Direct Answer
Cabinets ship from Cabo Cabinet Group's 700,000 square foot factory in Mexico by land freight directly to your US job site. Once production completes, delivery takes under 7 days to any location in the United States. The entire timeline from confirmed specification to cabinets on site runs about five weeks: roughly 30 days production and under 7 days transit. Units ship in full truckload quantities, typically 6 to 40 cabinets per unit, branded with your company name on every box. You choose assembled or RTA format at the ordering stage, and we pack accordingly.
Why It Matters
The Mexico to US land route eliminates 45 to 90 days of ocean transit that Asian manufacturers add to every project. That difference changes what you can commit to a developer or general contractor. A five week total cycle means you can lock a cabinet order later in the construction schedule and still hit your install window. It also means you can respond to plan changes or unit count adjustments without the long lead time penalties that come with overseas containers already on the water.
Land freight also reduces damage risk. Cabinets make one continuous journey by truck rather than multiple container transfers, port handling, and ocean exposure. When a load arrives, it is the same load that left the factory days earlier, not weeks or months earlier. For assembled cabinets, that matters. For projects running 200 or more units a month, the predictability of a seven day transit window lets you stage deliveries to match install crews without warehousing costs.
How It Works
Cabo produces to your exact specification: framed or frameless boxes, painted or stained doors in shaker, slim shaker, slab or thermofoil, soft close hardware standard. Production runs about 30 days once the spec is confirmed and the order is released to the factory floor. As units complete, they are packaged for the format you specified. Assembled cabinets are corner blocked, wrapped and loaded to protect finished surfaces and hardware. RTA cabinets are flat packed with hardware bagged and labeled for each box.
Full truckloads leave the factory and clear customs en route to the US border. From there, freight moves under normal commercial trucking to your designated job site or distribution point. Cabo's monthly capacity is about 8,000 apartment units of cabinetry, roughly 200 shipping containers worth of volume, so scheduling is stable even for large national accounts placing orders across multiple projects.
Every box carries your brand. The cabinets arrive as your product, not as a Cabo product. That is the manufacturing partnership: we build to your specification and ship under your name.
What to Specify for Shipping
Confirm the delivery format early. Assembled cabinets save install labor on site but require more truck space and careful handling at delivery. RTA cabinets pack tighter, cost less to ship per unit, and are easier to move through tight job site access points, but they add assembly time in the field. For high volume projects, many buyers specify RTA for upper cabinets and assembled for base and vanity units to balance install speed and shipping cost.
Provide accurate delivery addresses and job site contact information. Trucking companies need a receiver name and number, delivery hour windows if the site has restrictions, and any special access requirements like lift gates or inside delivery. Cabo does not warehouse in the US, so cabinets ship direct from factory to your location. Clear delivery coordination prevents delays and redelivery charges.
If you are running a national account program with multiple projects, talk to Cabo about delivery scheduling across sites. The factory can stagger production and release truckloads in sequence to match your installation calendar without bunching all deliveries into the same week.