Fastener Guide
What screws to use for bottom-mount drawer slides.
The right screw for a bottom-mount pull-out depends on the slide hole, shelf material, cabinet base, load, and screw head clearance. This guide helps you choose fasteners before the shelf is installed.
Quick answer
Use low-profile screws that fit the slide mounting holes, bite securely into the cabinet or shelf material, and do not protrude into the moving rail path. For many bottom-mount cabinet pull-outs, builders use appropriately sized pan-head, truss-head, or flat-head screws based on the rail hole and required clearance.
Do not choose screws by length alone
A longer screw is not automatically stronger. If it breaks through the shelf surface, hits a moving rail, or splits the material, it creates a worse installation. The best fastener is long enough to hold in the material, low enough to avoid interference, and matched to the hole diameter.
If screws are included with a hardware kit, still verify them against your material. Cabinet plywood, particleboard, hardwood, metal brackets, and laminated panels do not all need the same fastener.
Fastener checklist
Common screw mistakes
- Using cabinet screws with heads too tall for the slide clearance.
- Driving screws at an angle because the cabinet is too tight for the tool.
- Skipping pilot holes and pushing the rail out of alignment.
- Using short screws in soft material for a heavy pantry or trash pull-out.
- Letting screws break through the top of the pull-out shelf.
- Using mismatched screws across the two rails, causing uneven seating.
COREAX product match
When installing COREAX undermount drawer slides, choose fasteners after confirming slide hole fit, shelf thickness, cabinet material, and movement clearance.
View Undermount Drawer SlidesFAQ
What screw size is best for bottom-mount drawer slides?
The best size depends on the slide hole, shelf thickness, cabinet material, and clearance. Use a screw that seats cleanly and holds securely without rubbing the moving rail.
Are included screws always enough?
Not always. Even if screws are included, builders should confirm that they match the actual cabinet and shelf material.
Why do screw heads cause drawer slide problems?
A screw head that sits too high can contact the moving slide member, causing grinding, binding, or a hard spot in the travel.