Homeowners want to know whether a recessed medicine cabinet can go in any wall or only where studs allow, what happens if there is an electrical outlet behind the mirror location, and how surface mount cabinets are anchored when studs are not centered. A website that explains medicine cabinet installation earns the call. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Medicine Cabinet Installation in KC
Web Design for Medicine Cabinet Installation Companies in Kansas City
Medicine cabinet installation customers are KC homeowners replacing a flat mirror with a recessed cabinet to gain bathroom storage without adding visual bulk, homeowners doing a bathroom remodel and centering the medicine cabinet over a new vanity where studs are not conveniently located, or homeowners in older KC bathrooms where the original recessed cabinet has rusted or the mirror is delaminated and needs full replacement. The central education is recessed vs. surface mount decision, stud cavity sizing for the recessed option, and how electrical outlets that conflict with the cabinet location are handled — three things that determine whether a medicine cabinet installation is a half-day job or a project that requires an electrician. Recessed vs. surface mount: a recessed medicine cabinet sits inside the wall cavity — it requires cutting an opening between two studs and the cabinet body slides in flush with the wall surface; standard recessed cabinet width is 14 to 16 inches, which fits between studs set at 16-inch on center; a recessed cabinet that is wider than the stud bay requires either a surface mount installation or removing a stud and adding a structural header to span the opening — this is only appropriate in non-bearing partition walls; surface mount cabinets project 4–6 inches from the wall and require no wall cutting, but add visual depth in small bathrooms; in KC bathrooms built after 1980 with standard 2x4 framing at 16 inches on center, a 14-inch recessed cabinet is straightforward; in older KC bathrooms with plaster and lath walls (common pre-1960), the stud cavity is often irregular and the plaster depth varies — a surface mount may be more practical. Electrical conflicts: bathroom medicine cabinet locations are frequently above or alongside a GFCI outlet rough-in — code requires GFCI protection within 6 feet of a bathroom water source; if the outlet is directly behind the intended cabinet location, it must be relocated before the cabinet goes in — this requires an electrician unless the work is limited to surface-mounted boxes; if the outlet is adjacent to the cabinet location, the cabinet may be able to be offset slightly to clear the outlet box; recessed cabinet installation always requires checking for electrical, plumbing, and HVAC inside the cavity before cutting. Framing the opening: a recessed cabinet opening cut between two studs requires nailing horizontal blocking (header and sill) to define the top and bottom of the rough opening; the blocking is sized to the cabinet rough opening height plus 1/2 inch; after the cabinet is inserted and shimmed plumb, the perimeter trim (supplied with the cabinet or field-cut) covers the rough opening gap. A medicine cabinet website that explains when recessed fits vs. when surface mount is the better call, what an electrical conflict means for scope, and how the framing opening is prepared earns the homeowner who wants to know the full job before committing.
What homeowners research before medicine cabinet installation
- Recessed vs. surface mount — stud bay width requirement, wider cabinet options, plaster wall limitation
- Electrical conflict — outlet location check, relocation scope, when an electrician is required
- Stud cavity check — electrical, plumbing, and HVAC in cavity before cutting, KC plaster wall variation
- Opening framing — blocking construction, rough opening sizing, shim and trim process
- Cabinet sizing — standard 14-16 inch vs. wide cabinets, depth options for surface mount, mirror size
What your medicine cabinet installation website would include
- Recessed vs. surface mount — stud bay width decision, older KC home plaster consideration, visual depth comparison
- Electrical conflict section — outlet location check, GFCI code context, when electrician is needed
- Cavity inspection guide — what to check before cutting, how to look inside wall without demo
- Opening framing section — blocking construction, rough opening sizing, shim and perimeter trim
- Wide cabinet section — when wider than stud bay, surface mount alternative, structural header requirement
- Quote form with bathroom age, existing outlet location, cabinet size preference, wall type, timeline
What clients say
“The electrical conflict section saved a job from going sideways. Customer in Prairie Village wanted a recessed cabinet exactly centered over the vanity — directly behind the GFCI outlet. After she read the section explaining the outlet conflict issue, she called me knowing we might need to move the outlet. We found it was two inches outside the cabinet rough opening, so we offset the cabinet slightly and avoided the electrician entirely. Without that section, I would have arrived at estimate and she would have been surprised by the outlet scope. Instead she was pre-informed and we found a solution in ten minutes on site.”
— D. Schreiber, bathroom carpentry and remodel, Prairie Village, KS
Simple pricing
A medicine cabinet site with recessed vs. surface mount section, electrical conflict guide, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with cavity inspection, opening framing, and wide cabinet content is $425–$750. One cabinet installation covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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