Install × Kitchen — 78 install guides for the busiest room.

You came in through the Install lane — here's everything install-related for the kitchen. 78 guides covering plumbing fixtures, lighting, tile and surfaces, cabinets, appliances, storage, and the new generation of smart-home gear that earns its place in the kitchen. This is the same content you'd reach by browsing through the Kitchen room hub's Install slice; both URLs serve the same intersection because the site supports two equally valid mental models — "I want to install something" and "I want to do something in the kitchen."

The kitchen is the highest-payoff room for install work. Three reasons. First, the kitchen has the most fixtures per square foot of any room — every faucet, every drawer pull, every pendant is an install opportunity. Second, kitchen installs are visible — a new backsplash or under-cabinet lighting changes the daily experience of the most-used room in the house. Third, kitchen installs come back at resale faster than almost any other category — a well-installed faucet and a clean backsplash add real dollars when the listing photos go up.

The five highest-search install projects in the kitchen

If you don't know where to start, these five represent the bulk of kitchen-install searches on the site. All five are within DIY range for a careful first-timer.

1. How to tile a kitchen backsplash

One weekend. $180–$420 in materials. Intermediate. The single highest-ROI kitchen install — visible from every angle, immediately upgrades a tired kitchen, and uses techniques (dry-fit, thinset application, grout float) that transfer to every other tile project in the house. Read the backsplash guide via the install lane →

2. How to install a kitchen faucet

60–90 minutes. $80–$300 in materials. Beginner-to-intermediate. A like-for-like swap is the right first plumbing install for any homeowner. The hard part is the basin wrench under the sink (buy one — $18 — instead of trying to use a regular wrench in a 4-inch space). Read the faucet guide via the install lane →

3. How to install a dishwasher

2-3 hours. $30 in install materials (the dishwasher itself is $400-$1,500). Intermediate. Built-in or freestanding, hardwired or plugged — the install steps are similar but the connection points differ. The water-supply braided line and the drain hose run are the two parts that fail if rushed. Read the dishwasher guide via the install lane →

4. How to install a range hood

3-4 hours. $40 in install materials. Intermediate. Ducted, ductless, or chimney-style — the difference is whether you're cutting a duct through a cabinet (ducted) or just hanging a recirculation hood (ductless). Ducted is the right answer almost always; ductless is a renter compromise. Read the range hood guide via the install lane →

5. How to install pendant lights over an island

2 hours. $50–$300 per pendant. Intermediate (electrical). Spacing matters more than fixture choice — three pendants over a 6-foot island spaced at 24 inches from each other and 30-32 inches above the counter is the standard that always reads right. Power off, voltage tester, ground first. Read the pendant guide via the install lane →

The full kitchen-install menu, by category

78 guides total, organized by what part of the kitchen you're working on.

Plumbing fixtures (12 guides)

Lighting (14 guides)

Tile and surface (8 guides)

Cabinets and hardware (16 guides)

Appliances (15 guides)

Storage and organization (8 guides)

Connectivity and smart home (5 guides)

Five mistakes specific to kitchen installs

Kitchen-specific failure modes — these come up because the kitchen has water, heat, electricity, and finished cabinetry all within arm's reach.

Tools that earn their place in kitchen installs specifically

Beyond the general install kit, these are the tools that show up specifically on kitchen projects.

The 10-project kitchen-install starter sequence

If you've never installed anything in a kitchen and want a sequence that builds skill efficiently, these ten projects in order form a deliberate skill ladder. Each project teaches a technique that the next one assumes.

  1. Replace cabinet hardware. 30 minutes per door. Teaches measuring and aligning fasteners.
  2. Install a soap dispenser at the sink. 20 minutes. Teaches countertop drilling with a hole saw.
  3. Install a smart smoke and CO detector near the kitchen. 30 minutes. Teaches ceiling mounting and battery handoff.
  4. Install under-cabinet LED strips (plug-in version). 90 minutes. Teaches measurement, channel mounting, and adhesive technique.
  5. Replace the kitchen faucet. 90 minutes. Teaches under-sink wrench work and water shutoff.
  6. Install a garbage disposal. 2 hours. Teaches drain alignment and electrical box wiring.
  7. Install a backsplash. One weekend. Teaches dry-fit, thinset application, grout, and caulk.
  8. Replace a dishwasher. 3 hours. Teaches water supply, drain hose, and 240V (or 120V) electrical hookup.
  9. Install a range hood (ducted). 4 hours. Teaches ducting through cabinets and ceiling.
  10. Install pendant lights over an island. 2 hours per pendant. Teaches electrical from the box level.

By the end of project 10, you've covered fastening, drilling, plumbing, electrical, tile, ducting, and lighting — the entire kitchen-install skill stack. From here, every other kitchen install is a variation on what you've already done.

Six common questions about kitchen installs

Do I need to shut off the water for every plumbing install? Yes, every time. The shutoff valves under the sink usually still work; if not, replace them ($12 each) before the rest of the project. A working shutoff is non-negotiable.

How do I know if a kitchen circuit is GFCI-protected? Look for a "TEST" and "RESET" button on any outlet on that circuit. Push TEST — if a downstream outlet loses power, that's GFCI protection working. Code requires GFCI on every countertop outlet within 6 feet of a sink.

Can I install a gas range myself? No. Gas line connections require a licensed plumber in nearly every jurisdiction. The cost of a slow gas leak is fire or carbon monoxide. Pay for the install.

What's the difference between hardwired and plug-in installs? Hardwired connects directly to electrical with no plug — used for built-in appliances and most lighting. Plug-in uses a standard outlet — used for portable appliances and most under-cabinet LED strips.

How do I match new cabinet hardware to existing holes? Use a 3-1/2 inch or 5 inch cabinet hardware template ($8 from any hardware store). It matches the standard hole spacings; just drop it on the door, mark the new hole position, drill.

What do I do with the old appliance after installing a new one? Most retailers offer haul-away for $25-$50 with new appliance purchase. Otherwise, scheduled curbside pickup through the city or a metal scrapper for free if the appliance has copper or aluminum.

The four kitchen-install techniques worth mastering

Once you've done a few kitchen installs, you'll find the same four techniques show up again and again. Mastering these four moves the rest of the kitchen-install catalog from "I need a tutorial" to "I know what to do."

1. Pre-tightening fittings under tension, then making the final turn

Plumbing and faucet installs almost always require a fitting that's threaded blind — you can't see what you're tightening into. The technique: pre-thread by hand to make sure you're not cross-threaded, then back off a half turn, then make the final turns under tension. This catches cross-threading before you've snug-tightened a damaged fitting. Saves a leak, saves a fitting, saves the trip back to the hardware store.

2. Two-line pencil marks for layout

Every install that mounts to a wall (TV, shelves, cabinet hardware, backsplash, lights) starts with a layout mark. The cleanest method: a pencil line for the horizontal axis, a pencil line for the vertical, marks at the intersections. Never measure-and-mark single dots — they migrate as you work. The two-line technique gives you a coordinate system that stays put.

3. Dry-fit before any adhesive or fastener

Tile, cabinets, hardware, even shelf brackets — every install where two parts come together benefits from a dry-fit before the permanent attachment. Confirms alignment, catches missing parts, gives you the chance to see the finished look before commitment. Adds 10 minutes; saves rework.

4. Step-back-six-feet, every five tiles

Kitchen wall installs (backsplash, paint, paneling, cabinet hardware) are physically close-up work. Your eye loses perspective at 18 inches. Every five tiles, every cabinet door, every five strokes of paint — step back six feet, look at the whole wall, then return. This is how pros catch waves, drift, and color inconsistency before they're permanent.

Cost-to-payback ranking — which kitchen installs return their cost fastest

Every kitchen install is part labor savings, part daily-use upgrade, part resale value. Here's how the major projects rank by cost-to-payback (a project that costs $100 and saves you 10 hours a year of frustration ranks higher than one that costs $500 and only matters at resale).

One more thing — the order projects should be done in

If you're tackling multiple kitchen installs in the same season, sequence matters. The right order saves rework and keeps each project standing on a finished surface from the previous one.

About this intersection

This page is the Install × Kitchen intersection — one of 60 task-lane × room intersection pages on HowTo: Home Edition. It exists at two equivalent URLs by design: /en/install/kitchen/ (lane-first) and /en/kitchen/install/ (room-first). Both are real pages with real content; both serve the same purpose; both link to the same 78 leaf-level install guides. The dual entry points let users navigate the way they think — some readers think "I want to install something, what room am I working in?" while others think "I'm working in the kitchen, what can I do here?" — and the site supports both mental models.