Add this pimped out IKEA toy kitchen hack to your holiday gift list! This DIY not only looks like a million bucks, but itโ€™s also super cheap and easy to make! If you can thrift your kitchen playset, even better.

*Disclaimer: This post contains commissionable links.

When I first saw these upgraded IKEA toy kitchen hacks on Pinterest, I knew we had to make one for Jemma. We scoured Facebook marketplace for months until a cheap play kitchen popped up, and we ended up finding one in great condition for only $40.

The actual DIY is quite simple. We spray painted the โ€œhardwareโ€ gold and painted the cabinets with the leftover paint from our (real) kitchen remodel. It worked out quite nicely that we had that leftover paint, because now our mini play kitchen matched our real kitchen exactly!

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WELCOME TO OUR NEW HOUSE! I thought Iโ€™d give you guys a virtual tour, starting with our kitchen and dining room. When we bought this home back in spring, we thought for sure we would have people over by now. Obviously, that hasnโ€™t happened. So I wrote up a blog post with pictures from our kitchen and dining room, including links to all the furniture, hardware, and appliances, in case you are thinking of updating your kitchen too. I reeeaaalllyyyy love how our kitchen turned out so go take a look. Big thank you to my parents for helping us build and paint and install while I sat around being pregnant. #StayHomeWithLTK #LTKhome #liketkit #interiordesign #kitchendesign #kitchenrenovation #kitchenreno #diykitchen #diyhomeprojects #homeimprovements #midcenturymodernhome #midcenturymoderndesign #midcenturymodernfurniture #midcenturykitchen #modernkitchen #targethome #cb2 #wayfair @liketoknow.it http://liketk.it/2XHF9

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We used contact paper for the fake marble countertops and for the backsplash, which is just a piece of poster board attached to the back of the kitchen. I linked the exact ones we bought from Amazon, but Iโ€™ll also link some of the fancier and more expensive ones you can get at Target.

The play kitchen accessories you see here are a mix of IKEA and Melissa and Doug.

And thatโ€™s it! How easy and cheap was that? The total cost, INCLUDING our thrifted kitchen was about $50, since we only had to buy the two patterned contact papers. And yet doesnโ€™t it look like such an amazing upgrade? Iโ€™m dying at how itโ€™s basically an exact replica of our real kitchen too. Ugh, so cute!!

What other cute kids DIY should we attempt next? If you find anything good, send it to me on Instagram! In the meantime, I will just be here playing in this fake copy of a real room in our house.