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Browse All Products3 3/4 inch (95.2 mm) drill-center pulls for medium drawer fronts
3 3/4 inch (95.2 mm) drill-center pulls land in the medium-pull range used heavily across both traditional and transitional kitchens. The 95.2 mm spec sits just below the European 96 mm standard, close enough that many manufacturers cross-list the two. Drawer fronts of roughly 14 to 22 inches wide carry this size comfortably, and the spacing turns up on a lot of stock cabinet brands from the late 1990s onward.
Where this size pulls its weight
Standard base cabinets, vanity drawers, and the wide drawer rows under cooktops are common landing spots. The proportion is large enough to grip securely but small enough not to dominate the door visually. On shaker fronts and slab fronts alike, 3 3/4 inch reads neutral and balanced. It's also the size most often chosen when a buyer wants the look of a cup pull on a kitchen drawer rather than the smaller 2 1/2 inch traditional cup-pull spec.
Style range at this center
Almost every pull category produces a 3 3/4 inch option. Bar pulls, cup pulls, bin pulls, decorative pulls with backplates, and traditional birdcage and arch pulls all show up at this spacing. If you're working across mixed door styles in one kitchen, this size gives you the broadest catalog to pull from. The cross-listing with 96 mm means many European designs are also available, which expands the modern-bar-pull selection considerably.
Adjacent sizes worth checking
If existing holes turn out slightly closer together, see 3 1/2 inch (88.9 mm), which is the equivalent older American standard. Moving the other direction, 4 inch (101.6 mm) is the next step up and shows on slightly wider drawer fronts. For runs that want a warmer note, the size is well represented in aged bronze.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is 3 3/4 inch in millimeters, and is it the same as the 96 mm European standard?
3 3/4 inch converts exactly to 95.25 mm, which is typically rounded to 95.2 mm in product listings. This sits 0.75 mm short of the European 96 mm standard, but the difference is small enough that many manufacturers cross-list pulls under both specs, making a wide range of European bar-pull designs available at this center distance.
How do I measure my existing drawer holes to confirm I need a 3 3/4 inch center-to-center pull?
Measure from the center of one screw hole to the center of the other screw hole — not edge to edge. If that distance is 3 3/4 inches (95.2 mm), a pull listed at that center will drop in without drilling new holes. If the measurement comes out closer to 3 1/2 inches (88.9 mm), that older American standard is the correct size to order instead.
What drawer front widths work well with a 3 3/4 inch pull, and when should I size up to 4 inch?
Drawer fronts roughly 14 to 22 inches wide suit a 3 3/4 inch (95.2 mm) pull proportionally. The 4 inch (101.6 mm) center is the next step up and is typically used on slightly wider drawer fronts where the additional spread looks more balanced. If your drawer fronts fall toward the upper end of that 14–22 inch range and you want a more substantial visual presence, the 4 inch size is worth comparing before ordering.
How does a 3 3/4 inch pull compare to the 2 1/2 inch size for cup pulls on kitchen drawers?
The 2 1/2 inch (63.5 mm) center is the traditional cup-pull spec inherited from older American cabinetry, and it can read small on modern base-cabinet drawer fronts. The 3 3/4 inch (95.2 mm) center gives a cup pull a larger, more grippable spread that suits today's wider drawer fronts better — it is specifically noted as the size buyers choose when they want the look of a cup pull on a kitchen drawer without the compact proportions of the classic 2 1/2 inch spec.
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