Speed
Four weeks to build. Seven days to deliver.
Once the spec is set, production runs about four weeks. For this industry that is remarkably fast, a domestic US shop can take 120 days. Then delivery is under seven days, production to site, by land. About five weeks from a confirmed spec to cabinets on the job site.
One border, not an ocean
Production runs about four weeks once Cabo knows what it is building. Cabinets take time to make well, and four weeks is fast, a domestic US manufacturer can run to 120 days. The larger difference is what happens after the build. Cabo ships into the United States by land, so the cabinets leave the production floor and reach the job site inside a week. No six week ocean crossing, no port queue, no customs surprise at the end of a quarter. An order from Asia carries its own factory lead time, then forty five to ninety days at sea, then the seasonal shutdowns, a plant closed for weeks around the holidays.
Make and deliver, three ways
- Cabo
- About four weeks to build, then under seven days to deliver. Roughly five weeks, a confirmed spec to cabinets on site.
- A domestic US shop
- Up to 120 days to build, before any delivery.
- An Asian factory
- Its own factory lead time, then forty five to ninety days at sea, then the holiday season shutdowns.
What seven days buys you
Schedule certainty
Cabinets stop being the line item that slips the build. A seven-day window is something a superintendent can plan around.
Less capital tied up
No ocean container sitting on the books for two months. Order closer to need, free up working capital.
Room for change orders
A late layout change is a new short run, not a blown quarter. Proximity makes production responsive.
Faster project turns
Phased delivery building by building, matched to the construction sequence rather than one ocean shipment.
A port near every client
Put a real date on your cabinets.
Send the project and Cabo comes back with a number and a timeline.