Can a single showroom in Kew Gardens actually sell you a real German kitchen, or just the idea of one? Leicht Queens answers with names. It carries eight door programs from LEICHT's factory in Waldstetten, Germany: AVANCE, PRIMO, CONTINO, BOSSA, WAKUU, BAHIA, MADERO, and WAKUU-FS. Each is a separate design language in LEICHT's catalogue, so the claim points at a documented product structure instead of a vague "modern European" range. On a sourcing question, that level of detail is rare and welcome.
What it offers
Leicht Queens works as a dealer for two German manufacturers. LEICHT sits at the premium end; Nobilia covers more accessible European cabinetry. Pairing the two lets one floor handle a spread of budgets without pushing every client into the flagship tier, and that is a confident move. A dealer only offers the cheaper line alongside the expensive one when it trusts the expensive one to win most of the comparisons it invites. The cabinets ship from Waldstetten, and Leicht Queens states this plainly on the site. In a trade where the origin of the boxes is often kept quiet, naming the factory is a genuine point in its favor. It ties the showroom to a known, traceable source instead of a supplier that swaps out every shipping season, and it puts Leicht Queens on the hook for that factory's reputation.
The finish range is broad. Cabinetry comes in wood veneer, lacquer, metal, stone, laminate, and textured surfaces, so the same door program can read warm and woody in one home and cool and architectural in another. Lacquer and stone are nearly impossible to judge on a screen; they answer to light in ways a photograph flattens. That is the honest reason Leicht Queens builds its main call to action around a private consultation appointment, and there is no e-commerce checkout anywhere on the site. For a kitchen at this price, a buy-now button would be the wrong design, and the absence of one is a point in the showroom's favor. A material this dependent on how it sits in a room ought to be seen in person before money changes hands.
Service model and process
Leicht Queens reaches well past product supply. It offers private design consultations, bespoke technical kitchen planning with detailed layouts and 3D renderings, full project coordination, and professional installation. An imported German kitchen is expensive to get wrong. Appliance clearances, panel alignment, and handle-free door mechanisms all have to be specified correctly before the order ships, because mistakes do not show themselves until the freight lands and the crates open in a half-finished room. The 3D stage is where those calls get made on paper, while there is still time to change them. Keeping the whole sequence under one roof cuts down the handoffs where things slip. On a kitchen that crosses an ocean between order and delivery, fewer handoffs is worth a great deal, and it spares the homeowner the familiar renovation problem of supplier and installer pointing fingers at each other when something does not fit. Here, Leicht Queens owns both ends, so there is one number to call when a panel arrives a centimeter off.
Leicht Queens also runs a trade program for design professionals and keeps a project portfolio alongside a blog on kitchen design topics. The trade program tells you how the showroom prefers to operate: it is built to work next to architects and interior designers, handling cabinetry specification and coordination while the designer holds the client relationship. That is a different stance from a floor set up only for direct retail. A homeowner already partnered with a professional on a renovation can slot Leicht Queens in as the cabinetry supplier without reshuffling the project, and the designer keeps control of the rest. Plenty of German kitchen dealers cannot do that part. The portfolio and blog, for their part, give a prospective client some sense of the work and the thinking behind it, though neither substitutes for standing in the showroom and touching the doors.
Geographic coverage
Coverage is mapped at town level. Leicht Queens serves Queens, Brooklyn, Long Island including Great Neck, Cedarhurst, Woodmere, Freeport, and Roslyn, plus the wider New York metro area. The site backs this with area-specific landing pages for local kitchen remodeling, so a homeowner in Roslyn lands on content tied to their town. A German kitchen is not something you commission from a distance; planning and installation need proximity, and Leicht Queens does not pretend otherwise. A resident of Woodmere can confirm in a few seconds that the showroom works their area, which beats the usual "serving the tri-state area" banner that says nothing. That regional granularity is something a homeowner can act on immediately, and it is one of the more useful things on the listing.
Contact and reputation
Phone and address for Leicht Queens on Metropolitan Avenue in Kew Gardens show up clearly on third-party platforms and on Facebook. The website itself leads with a "Book a Private Consultation" button and wraps the whole contact flow around scheduling. Someone who just wants to dial a number without filling in a form has to dig a little, because the booking widget soaks up most of the homepage. The number is out there through Facebook and outside listings; it simply is not the first thing the site shows you. For a high-touch business that depends on a phone conversation, burying the phone number is an odd choice, though not a damaging one once a customer knows where to look.
Now the part that gives me pause. The third-party scores look fine on their face. Yahoo Local shows a 4.5-star average, Houzz a perfect 5 out of 5 from several reviewers, and Facebook a 100 percent recommend rate. The homepage adds an aggregated 4.8 out of 5 across 44 reviews, a self-published figure that at least lines up with the independent platforms rather than fighting them. Houzz is the right venue for remodeling clients, and the clean scores there cross-reference against a Yelp photo record. But Trustpilot, BBB, and Google show almost no public feedback, so the verified base is a handful of platforms and a few dozen reviews. For a purchase that runs into five figures and arrives by freight from Germany, a few dozen reviews is not much to lean a decision on. One enthusiastic stretch of submissions could account for most of it, and a couple of difficult installs could move the average noticeably. The credentials and the named programs are genuine; the track record a stranger can actually inspect is small. On a commitment this size, the numbers Leicht Queens points to are not enough to settle the question, and I would want to see far more independent installs documented before reading them as proof of anything. The product story is solid. The proof that other homeowners have lived happily with the result is the part that has not caught up.
The product range checks out, the service structure covers the job from first drawing to working room, and the door programs are documented down to the name. The public reputation behind all of that rests on a small, mostly self-curated set of reviews. On the Leicht Queens homepage, the booking button is still the loudest element on the page.
Business address
Leicht Queens
124-01 Metropolitan Avenue,
Kew Gardens,
NY
11415
United States
Contact details
Phone: 7182381710