Cabinet modules in Polish kitchens follow a sizing logic derived from European norms and practical workshop constraints. Understanding these dimensions helps when ordering custom furniture, retrofitting existing layouts, or comparing manufacturer specifications.

Kitchen cabinet modules displayed in a showroom
Kitchen cabinet modules on display — standard sizing conventions apply across most Polish and European manufacturers.

Base Cabinet Dimensions

Base cabinets form the foundation of any modular kitchen. In Polish manufacturing, they almost universally share a cabinet body depth of 560mm, which combines with a standard 40mm door or drawer front to reach the worktop-support depth of 600mm. The plinth, typically 100–150mm tall and 50–60mm deep, raises the worktop to an ergonomic working height.

Standard widths for base units

Widths increase in 100mm increments for most of the range. The most common sizes in Polish workshops are:

Width (mm)Typical useDoor/drawer configuration
300Narrow filler, spice pull-out1 door or pull-out
400Single-door base1 door
500Single-door with drawer1 door + 1 drawer
600Standard base, sink unit2 doors or 3 drawers
800Wide base, corner transition2 doors
900Wide drawer bank3 drawers
1000Corner base filler2 doors or pull-out

Cabinet body height for base units is generally 720mm, leaving space for a 150mm plinth and a 40mm worktop to reach the standard 870mm–910mm working height. Deviations exist — some manufacturers use 700mm or 740mm body height depending on the plinth specification.

Note on tolerance

Polish furniture manufacturers working to PN-EN 14749 allow ±2mm on nominal dimensions for cabinet bodies. Doors and drawer fronts may show ±1mm. When planning a fitted kitchen, account for 3–5mm of adjustment space at walls and ceiling to avoid gaps visible after installation.

Wall Cabinet Dimensions

Wall units are shallower than base cabinets — the standard depth is 300mm for the cabinet body, with door fronts adding approximately 18–20mm. Heights vary more than base units, offering 400mm, 600mm, 720mm, and 960mm variants depending on ceiling height and the presence of a cornice rail.

Width range

Wall units follow the same 100mm width progression as base cabinets, from 300mm to 1000mm. The 600mm wide unit with two doors is the most produced size in Polish factories. Corner wall solutions — L-shaped or with blind corner fillers — require careful measurement, as the internal accessible space narrows significantly from the nominal width.

Hanging height and spacing

The gap between the worktop surface and the underside of wall units is typically 550–600mm. This allows comfortable working clearance while keeping shelf access reachable without stretching. When wall units are installed above a hob, the minimum clearance increases to 650mm for gas and 500mm for induction, per EN 30-1-1 requirements. International standards on kitchen equipment ergonomics provide the underlying framework for these spacing rules.

Tall Unit and Pantry Module Dimensions

Tall units — pantry columns, oven housing, and refrigerator enclosures — share the 600mm depth of base units and span from floor to ceiling or to a set height of 1950mm, 2100mm, or 2200mm. The 2100mm tall unit is the most common in Polish interiors with standard 260cm ceiling heights, as it leaves 500mm above for a cornice panel.

Module typeWidth (mm)Depth (mm)Height (mm)
Pantry column300–6005601950–2200
Oven housing (single)6005602100
Fridge enclosure600–700560–6202100–2200
Utility/broom column300–4005602100

Corner Solutions

Corner cabinets are technically the most complex modules. The two main approaches used in Polish kitchens are the blind corner — where one unit extends past the corner and provides a pull-out mechanism — and the L-shaped carousel unit. Carousel units require a minimum corner leg length of 900mm on both sides to accommodate the rotating shelf diameter. Blind corner units can function with 400mm leg lengths but sacrifice internal accessibility.

Angular corner dimensions

Diagonal corner base units, with a 45° front, occupy a nominal 900mm × 900mm footprint. The usable interior is smaller — approximately 600mm across at the widest point. These units work well with a Blum Tandem pull-out system to bring rear contents forward, improving practical storage efficiency.

Plinth and Cornice Dimensions

The plinth runs along the base of all floor-level cabinets and hides the gap between the cabinet bottoms and the floor. Standard plinth height in Polish kitchens is 100–150mm, adjustable via leveling feet that allow ±20mm correction for uneven floors. Plinth depth is typically 55–60mm — set slightly back from the cabinet front to provide toe space.

Cornices and light rails at the top of wall units are decorative additions with no structural role. Heights range from 40mm (flat rail) to 120mm (profiled cornice). These are cut on-site to length and mitred at corners.

Working with existing floor tiles

In renovations where floor tiles are already laid, plinth height may need adjustment to clear the tile edge. Adjustable legs allow plinths to be raised to 180–200mm without replacing the cabinet body. Confirm leveling foot thread length before ordering — some manufacturers supply 100mm and 150mm variants separately.

References

Dimensional data in this article reflects practice observed in Polish custom furniture workshops and is cross-referenced with ISO ergonomics standards and the European norm PN-EN 14749 covering storage furniture structural strength.