Recap: KBIS 2026

Attending the Kitchen & Bath Industry Show

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Tracey Boyett
Executive Support Specialist
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When Digital Polygon attended KBIS (The Kitchen & Bath Industry Show), we did so from a slightly different vantage point than most attendees.

KBIS is designed for builders, designers, manufacturers, and suppliers — not web agencies. But that’s exactly why it was valuable. Being in the room where products, trends, and industry anxieties converge gave us a clearer picture of where the build and design world is heading, and how digital strategy must evolve to support it.

Here’s what stood out.

The show floor is the star

KBIS shines brightest on the exhibit floor.This is where brands go all in: fully functioning kitchens with chefs cooking live meals, bath displays with running water and illuminated tubs, outdoor spaces featuring real fire. These immersive environments don’t just showcase a product, they sell an experience.

Builders and designers aren’t just buying materials; they’re selling feeling, lifestyle, and trust to homeowners. The best booths understood that.

Not every display hit the mark. Some extravagant setups, like mirrored hallways or maze-like structures leading to a single product, felt more distracting than impactful. When spectacle overshadowed substance, the product itself suffered.

The takeaway for us? Clarity beats complexity. Whether it’s a trade show booth or a website, users must quickly understand the value proposition.

AI conversations are happening, but they are tense

One of the more revealing moments came during an AI-focused session aimed at designers.

The tone wasn’t excitement — it was fear.

Designers voiced real concern about technology companies marketing AI tools directly to homeowners, bypassing professional expertise altogether. There’s anxiety around being commoditized, replaced, or reduced to a nice-to-have layer in the design process.

At the same time, speakers acknowledged an uncomfortable truth: AI isn’t optional anymore. Designers who don't to engage with it risk falling behind quickly.

What AI can’t do well came up often:

  • Understanding flow and function
  • Accounting for cultural and human nuance
  • Making sustainability-conscious material decisions

The conversation missed an opportunity to focus on how AI could support professionals rather than threaten them. That gap stood out to us because this is where thoughtful digital strategy and responsible implementation matter most.

KBIS booth floorSoftware is everywhere, but support is not

A dedicated section of KBIS was focused on builder software: quoting tools, project management platforms, and emerging AI agents promising efficiency and automation.

While the tools are advancing, many builders struggle with adoption and usability. Throughout the show, we had conversations that reinforced a recurring theme we see across industries: the problem isn’t lack of technology, it’s lack of implementation support.

This creates an opportunity not just for software companies, but for partners who can bridge the gap between powerful tools and real-world workflows.

The real value happened outside the conference hall

The most meaningful connections occurred on shuttle rides, at dinners, and in unplanned conversations, with builders, sourcing professionals, and industry leaders who were navigating the same pressures: scaling, differentiation, and keeping up with rapid change.

These moments reinforced why proximity matters. Being present in the industry spaces our partners operate helps us better understand their challenges beyond what analytics dashboards or discovery calls can show.

 

Final Takeaway

Was KBIS worth it for a digital agency? Yes, but not for the reasons you might expect. KBIS was valuable for Digital Polygon because it provided context. Seeing firsthand how builders and designers think, where they feel pressure, and where digital tools are helping or failing them allows us to build better, more resilient ecosystems.

For Digital Polygon, attending KBIS reinforced a core belief: Great digital work doesn’t start with technology. It starts with understanding the people, industries, and experiences behind it.

And sometimes, the best way to do that is to step into a new space and listen.

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