Cabinet Hardware

Cabinet Hinges

Shop cabinet hinges for kitchen and bath projects, including soft-close, concealed European, overlay, inset, face-frame, and corner hinges. Compare types below or jump to the right collection.

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Cabinet hinges and hardware from Berta Store
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Step-by-Step Video Guides

How to Choose and Install Cabinet Hinges

Watch Berta Store cabinet hinge videos for product details, face-frame hinge installation, and frameless cabinet hinge guidance.

Discover Berta Cabinet Hinges

Face Frame Hinges Installation

Frameless Hinges Installation

Download Hinge Installation Templates

Print the correct cabinet hinge installation template before drilling hinge cup and mounting plate holes. Choose the face-frame or frameless template based on your cabinet construction.

Hinge Accessories

Cabinet Hinge Restrictor Clips

Limit cabinet door opening angles and help prevent doors from hitting walls, appliances, or nearby cabinets.

Browse Hinge Accessories
Project Calculator

Cabinet Hinge Quantity Calculator

Estimate how many hinges your cabinet doors need based on door height and standard hinge spacing.

Calculate Hinge Quantity

Shop Cabinet Hinges by Type

Cabinet hinges are the hardware that mount, align, and control cabinet doors. The right hinge depends on your cabinet style, door overlay, opening angle, and whether you need soft-close movement. Use this guide to compare soft-close, concealed European, overlay, inset, face-frame, and corner cabinet hinges before choosing the right option.

Cabinet hinges do more than open and close a door. The right hinge controls door movement, reveal lines, overlay, alignment, and how clean the finished cabinet looks. At Berta Store, we supply cabinet hinges for cabinet makers, contractors, furniture builders, and installers who need dependable hardware for kitchen cabinets, wardrobes, vanities, built-ins, and millwork projects.

Our cabinet hardware essentials include soft-close hinges, overlay and inset hinges, face-frame hinges, corner cabinet hinges, lazy Susan hinges, and hinge accessories for controlled door movement and cleaner installation.

Soft-Close Cabinet Hinges

Soft-close cabinet hinges use a built-in damping mechanism to slow the door before it closes. This helps reduce slamming and gives kitchen cabinets, wardrobes, and furniture doors a smoother feel.

For common frameless cabinet projects, the 110° soft-close 3D hinge is a practical choice because it gives installers adjustment control after the door is mounted. For tighter openings, use 90° soft-close hinges. For wider-opening cabinet doors, choose 165° hydraulic soft-close hinges.

Overlay & Inset Cabinet Hinges

Overlay and inset hinges determine how the cabinet door sits against the cabinet box. Full overlay hinges cover most of the cabinet side, half overlay hinges are used when two doors share one partition, and inset hinges place the door inside the cabinet opening.

For frameless cabinet doors, use full overlay soft-close hinges or 110° half overlay hinges. For flush inset cabinet doors, the 110° inset hinge is built for a cleaner inset cabinet layout.

Face-Frame Cabinet Hinges

Face-frame hinges are made for cabinets with a front frame, which is common in traditional American cabinet construction. Instead of mounting only to the cabinet side panel, these hinges work with the face frame structure.

For framed cabinet boxes, the 105° face-frame hinge is a common option. For overlay doors on framed cabinets, the 5/8 inch soft-close cabinet hinge is useful when the project requires that specific overlay.

Corner & Lazy Susan Cabinet Hinges

Corner cabinets need hinges that open wider than standard cabinet hinges. Corner and lazy Susan hinges are used for folding cabinet doors, corner kitchen cabinets, and access to rotating shelf systems.

For corner cabinet layouts, Berta Store carries 135° lazy Susan hinges, 165° lazy Susan hinges, and 165° soft-close lazy Susan hinges for smoother movement.

Hinge Accessories

Hinge accessories help control how far cabinet doors open. This matters near walls, appliances, fillers, inside corners, and adjacent cabinet doors.

For door angle control, use angle restrictor clips or the 86° angle restriction clip to limit opening movement and reduce contact with nearby surfaces.

How to Choose the Right Cabinet Hinge

The right cabinet hinge depends on how your cabinet is built, how the door sits on the opening, and how far the door needs to open. Before ordering, match the hinge to the cabinet style, overlay type, closing action, and opening angle.

1

Choose Frameless or Face-Frame

Frameless cabinets have no front frame, so the hinge mounts to the cabinet side panel. Face-frame cabinets have a front wood frame around the opening, so they need hinges or mounting plates made for face-frame construction.

2

Choose Overlay or Inset

Overlay doors sit in front of the cabinet opening and cover part of the cabinet side or frame. Inset doors sit inside the cabinet opening and finish flush with the front of the cabinet.

3

Choose Soft-Close or Standard Close

Soft-close cabinet hinges use a built-in damper to slow the door before it shuts, reducing slamming and improving the feel of the cabinet. Standard hinges close without damping and are usually used when soft-close movement is not required.

4

Choose the Opening Angle

Use 90° hinges for tighter openings, 105° or 110° hinges for most standard cabinet doors, and 135° or 165° hinges for corner cabinets, lazy Susan doors, or wider-access cabinet openings.

Overlay vs Inset Cabinet Hinges

Overlay and inset describe how the cabinet door sits when it is closed. An overlay cabinet door covers part of the cabinet box or face frame. A full overlay door covers most of the cabinet side, while a half overlay door is commonly used when two doors share the same center partition.

An inset cabinet door sits inside the cabinet opening and finishes flush with the front edge of the cabinet. Inset hinges are used when the project needs a clean furniture-style look with even reveal lines around the door.

If your door sits on top of the cabinet opening, choose an overlay hinge. If your door sits inside the opening, choose an inset cabinet hinge.

Frameless vs Face-Frame Cabinet Hinges

Frameless cabinets are built without a front frame. The hinge usually mounts directly to the cabinet side panel, which is common in European-style cabinets, modern kitchens, closets, and built-ins.

Face-frame cabinets have a front frame around the cabinet opening. These cabinets need hinges designed for face-frame mounting or hinges with compatible mounting plates. This style is common in traditional American cabinet construction.

If the front of your cabinet is flat with no frame, shop frameless hinge options such as 110° soft-close 3D hinges. If your cabinet has a front frame, shop face-frame cabinet hinges.

Concealed European Cabinet Hinges

Concealed European cabinet hinges mount inside the cabinet and are hidden when the door is closed. They are commonly used for modern kitchen cabinets, frameless cabinets, wardrobes, vanities, and custom furniture.

Many concealed hinges include adjustment features that help installers fine-tune door height, side-to-side alignment, and door depth after installation. This makes them a strong choice for professional cabinet projects where clean gaps and consistent reveal lines matter.

For a common concealed soft-close option, use the 110° soft-close 3D hinge. For wider openings, choose 165° concealed soft-close hinges.

Cabinet Hinge Replacement Guide

When replacing cabinet hinges, the safest approach is to match the existing hinge type as closely as possible. Check whether your cabinet is frameless or face-frame, then confirm whether the door is full overlay, half overlay, or inset.

  1. Remove one existing hinge and check the opening angle, overlay type, and mounting plate style.
  2. Measure how the door sits on the cabinet: full overlay, half overlay, or inset.
  3. Match the hinge cup position and screw pattern when possible to avoid extra drilling.
  4. Choose soft-close if you want quieter cabinet doors and smoother daily use.
  5. Replace one door first, adjust the hinge, then continue with the rest of the project.

For replacement projects, start with the main cabinet hinges collection, then narrow by soft-close, overlay, inset, face-frame, or opening angle.

Cabinet Hinge Types Comparison

Hinge Category Typical Angle Cabinet Style Common Use
Soft-Close Hinges 90°, 105°, 110°, 165° Frameless & Face Frame Kitchens, wardrobes, bathroom cabinets
Overlay Hinges 105°–110° Frameless Cabinets Full overlay and half overlay cabinet doors
Inset Hinges 110° Inset Cabinet Doors Flush inset furniture and custom cabinetry
Face-Frame Hinges 90°, 105°, 5/8" overlay Face Frame Cabinets Traditional American cabinet construction
Corner & Lazy Susan Hinges 135°, 165° Corner Cabinets Lazy Susan cabinets and folding doors
Hinge Accessories 86° restrictor Frameless & Face Frame Limits cabinet door opening angle
Cabinet Hinge Help

Cabinet Hinges FAQ

Quick answers to help you choose the right cabinet hinges for overlay, inset, frameless, face-frame, soft-close, and corner cabinet projects.

What type of cabinet hinge do I need?

The right cabinet hinge depends on your cabinet construction, door position, closing style, and opening angle. First, check whether your cabinet is frameless or face-frame. Then decide whether the door is overlay or inset. After that, choose soft-close or standard close, and match the opening angle such as 90°, 105°, 110°, 135°, or 165°.

For most modern frameless kitchen cabinets, a 110° soft-close 3D hinge is a common choice. For flush inset doors, use an inset cabinet hinge.

What are soft-close cabinet hinges?

Soft-close cabinet hinges include a built-in damper that slows the cabinet door before it shuts. This helps reduce slamming, protects cabinet doors, and gives kitchens, vanities, wardrobes, and furniture a smoother, more professional feel.

Soft-close hinges are available in different opening angles, including 90°, 105°, 110°, and 165°, depending on the cabinet layout and door movement needed.

What are concealed European cabinet hinges?

Concealed European cabinet hinges mount inside the cabinet and are hidden when the door is closed. They are commonly used for modern kitchen cabinets, frameless cabinets, wardrobes, vanities, and custom furniture.

Many European hinges allow adjustment after installation, helping cabinet makers and installers fine-tune the door height, side alignment, and depth for cleaner reveal lines.

What is the difference between overlay and inset cabinet hinges?

Overlay cabinet hinges are used when the cabinet door sits in front of the cabinet opening and covers part of the cabinet side or face frame. Full overlay hinges cover most of the cabinet side, while half overlay hinges are often used when two doors share one center partition.

Inset cabinet hinges are used when the door sits inside the cabinet opening and finishes flush with the cabinet front. If your door rests on top of the cabinet opening, choose overlay hinges. If your door sits inside the opening, choose inset hinges.

What is the difference between frameless and face-frame cabinet hinges?

Frameless cabinets do not have a front frame. The hinge usually mounts directly to the cabinet side panel, which is common in European-style cabinets, modern kitchens, closets, and built-ins.

Face-frame cabinets have a front wood frame around the cabinet opening. These require face-frame cabinet hinges or compatible mounting plates designed for that construction style.

How many hinges do I need per cabinet door?

Most standard cabinet doors use two hinges. Taller, heavier, or wider doors may need three or more hinges for better support, alignment, and long-term stability.

As a general rule, use two hinges for small and standard cabinet doors, three hinges for taller doors, and additional hinges for oversized or heavy doors. Door height, door weight, material thickness, and daily use should all be considered.

Which hinges work for corner and lazy Susan cabinets?

Corner cabinets and lazy Susan cabinets usually need wider-opening hinges than standard cabinet doors. Common options include 135° and 165° hinges, depending on the corner layout and how much access the cabinet needs.

For corner cabinet projects, shop corner and lazy Susan cabinet hinges, including 135° lazy Susan hinges, 165° lazy Susan hinges, and 165° soft-close lazy Susan hinges.

Hinge Comparison Guide

Soft Close Hinges vs Standard Cabinet Hinges

Compare how soft close and standard hinges operate and which type is best for kitchen cabinets and furniture.

Compare Hinges
Hinge Comparison Guide

Full Overlay vs Half Overlay Cabinet Hinges

Compare how full overlay and half overlay cabinet hinges differ in door coverage, cabinet spacing, and cabinet door layout.

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