Why I Prefer to Fit Blum Kitchen Hardware
When most people plan a new kitchen, they think about the doors, the worktop and the colour. Almost nobody asks about the hinges and the drawer runners. That’s fair enough, it isn’t the exciting part. But after more than 23 years of fitting kitchens, I can tell you the hardware is the bit that decides whether a kitchen still feels good in ten years or starts to annoy you in two. That’s why I fit Blum whenever I can.
Here’s what’s behind that.
It’s the part you touch every day
You open and close kitchen drawers and doors thousands of times a year. Cheap hinges and runners feel fine in the showroom and for the first few months. Then the soft-close starts to give out, a drawer begins to catch, and a door drops slightly so the gaps go uneven. None of it is dramatic, but you notice it every single day.
Blum’s soft-close, which they call Blumotion, is built into the hinge or the runner, and it keeps working. The drawers glide right out so you can actually reach the back, and they close with a solid, quiet action instead of a rattle. It sounds like a small thing. It isn’t. It’s a lot of what separates a kitchen that feels cheap from one that feels properly made.
I was called out to a kitchen once where a lot of the door hinges had failed, just because they were poor quality from the start. I changed them all to Blum, and the customer said it felt like a brand new kitchen. When I phoned later to check everything was okay, the amazement in their voice stuck with me. That’s the difference good hinges make.
It lets me get the finish right, and keep it right
A big part of a tidy kitchen is even gaps and straight lines. Blum hinges adjust in three directions with a turn of a screwdriver, and the drawer fronts adjust too. Once the kitchen’s in, I can dial everything in so the reveals are even and the doors sit flush.
Just as important, houses move. Timber settles, floors flex, and a year down the line a cheaper kitchen often needs the doors fiddling with, if it can be adjusted at all. With Blum I can bring it back to perfect in a few minutes. It’s also why the 12-month check-up I include is usually a quick tweak rather than a list of problems.
It takes a real-world load
Drawers end up full of pans, crockery and tins, people lean on them, and the kids hang off them. I fit Blum runners rated to 40 or 70 kg depending on what the drawer’s going to hold. A cutlery drawer doesn’t need the same as a deep pan drawer or a larder pull-out, so I match the runner to the job rather than fitting one size everywhere. They’re tested to the equivalent of years of daily use, and I’ve pulled out plenty of failed budget runners over the years where the drawer had started dropping under the load. I don’t get called back to Blum ones for that.
I’d rather fit it once
This is the honest business reason. Every callback costs me a day and costs you the hassle of having me back in your house. Cheap hardware fails, and when it does it’s my name on the job, not the hardware brand’s. Blum’s consistency means the boxes go together square, the parts fit first time, and I’m confident in the finish when I walk away. Fitting better hardware actually saves me time and saves you grief.
Spares are there when you need them
Blum is a standard across the trade, made in Austria, and the parts have stayed compatible across their ranges for years. If a kitchen ever does need a runner or a hinge replaced, after a knock or just years of use, I can get the part. I’m not telling you the cabinet brand has been discontinued and nothing matches. That matters for a kitchen you plan to keep for fifteen or twenty years.
What it means for you
If you’re having a kitchen supplied and fitted, ask what hinges and runners are going in. Some suppliers use Blum as standard, some only on their dearer ranges, and some don’t use it at all. It’s worth knowing, because it’s one of the clearest signs of whether a kitchen is built to last or built to a price.
When I supply and fit, Blum is what I use as standard. I keep a good stock of their components too, so I’m not held up waiting on parts to finish a job or sort a repair. When I’m fitting a kitchen you’ve bought elsewhere, I’ll tell you straight what’s in it and whether it’s worth upgrading. Either way, you’ll know exactly what you’re getting.
If you want to talk through a kitchen and the parts that actually matter, give me a call on 01506 300 402 or send an enquiry through the contact page.



