If you live in Cheshire and want a kitchen built to fit your room, who designs and makes the thing rather than selling you a flat-pack? Daniel Scott Kitchens answers that fairly clearly. It is a maker, based at Adlington Business Park near Macclesfield, that designs, hand-builds and installs its own kitchens and fitted furniture. The two founders, Daniel and Scott, bring a combined thirty-plus years of joinery and cabinet work between them, and the workshop handles the run from first consultation through manufacture to the fit. That single fact matters quite a bit, because the difference between a company that resells units and one that cuts and assembles them in-house tends to show up in the corners and the carcasses.

The range on offer at Daniel Scott Kitchens is broad without straying outside what a cabinet shop can credibly deliver. Five named styles are listed: Classic, Shaker, Modern, Traditional and Country. Those are not wildly different products so much as variations in door profile, finish and detailing, which is honest, because most homeowners arrive with a feeling about how they want the room to look and want help turning it into something buildable. Beyond kitchens, Daniel Scott Kitchens makes fitted bedrooms and standalone bespoke furniture, so the same workshop that builds your base units can also handle a run of wardrobes upstairs. For anyone trying to keep a whole house visually consistent, having one maker across rooms is genuinely useful.

Workshop and the people behind it

The naming gives the game away in a good way. Daniel Scott Kitchens is literally Daniel and Scott, which means the business is small enough that the people whose names are over the door are plausibly the people working on your job. That arrangement is worth more than it sounds in the kitchen trade, where a chain showroom designer you meet often never goes near the saw. Thirty years of combined experience is a modest claim by any standard, not an inflated one, and modest claims that match the scale of the operation read as more believable than grand ones. Daniel Scott Kitchens does not claim to be an award-winning studio or a regional giant; it claims to make good kitchens by hand, which is exactly the kind of thing a two-founder workshop should be saying.

Because everything is designed and built in-house, Daniel Scott Kitchens is dealing with one chain of responsibility from drawing to installation. There is no handoff to an outside fabricator who never met you, and no excuse-trading between a sales arm and a fitting arm when something needs adjusting. That matters most when a room is awkward, which kitchens often are: sloping floors, a chimney breast that eats into a run, a window sited badly for a sink. A maker that controls its own manufacture can solve those on the bench rather than asking the homeowner to live with a compromise.

The catchment is sensible. Daniel Scott Kitchens works across Northwest England, naming Cheshire, Greater Manchester and Yorkshire, and serves both homeowners and property developers. Developers are a telling clientele, since they buy repeatedly and judge on consistency and lead times, not a one-off emotional purchase. A small workshop that keeps developer relationships going is usually one that delivers on schedule and on spec.

Gallery, testimonials and what the site lets you check

The website is organised the way a prospective customer would actually use it. There are sections for the kitchen styles, a gallery, a testimonials page and a contact page. The gallery is the part that deserves the most attention from anyone weighing up a bespoke maker, because finished installations are the only real proof that the styles translate into actual rooms. Photographs of completed work let you judge joinery, alignment and finish before you ever pick up the phone, and a maker willing to show its output is usually one comfortable being judged on it. Daniel Scott Kitchens does put its work on display, which is a positive sign.

Contact details are published openly, which is exactly what you want from a trade you are inviting into your home. A phone number and an address for the Adlington premises are both listed, so reaching Daniel Scott Kitchens or simply turning up to see where it operates is straightforward. A physical workshop address you can locate on a map is reassuring in a sector where plenty of operators are little more than a mobile number and a logo. The address also puts the operation in a credible commercial setting, not a garden shed.

On outside opinion, the picture is decent if modest. The company's Facebook page carries eight reviews with a hundred percent recommend rate. Daniel Scott Kitchens also appears on Houzz among cabinet-makers and kitchen professionals, and there is at least one detailed positive write-up on Homify. A Yelp listing exists as well, though no rating is confirmed there. Eight reviews is a small sample, but a clean recommend rate from real customers on a public page, backed by a presence on Houzz where the kitchen trade tends to gather, is a fair indicator for a workshop of this size. The own-site testimonials add quoted endorsements, which are worth reading as colour even if you treat anything self-published with mild caution.

Social reach is wider than the review count alone might suggest, spanning Facebook, Instagram, Pinterest, Twitter and Houzz. For a visual trade, Instagram and Pinterest are the practical channels, since they double as an ongoing portfolio between formal gallery updates. A homeowner can scroll recent work and get a feel for the maker's current output, which is often more current than a static site.

Where Daniel Scott Kitchens lands

Daniel Scott Kitchens reads as a credible, owner-run bespoke joinery business with the right things in place: in-house design and manufacture, a real workshop address, a phone number, a gallery of completed work, and modest but genuine third-party endorsement. The review footprint is small, and the named styles, while sensible, are common enough across the trade that the real differentiator is build quality, which you can only confirm by visiting the gallery or the premises. None of that undermines the offering; it just means the proof is in the work, not the marketing copy.

Set it against the obvious alternative many Cheshire homeowners reach for first, a national fitted-kitchen retailer such as Wren Kitchens. Wren wins on showroom polish, financing options and the comfort of a big-brand guarantee, and you can walk into a branch and see dozens of door styles in an afternoon. What it cannot easily offer is a maker who builds your specific units by hand and answers for the result from sketch to screwdriver. If your room is standard and price visibility is the priority, the retailer route is reasonable. If the room is awkward, or you want to deal directly with the people doing the work, Daniel Scott Kitchens is the stronger option. The published evidence from Daniel Scott Kitchens, a real address, an in-house workshop, a clean recommendation record and a gallery of finished rooms, is enough to make it a genuinely worthwhile first call for Northwest homeowners planning a kitchen they intend to keep.


Business address
Daniel Scott Kitchens
Adlington Industrial Estate,
Macclesfield,
Cheshire
SK10 4NL
United Kingdom

Contact details
Phone: 01625 874083