Cabinets fail on a schedule, even if no one writes it down. The slow leak under the sink that swells a base panel over one humid summer. The chip in a door edge that drinks in moisture all winter until the corner softens. The hinge that loosens a little each month until the door hangs crooked and strains its mounts.
None of that is inevitable. Maintaining kitchen cabinets is easiest when you tie the work to the seasons, the way you already think about gutters or the furnace, so it spreads into small jobs that never pile up. The short version: wipe spills daily, audit for moisture in spring, adjust hardware in summer, protect the finish in fall, and manage humidity in winter.
How to Clean Kitchen Cabinets (the Daily Habit)
Before the calendar, one thing runs all year: wipe spills and splatters when they happen, not later. Standing water is what destroys cabinets, and grease that sits hardens into grime that fights you the next time. A damp cloth, a little mild dish soap, then dry the surface. Skip the abrasive pads and anything with ammonia or bleach, which strip finishes and dull paint over time. That is the whole daily routine. The seasonal tasks below are what you add on top.
Spring: Check Cabinets for Moisture Damage
Spring is when winter’s damage shows itself, so this is the season to look for water. Open the base cabinet under the sink and actually look, run your hand along the floor of it, check the back corners, feel whether the panel has any soft give. A slow supply-line drip or a condensation problem will have been working all winter, and catching it now, before the panel swells and delaminates, is the difference between a cleanup and a replacement.
While you are down there, check the cabinet that holds the trash and any unit next to the dishwasher. These three, sink, dishwasher, trash, are where nearly every cabinet failure starts, because they live in moisture. This is also the moment construction earns its keep: a plywood box, the kind detailed in any good cabinet care and materials guide, shrugs off the dampness that swells and crumbles a particleboard box. Maintenance preserves a good box; it cannot save a bad one.
Summer: Adjust Cabinet Hinges and Hardware
Warm, dry months are the easy season, so use them for the fiddly mechanical work. Doors and drawers drift out of alignment over a year of use, and a door that no longer sits flush quietly stresses its hinge mounts every time it closes.
Go around the kitchen with a screwdriver. Modern hinges adjust in seconds, up and down, side to side, in and out, so square up any door that has wandered. Confirm the soft-close hinges still catch and ease shut instead of slamming. Tighten every knob, pull, and hinge screw, because each one loosens a little with use, and a snug screw now prevents a stripped, wallowed-out hole later. If a drawer glide drags, clean the track and add a touch of lubricant before the mechanism wears.
Fall: Protect the Cabinet Finish
Heading into the heating months, the air indoors gets dry and finishes take a beating. Fall is for the surface. Inspect every door and drawer front for chips, especially along the edges and corners where they start. A chip in a painted finish is not cosmetic, it is an open door, exposed substrate pulls in moisture and the damage creeps outward from that one spot. Touch up chips promptly. Wood-finish cabinets benefit from a conditioning product suited to the finish around now; painted ones do not need it but do need that chip inspection.
Winter: Manage Humidity to Protect Cabinets
Winter care is mostly about the air. Heating systems dry a house out, then cooking and dishwashing dump moisture back in, and those swings stress cabinet materials and finishes over time. Run the range hood and ventilate during and after cooking and running the dishwasher so the humidity does not spike and settle into the cabinets. There is little hands-on work this season, just keep the air from doing the damage that no wiping can undo.
Common Kitchen Cabinet Repairs Worth Knowing
Across any season, a few small fixes keep a problem from becoming a replacement. Touch up a finish chip before it spreads. Re-square a sagging door at the hinge instead of letting it strain the mounts. When a mounting screw has stripped its hole, fill the hole with wood glue and a dowel or matchstick, let it cure, and re-drill for a solid anchor. None of these needs a pro, and each one buys years.
Frequently asked questions about cabinet maintenance
How often should I really be checking under the sink? At least once in spring, when winter moisture problems surface. If the cabinet sits next to a dishwasher or you’ve had plumbing issues before, a quick look each season is cheap insurance against the most common cabinet failure there is.
Is there a wrong way to clean cabinets? Yes, abrasive pads, scouring powder, and ammonia or bleach cleaners all strip finish and dull paint. Warm water, mild dish soap, a damp (not wet) cloth, and drying afterward is all most finishes want.
My door hangs crooked. Do I need a new one? Almost never. A drifted door is a hinge adjustment, a few turns of a screwdriver, not a replacement. Left alone it strains the mounts, which is how a five-second fix becomes a real repair.
Why do the cabinets by the sink and dishwasher always go first? Constant moisture. Those units sit in the dampest spot in the kitchen, which is why they fail first and why a plywood box matters most exactly there.
Does it matter how dry or humid the house is? Over years, yes. Big humidity swings stress materials and finishes, so ventilating while cooking and running the dishwasher protects the whole installation, not just one cabinet.
Put these on the calendar next to the other seasonal home chores and cabinet care stops being something you notice only when something breaks. A good box, kept dry and squared and touched up, runs past its twentieth year without drama, which is exactly what you want from the part of the kitchen you use most and think about least.
