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Curated pack · kitchen appliance cad blocks

Free kitchen appliance CAD blocks for AutoCAD

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By Saumyajit Maity · Published 22 Jan 2022 · Updated 19 Dec 2025

Kitchen appliances are the fixed points a kitchen layout has to work around — they come in standard module widths, they need their gaps, and they decide where the plumbing and power go. This free kitchen appliance pack gathers the appliance blocks you reach for most — fridges and freezers, ovens, hobs, dishwashers, washing machines, range hoods and microwaves — drawn in plan and elevation, in DWG and ready to insert into AutoCAD 2004 or later. Everything is free for personal and commercial work, with no signup, no watermark and no attribution needed.

Use the pack to lay out residential kitchens, apartment fit-outs and kitchenettes, and to coordinate appliance positions with cabinetry, services and clearances. Because the appliances are drawn on the standard module, they snap into a cabinet run without leaving awkward gaps, and you can confirm the work triangle and door swings the moment they land on the plan.

Appliances are also where a kitchen drawing meets the real world of supply and installation. Getting the module right — and showing the appliance in both plan and elevation — means the joiner cuts the right aperture and the installer finds the right service in the right place. Keeping appliances on their own layer lets you produce a clean appliance plan, a cabinetry plan and an elevation set from the same drawing without redrawing anything.

What's in the kitchen appliance pack

The pack covers the standard kitchen appliance kit. Cold: under-counter fridges, tall fridge-freezers and integrated units. Cooking: 600 mm and 900 mm hobs, freestanding cookers, built-in single and double ovens, microwaves and range hoods sized to match. Cleaning: dishwashers and washing machines at the standard module, plus a sink-and-tap block to complete the wet zone.

Because kitchens are built on a 600 mm module, the appliances share that grid so they line up cleanly within a cabinet run. Each appliance ships as a single block reference you can copy and mirror, drawn with enough outline to read the appliance type in plan and to show the front face in elevation for the joinery drawings.

How to coordinate appliances on a kitchen plan

Put appliances on a dedicated layer so you can produce an appliance-only plan for the services and electrical coordination, separate from the cabinetry. Position the fixed-by-services appliances first: the sink follows the window or the waste, the hob and oven form the cooking zone, and the fridge anchors one end of the work triangle.

With those placed, fill the run with cabinet blocks and confirm the appliances sit on the module without orphan gaps. Check the classic work triangle between sink, hob and fridge, and verify appliance doors and the dishwasher drawer don't clash with each other or with circulation. Because each appliance is a block reference, swapping a 600 mm oven for a 900 mm range is a quick replace rather than a redraw.

Standard appliance modules to design around

Keep these reference figures close. Standard appliance width: 600 mm for a hob, single oven, dishwasher and washing machine, with 900 mm and 1000 mm options for larger ranges. Base cabinet and appliance depth: around 600 mm. Worktop height: about 900 mm, with a built-under oven sitting within that run.

For the wall zone, a range hood typically hangs 650–750 mm above the hob, and wall cabinets leave a 450–600 mm clearance above the worktop. Tall fridge-freezers run the full height of the run. Allow at least 1000 mm of clear floor in front of an appliance for the door to open and a person to work, and 1200 mm where that space is also a walkway. The scaled blocks turn each of those into a visual check rather than a sum.

Plan and elevation appliances

For the layout you work in plan: appliances seen from above, arrayed along the run on the module. The plan block is what governs the cabinetry coordination and the services positions. For joinery drawings and client presentations you switch to elevation, where the oven, hob, hood and appliance fronts are drawn face-on within the run.

In elevation the heights matter: the built-under oven sits in the worktop run, the hood hangs above the hob, and an integrated fridge's door line aligns with the cabinet fronts. Many appliance blocks ship both views in the same DWG, so you can build the plan and the matching elevation from one download and keep the two drawings consistent.

Who uses the kitchen appliance pack

Kitchen designers, architects and interior designers all draw appliances, and the pack suits residential kitchens, apartment and flat fit-outs, small commercial kitchenettes, and student or competition schemes that need believable, correctly-moduled appliances. It's as useful for a quick concept layout as for a detailed joinery and services coordination drawing.

Pair the appliances with the kitchen cabinetry, worktop and sink blocks, and with the interior-accessories pack for the styled presentation, to build a complete kitchen drawing. Because every appliance here is free and licence-clear, you can build an appliance library once and reuse it across every kitchen you draw, swapping module sizes as each scheme demands.

Keeping appliances coordinated and editable

Appliances are the blocks most likely to change late — a client upgrades to a range cooker, the fridge moves to suit the services — so keep them as block references and on their own layer to make those swaps painless. Replacing a 600 mm block with a 900 mm one updates the plan in seconds; if you'd exploded the geometry, you'd be redrawing.

Use the layer to coordinate: an appliance-only plan lets the electrician and plumber see exactly what needs power, water and waste, while the cabinetry plan stays clean. Freeze the appliance layer for a pure cabinetry drawing and thaw it for coordination and presentation. If an appliance symbol needs simplifying for a small-scale plan, edit the block definition once with BEDIT and every instance follows.

Free download

Browse the full library — DWG & DXF, no signup.

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Questions

Frequently asked

Are these kitchen appliance CAD blocks free for commercial use?+

Yes. The whole pack downloads free in DWG with no signup, no watermark and no attribution requirement, cleared for commercial kitchen layouts, joinery drawings and presentations.

What module are the appliances drawn on?+

The standard 600 mm kitchen module, with 900 mm and 1000 mm options for larger ranges and hobs. That means the appliances line up cleanly within a cabinet run on the same grid as the cabinetry blocks.

Do the blocks include plan and elevation views?+

Yes. You get plan blocks for the layout and services coordination and face-on elevation blocks for the joinery drawings and presentations. Where an appliance carries both views they're in the same DWG.

How much clearance should I leave in front of an appliance?+

Allow at least 1000 mm of clear floor for the door to open and a person to work, and 1200 mm where that space also serves as a walkway. Dropping the scaled appliance into the plan makes that a visual check rather than a calculation.

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