🍳 Kitchen Fitter in Auchtermuchty, Fife
This one’s up for grabs.
For Kitchen Fitters
Wide open.
- Only one Kitchen Fitter spot in Auchtermuchty
- Your business, top of the pile — no ads, no rivals, no noise
- £40/month — cancel anytime
Need a kitchen fitter?
Nobody’s stepped up in Auchtermuchty yet.
Drop your email — we’ll shout when someone local takes it.
About Kitchen Fitters
A kitchen fitter assembles and installs kitchen units, worktops, appliances, and associated plumbing and electrical connections.
A skilled fitter can make the difference between a kitchen that looks right and one that works perfectly for years.
Agree the full scope in writing before work starts, including who supplies appliances and who handles the electrical and plumbing connections.
About Auchtermuchty
Auchtermuchty is a small royal burgh in the Howe of Fife, known for its well-preserved town centre, its musical heritage, and as the birthplace of Jimmy Shand, the legendary Scottish accordionist.
The town has a traditional layout with a market square, a tollbooth, and a cluster of 18th- and 19th-century buildings that give it a quiet, unhurried character.
Auchtermuchty was used as a filming location for the TV adaptation of Ian Rankin's Rebus novels, standing in for a fictional rural Scottish town.
The surrounding farmland is some of the best in Fife, and the town serves as a small local centre with shops, a primary school, and community facilities.
About Fife
Fife is a large peninsula in eastern Scotland, bounded by the Firth of Forth to the south and the Firth of Tay to the north — a geography that has given it a distinct identity and earned it the traditional title of 'The Kingdom of Fife'.
Dunfermline is the largest town and a former capital of Scotland, while Glenrothes serves as the administrative centre and St Andrews is known worldwide as the home of golf and Scotland's oldest university.
The south-west of Fife has a strong industrial heritage — coal mining and shipbuilding shaped towns like Cowdenbeath, Lochgelly, and Rosyth — while the East Neuk coastline is defined by a string of picturesque fishing villages: Anstruther, Crail, Pittenweem, and St Monans.
Inland, the Howe of Fife is fertile agricultural land dotted with market towns like Cupar, Auchtermuchty, and Falkland, the last of these home to a beautifully preserved Renaissance palace.
Fife is well connected to Edinburgh via the Forth Road Bridge and Queensferry Crossing, and to Dundee via the Tay Road Bridge, making much of the region practical for commuters while retaining a strong sense of local identity.
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