Paint Your Kitchen Cabinets Without Sanding — I Did It and It Worked

My kitchen cabinets were a sad, yellowish oak from the early 2000s. I wanted them white. Every tutorial and YouTube video said the same thing: “You must sand first.” Sanding kitchen cabinets is a nightmare — dust everywhere, hours of work, and you have to remove every single door.

I procrastinated for eight months. Then a friend who flips houses told me about a product that makes sanding optional. I painted all my cabinets over a weekend. Two years later, they still look great. No sanding. No peeling. Here is exactly what I used and how I did it.

The Product That Changes Everything

Deglosser — also called liquid sandpaper. It is a chemical that etches the glossy surface of your cabinets so paint can bond without mechanical sanding. You wipe it on with a rag, wait the recommended time (usually fifteen to thirty minutes), and the surface is ready for paint.

cabinet painting, chalk paint, kitchen makeover
cabinet painting, chalk paint, kitchen makeover

It smells strong — use it in a well-ventilated kitchen with windows open and a fan running. Wear gloves. But it takes about twenty minutes to degloss every cabinet surface in an average kitchen, compared to hours of sanding.

The Full Process

  1. Remove cabinet doors and hardware. Label each door and its hinges with painter’s tape so you know where everything goes back. I used a numbering system — door #1, hinge #1, etc.
  2. Clean everything thoroughly. Kitchen cabinets collect years of grease and grime. Use TSP (trisodium phosphate) or a strong degreasing cleaner. Paint will not stick to grease.
  3. Apply deglosser with a lint-free rag. Work in sections. The glossy surface will look slightly dulled when it is ready — that is the etching you want.
  4. Prime. Do not skip this. A good bonding primer (I used Zinsser Bulls Eye 1-2-3) gives the paint something to grip. One coat, let it dry completely.
  5. Paint. Two thin coats are better than one thick one. I used a small foam roller for the flat surfaces and an angled brush for the corners and details. Wait for the first coat to fully dry before the second.
  6. Let everything cure for at least 24 hours before reattaching doors and hardware. This is the hardest part — you want to put it all back together immediately. Do not.

What Kind of Paint?

Chalk paint is the easiest option — it sticks to almost anything without primer. But it needs a protective topcoat (wax or polyurethane) because it is not durable on its own. Latex enamel is more durable and wipeable, which matters in a kitchen. I went with a satin latex enamel and it has held up beautifully to cooking splatters and daily use.

Two years in, one small chip near the trash pull-out where it gets banged constantly. That is it. The rest looks like the day I painted it. Eight months of procrastination for a weekend of actual work. The math on that is embarrassing.

Quick Summary: Use liquid deglosser instead of sanding. Clean with TSP first, apply deglosser with a rag, prime with bonding primer, then two thin coats of latex enamel paint. Let cure 24 hours before reassembling. Chalk paint is easier but needs a topcoat.