Fargo Elite Custom Cabinets provides professional kitchen cabinet installation in Dilworth, MN, with on-site field measurements, cabinet layout planning, custom-fit cabinetry, storage solutions, precise installation, and detailed final adjustments.
Located in Clay County on the eastern border of Moorhead, Dilworth is one of the core communities of the Fargo–Moorhead metropolitan area. The city recorded 1,828 households and 1,942 housing units in 2020, creating a varied residential setting where kitchen projects can differ substantially from one property to another.
Some homeowners may need complete cabinet replacement within an established kitchen footprint. Others may be working around existing appliances, plumbing rough-ins, countertops, flooring, previous remodel work, limited storage access, or a layout that no longer uses the available room effectively.
With 15+ years of combined experience, our team plans around the actual space. We evaluate wall dimensions, cabinet runs, appliance relationships, storage zones, door and drawer operation, hardware, clearances, and the site conditions that influence the finished installation.
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Practical residential cabinet solutions for installations, replacements, custom storage, and room-specific improvements.
Professional installation of base cabinets, wall cabinets, tall cabinets, pantry units, drawer bases, sink-base cabinets, and other approved cabinetry for kitchen remodels, replacements, and residential improvement projects.
Made-to-fit cabinetry for projects requiring greater flexibility in cabinet dimensions, storage configuration, materials, finishes, door styles, drawer configurations, or room-specific design.
Replace worn, outdated, or poorly functioning cabinetry with updated cabinet systems, improved storage, new hardware, and layouts better suited to current household needs.
Plan cabinet placement around floor area, appliance dimensions, plumbing locations, circulation paths, work zones, landing space, door swing, drawer operation, and the overall kitchen configuration.
Premium cabinetry for projects emphasizing refined finishes, upgraded materials, coordinated door and drawer fronts, quality hardware, detailed alignment, and greater control over the finished appearance.
Purpose-built cabinetry for home offices, living rooms, entertainment areas, alcoves, and other residential spaces where integrated storage can improve organization and use of available space.
Storage planning for food, cookware, small appliances, trays, cutting boards, household supplies, deep drawers, pantry pull-outs, roll-out trays, and frequently used kitchen items.
Installation and adjustment of compatible pulls, hinges, drawer slides, and specified soft-close hardware to support smoother door and drawer operation.
Dilworth combines a long-established community history with continued residential growth.
The city grew from 3,001 residents in 2000 to 4,024 in 2010 and 4,612 in 2020. The 2020 census also recorded 1,828 households and 1,942 housing units.
Those figures do not tell us the age, layout, or condition of any individual kitchen, and we do not assume that every Dilworth home presents the same project needs.
One kitchen may involve:
Another may need:
The appropriate solution depends on the property, approved project scope, cabinet system, and household using the space.
That is why our planning begins with field measurements and actual site conditions, not assumptions based on a city name or standard floor plan.
Many residential cabinet projects involve components that will remain in place.
These may include:
Retaining existing components can preserve value and avoid unnecessary replacement. It can also create fixed relationships that need to be understood before the cabinet layout is finalized.
A refrigerator affects more than nominal opening width. Planning may also need to consider:
Existing plumbing can influence sink-base cabinet placement, supply and drain relationships, and interior cabinet conditions.
Ranges and cooktops may affect adjacent cabinet relationships, landing areas, and the position of nearby drawers or pull-outs.
Dishwashers create their own operating relationships with sink bases, cabinet runs, walkways, and nearby doors.
Current flooring may affect installation sequencing and how replacement cabinetry relates to finished surfaces.
Existing countertops and backsplashes can influence transitions where portions of the kitchen remain.
Previous remodel work can create conditions that are not obvious from a basic room sketch.
For these reasons, cabinet planning should account for both what changes and what stays.
A component can fit dimensionally and still operate poorly.
Depending on the kitchen, relevant relationships may include:
Cabinet storage should respond to real routines rather than a generic idea of the “average homeowner.”
Dilworth recorded 1,828 households in 2020. The local data reflects different household compositions, reinforcing why one standard storage configuration will not suit every property.
Depending on the project, priorities may include:
A household that cooks frequently may prioritize wide drawers for pots, pans, utensils, and preparation tools near the cooking zone.
Another homeowner may want dedicated storage for countertop appliances.
A household planning for long-term use may place greater emphasis on accessible drawers, pull-outs, and frequently used items within comfortable reach.
The objective is not simply to increase cabinet count.
It is to improve the relationship between storage capacity, access, workflow, and the people using the kitchen.
Cabinet planning can also consider how storage relates to recurring kitchen tasks.
Depending on the room and project scope, these relationships may include:
This does not require forcing every kitchen into one universal planning formula.
It means recognizing that cabinet placement affects how frequently used items move through the room.
Depending on project conditions and approved scope, improvements may involve:
Not every improvement requires moving plumbing.
Not every storage problem requires expanding the room.
Not every existing cabinet layout should be reproduced simply because it is already there.
The better question is:
Which cabinet changes will create the most useful improvement within the space available?
That provides a more practical basis for planning a Dilworth kitchen project.
A kitchen may contain substantial cabinet volume while still making everyday items difficult to access.
Common project concerns can include:
The problem is not always a lack of space.
Sometimes it is the way the available space is configured.
Dilworth’s local context gives this page a distinct project angle.
The community has a long-established history while also experiencing continued population growth, increasing from 3,001 residents in 2000 to 4,612 in 2020.
That does not mean every Dilworth kitchen is older, undersized, or in need of replacement.
It does support an important planning principle:
A kitchen does not always need a larger footprint to become more functional.
In some projects, the stronger improvement comes from reconsidering how the existing space is divided and used.
Cabinet installation is influenced by more than the number of boxes shown on a layout.
The cabinet system itself can affect fitting, hardware, exposed surfaces, adjustment, and the way individual components meet the room.
Depending on the selected products and approved scope, relevant entities may include:
Not every project uses every component.
The important point is that these elements form relationships.
A finished end panel may affect the visible termination of a cabinet run.
A filler may support clearance near a wall.
A toe kick contributes to the base condition beneath cabinetry.
Specified crown molding can affect the transition between upper cabinetry and the ceiling area.
Door style, overlay, hardware, and cabinet construction can influence how fronts relate visually and operationally.
Understanding these relationships helps keep the installation discussion grounded in the actual cabinet system rather than generic claims about “custom work.”
Trust in a cabinet installer should come from more than broad claims about “quality.”
The installation process involves a series of details that can affect appearance, operation, and how the cabinetry relates to the room.
Depending on the approved project scope and cabinet system, these may include:
Cabinetry introduces straight horizontal and vertical references into a room.
Installation conditions may therefore require attention to:
The actual approach depends on the site, cabinet system, and approved scope.
Existing kitchen footprints do not always align perfectly with cabinet dimensions.
Depending on the layout, fillers and scribe allowances may help address:
The goal is not to force cabinet boxes into every available inch. It is to support proper operation and a considered fit against surrounding conditions.
Base, wall, and tall cabinet components need to be positioned according to the approved layout and actual site conditions.
Depending on the project, installation planning may consider:
Attachment methods should be appropriate to the cabinet system and actual supporting conditions.
Before installation proceeds, the approved cabinet configuration should be considered against actual room conditions.
Relevant relationships may include:
For some projects, cabinet schedules, layout drawings, or elevations may help communicate the approved configuration.
Consistent visual spacing between adjacent doors and drawer fronts contributes to an orderly finished appearance.
Final adjustment can be important because installation alone does not automatically create uniform relationships.
Compatible adjustable hinges may allow refinement of door position and operation after cabinetry is installed.
Depending on the hardware system, adjustment may affect how adjacent fronts relate to one another.
Drawer movement should be reviewed for smooth operation and relevant clearances.
Soft-close performance depends on compatible hardware, correct installation, and adjustment.
Toe kicks, exposed ends, finished panels, fillers, crown molding, and other specified trim elements contribute to the visual completion of the cabinet installation.
These details should be considered as part of the approved project scope rather than treated as unrelated finishing items.
A final inspection provides an opportunity to review:
These details help distinguish a planned installation process from simply placing cabinet boxes in a room.
Cabinet installation does not happen in isolation from the rest of a kitchen project.
Depending on the scope, sequencing may involve relationships with:
For example, plumbing conditions may need to be understood before sink-base cabinetry is finalized.
Countertop work generally depends on the installed cabinet configuration and the requirements of the countertop scope.
Electrical outlets, appliance connections, and range-hood conditions may affect surrounding cabinet relationships.
Flooring conditions can also influence how cabinetry meets the room.
Clear project sequencing helps reduce avoidable conflicts between trades, retained components, and new cabinetry.
The exact sequence depends on the approved scope and actual site conditions.
Typical cabinet installation projects range from $3,500 to $25,000+, depending on actual scope.
This is general pricing guidance, not a fixed quote.
Cost factors can include:
A smaller kitchen is not automatically a simpler project.
Working around retained appliances, fixed plumbing, existing countertops, previous remodel conditions, limited clearances, or room-specific fitting needs can increase complexity even when the overall footprint is modest.
Likewise, a focused cabinet upgrade may cost less than full replacement while still requiring careful measurements, layout review, installation planning, and hardware adjustment.
Detailed estimates are provided after project review.
We review the space, project objectives, storage priorities, retained components, existing conditions, and intended scope.
This helps establish whether the project involves full cabinet replacement, targeted upgrades, custom storage, built-ins, or another approved residential cabinetry scope.
Relevant dimensions and installation conditions are documented before final cabinet decisions.
Depending on the project, this may include:
Cabinetry is planned around available space, household needs, work zones, appliance relationships, plumbing, storage priorities, cabinet configuration, selected finishes, and approved hardware.
Depending on the project, planning may also address:
Cabinetry is planned around available space, household needs, work zones, appliance relationships, plumbing, storage priorities, cabinet configuration, selected finishes, and approved hardware.
Depending on the project, planning may also address:
Doors, drawers, hinges, slides, relevant hardware, clearances, visible relationships, operation, and overall fit-and-finish are reviewed and adjusted as appropriate.
Eligible cabinet installations include a 5-year workmanship warranty.
Manufacturer warranties may also apply separately to qualifying cabinets, components, and hardware according to the applicable manufacturer terms.
Homeowners should be able to understand what supports a cabinet contractor’s claims—not simply read generic statements about craftsmanship.
Our approach include
For Dilworth homeowners, the practical benefit is a process that can support targeted improvements within an existing kitchen footprint while accounting for retained conditions, cabinet configuration, storage priorities, and operating details that influence everyday use.
Our 5-year workmanship warranty applies to qualifying cabinet installations according to the applicable project terms.
Eligible cabinets, hinges, drawer slides, and other components may also carry separate manufacturer warranties.
These are not the same type of coverage.
Workmanship coverage relates to qualifying installation work, while manufacturer coverage depends on the specific product and the manufacturer’s applicable terms.
Clear distinctions help homeowners understand what coverage may apply to their project.
Our completed residential work includes focused kitchen upgrades, replacement projects, custom-fit installations, and built-in cabinetry across Dilworth and surrounding communities.
Project Type & Scope: Space-focused cabinet replacement with improved corner access, vertical tray storage, deep drawer bases, small-appliance storage, soft-close hardware, and fitting within the existing kitchen layout.
Estimated Project Cost: $9,700
Location: Dilworth, MN
Project Type & Scope: Replacement cabinetry fitted around retained appliances and existing plumbing, including field measurements, sink-base planning, new hardware, filler adjustments, and final door alignment.
Estimated Project Cost: $13,900
Location: Moorhead, MN
Project Type & Scope: Custom wall cabinetry with concealed storage, adjustable shelving, lower drawers, soft-close hardware, room-specific fitting, and final fit-and-finish adjustments.
Estimated Project Cost: $7,400
Location: West Fargo, ND
Dilworth is located in Clay County, Minnesota, directly along the eastern border of Moorhead and within the broader Fargo–Moorhead metropolitan area.
Depending on project scope, scheduling, and service availability, nearby project areas may include:
Your kitchen may not need a larger footprint to work better.
The project may involve replacement cabinetry, improved pantry access, deep drawer bases, better corner use, retained appliances, existing plumbing, countertop relationships, previous remodel transitions, or a layout that needs to make more effective use of the available room.
Fargo Elite Custom Cabinets provides kitchen cabinet installation in Dilworth, MN, with field measurements, cabinet layout planning, custom-fit solutions, professional installation, hardware adjustments, and final inspection.
With 15+ years of combined experience and a 5-year workmanship warranty on qualifying cabinet installations, our process is designed to give homeowners clearer expectations from initial project assessment through final fit-and-finish review.