Answers

Can you deliver to our warehouse instead of the job site?

Direct Answer

Yes. Cabo Cabinet Group delivers to your warehouse, distribution center, or any specified address in the United States. You designate the delivery location when the order is placed, and our logistics team coordinates the shipment to that point. Whether you operate a central receiving facility, run a multi-location distribution network, or prefer delivery direct to individual job sites, Cabo accommodates your receiving structure. The same timeline applies: about 30 days production once your spec is confirmed, then under seven days land delivery to your specified location, roughly five weeks total from confirmed spec to cabinets at your door.

Why It Matters

Different business models require different logistics. A regional builder with multiple projects may consolidate shipments at a central warehouse to control inventory and stage deliveries to job sites on their own schedule. A distributor with showrooms and storage needs cabinets at a hub before breaking down orders for customers. A national contractor might deliver to a project staging yard before moving material to individual buildings. Cabo's factory-direct shipping gives you flexibility: you choose the address, you control the next step. For high volume buyers in the National Accounts program, warehouse delivery simplifies the coordination of hundreds of units a month. You receive full containers, cross dock to your own trucks, and manage the last mile to job sites without depending on external schedules.

How It Works

When you confirm an order spec, you provide the delivery address. That address can be a warehouse, a yard, a storage facility, a job site, or any location with receiving capability. Cabo ships from the 700,000 square foot factory in Mexico by dedicated truck, crossing the border and delivering to your location in under seven days transit time. Each box is branded with your company name, so when the shipment arrives it is already your product. The receiving point must accommodate commercial freight: a loading dock or forklift access, space for an 53 foot trailer to maneuver, and a crew to offload. Most warehouse operations handle this routinely. If you receive at a central location and then redistribute, plan your internal logistics from there. Cabo's responsibility ends at delivery to your specified address. What happens after that, staging, storage, reshipment to job sites, is your operation. For orders running six to 40 cabinets, a single delivery is typical. For National Accounts volume, roughly 200 containers a month at full capacity, you may schedule regular deliveries to your warehouse on a rolling basis.

What to Specify at Order Time

Provide a complete delivery address including contact name and phone number for receiving. If your warehouse has specific delivery hours, gate codes, or dock assignments, communicate that at order time. If you run multiple locations, confirm which facility receives which orders. For projects spanning months, some buyers take early delivery to a warehouse and hold inventory until install crews are ready. Others prefer tighter coordination, cabinets arriving at the job site just ahead of the install window. Cabo adapts to either approach. If you need split shipments, some units to a warehouse and others direct to a job site, specify that in the order. The key is clarity at the front end: one address per shipment, clear receiving instructions, and a logistics plan that matches your project schedule and storage capacity. Warehouse delivery works well when you have the space, the systems, and the volume to justify central receiving and your own distribution.

A question about your own project?

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