Features
- 15-piece affordable set: You will receive 15 drawer slide bumpers and 15 screws in the package for your daily use and replacement. With this drawer slide spacers, you can reduce the noise made when the drawer is pulled and protect your cabinet door from being scratched.
- Compatible size: Furniture cabinet drawer slide bumper spacers includes screws | the length of the pullout shelf door bumper is 1 1/16", the width is 23/32'', and the overall height is 7/16''. The plastic drawer bumpers size is manually measured, with an error of 0.01~0.02mm.
- Material and durability: Drawer bumpers for cabinets made of high-quality plastic, it is strong, wear-resistant and temperature-resistant, and durable; the rounded surface design prevents the sharp corners of the drawer from scratching the cabinet surface when it is pulled out.
- Easy to install: Just fix it to the front corner of the pull-out drawer with the included screws to protect the inside of the cabinet door. It is easy to install and does not take a long time. One person can do it.
- Applicable scenarios: The slide-out tray bumper is used for drawers of pull-out shelves; it can be fixed to the front edge of the sliding rack, internal drawer or TV swivel rack to help protect furniture or cabinet doors from dents and impacts.
Specifications
Color | White |
Unit Count | 15 |
Related Tools
Set of 15 plastic cabinet/drawer bumpers with 15 screws for installation; each bumper measures 1 1/16" long × 23/32" wide × 7/16" high. Designed to attach to the front corners or edges of pull-out shelves, drawers or sliding racks to cushion impacts, reduce noise and protect cabinet surfaces; made of wear- and temperature-resistant plastic with rounded surfaces to avoid scratching.
IFERLA 15 Pcs Plastic Cabinet Drawer Bumpers, Drawers Slide Spacers, Hardware Furniture Drawer Slide Bumper for Roll Out Shelves, Pull Out Shelf for Pantry, Cabinets Sliding Door Hardware Review
A small piece of plastic solved a big annoyance in my kitchen. After a couple of run-ins between roll-out trays and cabinet doors, I tried the IFERLA drawer bumpers—simple screw-on spacers meant to cushion the leading corners of pull-outs and sliding racks. They won’t turn a basic cabinet into a soft-close system, but they do a fine job of taming clatter and protecting finished wood.
What they are and why they’re useful
These are compact, white plastic stops that mount at the front edge of a pull-out shelf, internal drawer, or sliding rack. Each bumper is 1 1/16" long, 23/32" wide, and 7/16" high. The rounded face presents a smooth surface to contact a cabinet door or face frame, so when a pull-out is extended or returned at an angle (or a door swings in slightly), the bumper is what makes contact, not a sharp corner of a tray or bracket. You get 15 bumpers and matching screws—more than enough for a full kitchen’s worth of rollout trays with spares for future replacements.
In practice, the bumpers serve two purposes: they prevent dents and scratches on cabinet doors, and they eliminate the hard plastic-on-wood “clack” when a sliding component bumps the door edge. If you’ve invested in quality cabinetry, these tiny parts are a smart preventive measure.
Build quality and design
The plastic is firm but slightly forgiving, with enough compliance to absorb minor impacts without deforming permanently. The rounded face is thoughtfully shaped; there are no sharp corners that might transfer a gouge into finished wood. I also appreciate the temperature and wear resistance—mine live near a dishwasher and a trash pull-out where heat and moisture are common. After a few weeks of use, I see light witness marks from repeated contact, which is exactly what I want; the bumper takes the abuse instead of the door.
They’re only available in white, which blends in fine on light cabinetry or inside casework. If you care about aesthetics and you’re mounting them somewhere visible on dark interiors, you’ll notice them. Painting is technically possible but not particularly durable on smooth plastics.
Installation: straightforward, with a couple of tricks
The installation is simple: position the bumper on the front corner or edge of the moving shelf and drive the included screw. The screws are small, so pre-drilling is worth the extra minute—especially in hardwoods like maple or oak. A 1/16" pilot hole made the screws seat cleanly for me without splitting. In tight cabinets, a right-angle driver or a compact drill helps, and I’ve used painter’s tape on the drill bit to control depth.
Placement matters. Set the bumper so its rounded face is the first thing that would meet the door if the pull-out isn’t perfectly square during operation. I like to close the door, extend the pull-out slowly, and sight where a corner might graze the door edge. Mark that point and mount the bumper slightly proud of it.
It’s a one-person job, and each install takes under five minutes with the right pilot bit and driver.
Fit and compatibility
Not all pull-out hardware is the same, and that’s where you need to pay attention. On roll-out trays where the front corners sit flush and there’s no bulky bracket protruding, these fit perfectly. On hardware with tall front brackets or offset face-frame adapters, the 7/16" height may be too small to clear the obstruction or to make contact where you need it. In one cabinet with a high front bracket, I had to mount the bumper slightly higher on the moving member to create the correct contact point. In another, the geometry simply called for a taller stop.
Measure before you commit. With the door open, hold a bumper in position and simulate the pull-out’s path. If the bumper won’t be the first point of contact, you may need a different size.
Day-to-day performance
Once installed, the difference is immediate. The telltale tap you hear when a roll-out returns just off-center is muted, and more importantly, the vulnerable door edge is spared. On my trash pull-out, which gets the roughest use, the bumpers take the brunt of those quick grabs and slams without transmitting a sharp shock to the door. They also help during loading: if a door drifts inward while you’re pulling a tray, the bumper glances off the door rather than pinching the finish.
These don’t replace proper alignment or soft-close slides. If your trays are wildly out of square, fix that first. But as inexpensive insurance, they do their job well.
Durability after a few weeks
I’ve cycled a set installed in a pantry and under-sink base for several weeks. The plastic shows light polishing where it hits the doors, but there’s no cracking or flattening. The screws remain tight. I tugged on a few by hand to check for looseness and found none—pre-drilling pays off here.
I can’t speak to multi-year durability yet, but given the low-stress application and the material’s resilience, I expect them to last. And even if a bumper wears, you’ve got plenty of spares in the 15-pack.
Practical tips
- Pre-drill, especially in hardwoods. It avoids splitting and stripped screw heads.
- Test-fit with the door partially closed to ensure the bumper hits first, not a metal bracket.
- If space is tight, a stubby screwdriver or right-angle driver is helpful.
- Add a tiny dab of paste wax to the screw threads for smoother driving in dense wood.
- Install on both front corners of a pull-out for balanced protection.
Where they work best
- Roll-out trays behind partial- or full-overlay doors where contact is possible
- Internal drawers behind a single door in pantry cabinets
- Trash/recycling pull-outs that see frequent, hurried use
- Media or TV swivel racks that can swing close to doors or side panels
For face-frame cabinets with bulky front hardware, check that the bumper’s height is sufficient. If not, consider a taller stop or rethinking placement.
Value
Fifteen pieces with screws is generous. Most kitchens will use fewer than that, so you’re buying once and covering future upgrades or replacements. Given the cost of repairing or refinishing a cabinet door, this is inexpensive protection.
What I’d change
I’d like color options—brown or black would disappear inside darker cabinets. A second size (taller height) in the same product line would also solve the occasional bracket clearance issue. But as a general-purpose bumper, the current dimensions hit the sweet spot for most standard roll-outs.
Bottom line
The IFERLA drawer bumpers are a small, practical upgrade that protect cabinet doors and quiet everyday use. Installation is quick with a pilot hole, the material holds up, and the pack size makes sense for a whole-house project. They aren’t universal—some hardware layouts need a taller stop—but where they fit, they work exactly as intended.
Recommendation: I recommend these bumpers for anyone outfitting roll-out shelves or internal drawers, especially in kitchens with hard, finished doors you want to keep pristine. They’re affordable, easy to install, and effective. Just confirm your hardware geometry first; if your pull-out uses tall front brackets, you may need a larger bumper. For most standard setups, this set is an easy win.
Project Ideas
Business
Quiet-Drawer Retrofit Kit (retailable)
Assemble a consumer-friendly kit: 8–12 bumpers + screws, quick installation guide, a small screwdriver and branded packaging. Add a QR-code video tutorial and sell as an easy 'quiet drawer' solution on Etsy, Amazon or your own Shopify store. Pricing: source in bulk (~$0.10–$0.50 per piece) and sell kits for $9–$19. Upsells: felt pads, anti-slip tape, or color-matched bumpers.
Mobile small-furniture refresh service
Offer a local handyman service focused on quick cabinet/drawer fixes — replace worn bumpers, adjust slides, install soft stops. Market on Nextdoor, Facebook Marketplace and local bulletin boards. Charge per cabinet or a flat visit fee plus parts; bundle with small upgrades (new knobs, felt feet) for higher ticket jobs and recurring checkups for landlords or Airbnb owners.
Craft & dollhouse maker packs
Create specialized packs aimed at crafters and miniaturists: paintable/primed bumpers, glue-on versions, and a small tutorial PDF with craft projects (stamps, feet, cushions). Sell through craft fairs, Etsy, hobby forums and Facebook craft groups. Consider private-labeling or including small accessories (mini pegs, glue dots) to increase perceived value.
Wholesale supply for cabinet makers & installers
Sell the bumpers in bulk to cabinet shops, furniture restorers and kitchen installers as a low-cost accessory they include on jobs. Offer tiered pricing, co-branding on packaging, or pre-assembled kits for installers. Provide quick-install guides and volume discounts to win repeat orders; target trade shows and local contractor networks.
Creative
Mini furniture feet for boxes & planters
Turn the bumpers into tiny protective feet for jewelry boxes, wooden crates, picture frames or small plant pots. Screw or glue one to each corner to raise items slightly, prevent scratches and improve airflow under potted plants. Variations: paint to match the piece, glue a thin felt pad under each bumper for extra surface protection, or stack two bumpers for more height.
Dollhouse & miniature cushions
Use the bumpers as scale-appropriate soft stops and feet inside dollhouse drawers, tiny cabinets or mini sliding doors. Their rounded faces work as cushions; trim or sand if you need smaller profiles. You can also paint them to match miniature furniture or glue them inside tiny doors to deaden sound.
Polka-dot stamps & texture tools
The rounded bumper ends make ready-made stamps for paint and clay. Mount a bumper on a small wooden peg or clothespin and use for repeating polka-dot patterns on greeting cards, wrapping paper, fabric (with fabric paint) or air-dry clay textures. Create a set with different paint colors for a DIY craft kit.
DIY soft-stop for pull-out trays
Install bumpers at the front corners or inside the frame of pull-out pantry shelves, TV swivel racks or craft drawers to prevent slamming and reduce noise. Simple placement tips: put them where the drawer face meets the cabinet interior to cushion impact, or stagger two per side for progressive dampening. Use with the included screws or switch to adhesive if you need removable protection.