Found Metal Balls Under Your Kitchen Sink? Here’s What They Mean
It usually happens when you least expect it—while cleaning, fixing a small leak, or reorganizing the clutter under your kitchen sink. You pull everything out, wipe down the cabinet, and suddenly notice something that definitely doesn’t belong there: a small, heavy metal ball sitting on the floor of the cabinet. Your first thought might be that it fell out of a pipe, came from the sink, or is some kind of leftover construction debris. For a moment, it feels like you’ve discovered a tiny but worrying mystery hidden in your own home.
1.
Finding an unfamiliar object in such a practical, high-traffic area of the house can be surprisingly unsettling. Is it part of the plumbing? Did something break? Is it important—or just junk someone forgot to throw away? Because it’s solid, heavy, and oddly specific in shape, it doesn’t feel random at all. It feels like it must belong to something. And in a way, you’re right.
Found Metal Balls Under Your Kitchen Sink? Here’s What They Mean
If you’ve pulled everything out from under your kitchen sink and discovered small, dense metal balls (usually steel or lead-colored, about the size of a marble or cherry tomato), don’t panic—and don’t throw them away!
They’re almost certainly counterweights from your kitchen cabinet hinges, and they serve a very specific purpose.
What Are They?
These metal balls are hinge counterweights, commonly used with full-overlay or soft-close cabinet doors—especially on larger, heavier doors like those for sink base cabinets, pantry doors, or appliance garages.
Brands like Blum (a leading European hardware manufacturer) use these in their “Blumotion” or “Tandem” hinge systems. The counterweight helps balance the door, ensuring it:
Closes smoothly and quietly
Doesn’t swing shut too fast (or too slow)
Stays aligned over time
Reduces stress on the hinge mechanism
How Do They Work?
The metal ball is attached to a thin metal rod or arm that connects to the hinge. As the cabinet door opens and closes, the counterweight offsets the door’s weight, creating perfect balance—similar to how a window sash weight works.
If the ball has fallen off, it’s likely because:
The retaining clip wore out
The hinge was bumped during cleaning or plumbing work
The cabinet was recently reassembled (e.g., after a sink install)
What Should You Do?
Don’t toss it! It’s not debris or a plumbing part.
Look at your cabinet hinges—you’ll likely see a small arm or socket where the ball attaches.
Reattach
it if possible:
Many counterweights snap or screw back into place.
If the clip is broken, you may need a replacement hinge kit (available online—just match Tap the p.hoto to v.iew the full r.ecipe.