glide-OutTM Shelving Solutions

Pull-out shelves unleash the storage potential on a typical 24-inch deep, 30-inch wide, lower kitchen cabinet. With standard shelves, you have to stoop down (ouch) and peer into the dark recesses to see what's back there. Mmm, peanut butter-that expired in 2008?

Eliminate this Neverland of lost pots and pans-and peanut butter-simply by retrofitting your existing cabinets with pull-out shelves.

Pull-out shelf basics

The beauty of pull-out shelves is that you'll bring the contents of the cabinet out into the light of day with one easy tug-a boon for anyone with limited mobility. Most pull-out shelves feature a shallow lip around the edge so that items don't tumble off as the shelf glides in and out.

Pull-out shelves typically come with full-extension gliding hardware that supports up to 100 pounds. However, most manufacturers recommend keeping the load to 75 to 80 pounds maximum.

Retrofitting existing cabinets with pull-outs is usually easy-most cabinets have adjustable shelves that are easily removed. If your shelving is fixed in place, however, you'll have to consult a woodworker to see if the shelves can be taken out.

Sizes and styles

Pull-out shelves come in standard or adjustable sizes to fit various cabinet interiors. They are available in three basic materials:

  • solid wood (usually the most expensive and well-made).
  • plywood sides combined with medium density fiber (MDF) bottoms.
  • metal wire that's lightweight and easy to install, but also the least substantial.

You'll also find a variety of specialty options such as pull-out shelves with slots for storing trays, baking pans, or lids. Other options include bins that hold waste baskets and units that swing out from corner cabinets. Look for pull-out shelves at home centers, discount stores, and online.

Costs and caveats

Prices for individual shelves start at about $13 for a low-end wire or plywood and MDF unit, up to $745 for a solid wood specialty unit for a corner cabinet.

If you purchase the shelves yourself and hire out the installation, expect to pay anywhere from $250 to $600 for a full day's labor. At about $20 each, for example, 24 shelves would cost about $730 to $1,200, installed.

If top-quality work is important to you, custom cabinetmakers will build and install pull-out shelves. Typical costs are $135 to $210 per shelf, installed. In an average-sized kitchen with 12 base cabinets and 24 shelves, expect to pay $3,240 to $5,040 for custom-made pull-out shelves.

Keep in mind that some cabinets aren't as well-suited to pull-out shelves. Narrow shelves, for example, may require a pull-out that glides on hardware installed on an existing shelf. The pull-out will likely work best for spices or small items.  By: Jan Soults Walker