LG is turning the humble built-in kitchen into a full‑blown connected system at EuroCucina 2026, and it’s doing it with a very specific user in mind: the European homeowner who’s short on space, tired of juggling energy bills and increasingly comfortable with AI quietly running things in the background.
Instead of showing off a couple of flashy hero products, LG’s new “LG Built-in” full kitchen package is basically a from-scratch rethink of what a modern kitchen looks and feels like when everything is designed to work together. The lineup spans refrigeration, cooking, induction cooktops and dishwashers, and it’s being shown for the first time at EuroCucina 2026, part of Milan Design Week running from April 20–26 at Fiera Milano in Rho, Italy.
The company is wrapping all of this under a pretty straightforward motto: “Built for Your Today.” In LG’s own words, it’s less about bragging rights on specs and more about efficiency, capacity and real-world usability in small, busy homes. That also means the usual “premium built-in” language—materials, finishes, heritage—takes a back seat to questions like: How much power does this really use? How much storage do I get in a constrained footprint? Can the appliances handle more of the micro-management for me?
At the center of the story is LG’s idea of “Affectionate Intelligence”—essentially, AI that adapts quietly to your routines instead of demanding constant inputs. Across the suite, LG is leaning on this to justify calling the range an “integrated, intelligent spatial solution” rather than just a roster of new SKUs.
On the refrigeration side, the new Wide Combi Refrigerator is doing a lot of heavy lifting for the “maximum efficiency, maximum capacity” promise. It packs 384 liters of storage into a built-in form factor, and the heart of it is an AI Inverter Compressor that constantly tunes cooling output based on how you actually use the fridge. LG says it reaches A‑grade energy efficiency, which matters in markets where energy labels are a deciding factor at purchase.

You still get a bunch of the brand’s familiar tricks: DoorCooling+ blasts cold air straight into the door baskets to stabilize temperatures after frequent door opens, while FRESHConverter+ is a dedicated drawer where you can tweak the temperature depending on whether you’re storing, say, meat, fish or vegetables. Then there’s AI Fresh mode, which is the more “invisible” part of the tech—over time it learns when the fridge is likely to be opened more often (evenings, weekends) and pre-cools ahead of those peaks to keep conditions stable without wasting energy.
On the cooking front, LG is making the oven feel more like a smart camera than a traditional box that just gets hot. The new Camera Oven uses an internal camera plus LG’s AI Gourmet system to identify what you’ve put inside and recommend the right cooking program. It also supports “No Preheat Air Cooking”, which is exactly what it sounds like: you skip the preheat step and still get fast, even cooking, helped by high-speed airflow and LG’s Inverter ProBake tech that keeps heat circulating consistently.

An InstaView window lets you knock on the glass to light up the interior without opening the door, which is one of those small quality-of-life touches that becomes addictive once you have it—no heat loss, no guessing if your lasagna has browned yet. And after cooking, EasyClean offers a 10-minute steam cleaning cycle to soften residue so you’re not scraping baked-on mess for half an hour.
Alongside that is a Compact Oven, described as a 6-in-1 Multi Oven that combines convection baking, air frying, steaming and microwave functions, with Combi Mode blending convection heat and microwave power to speed things up while trying to preserve texture. The idea is that in a tight European kitchen, this can replace several separate appliances and still live cleanly inside a built-in column. Both ovens share Inverter ProBake and high-speed airflow, so the “smart” layer is about recognizing food and timing; the hardware is tuned for even heat and shorter cooking times.

Induction is where LG leans heavily into design and layout. The Hood Integrated Induction Cooktop is targeted squarely at open-plan and island kitchens, with a downdraft ventilation system built directly into the hob. Instead of a bulky overhead hood, steam and smoke are captured at the surface, keeping sightlines open to the living area. Underneath, the unit is just 189 millimeters thick, which matters when you’re fighting for every centimeter of drawer space under the counter.
Interestingly, this cooktop has already picked up an iF Design Award 2026, a nod to LG’s effort to balance performance, noise levels and clean aesthetics in a single piece of hardware. Strong extraction paired with quiet operation is key here—if your cooktop sits on an island in the middle of the living space, it can’t roar like a commercial hood every time you boil water.
The second induction option is the Full-Flex Induction Cooktop, which drops the usual fixed zones and instead lets you place different pans almost anywhere on the surface. Heating elements track the position and size of the cookware and direct heat accordingly, making it easier to juggle big pots, small saucepans and awkward grill plates. A Water Boiling Alert feature watches for the moment water hits a rolling boil, then automatically turns down the heat to minimize spillover—a small example of that “Affectionate Intelligence” idea in action.

Rounding out the suite is a new Dishwasher that tries to solve the classic built-in pain point: long cycles in small kitchens where you can’t just leave everything piled up indefinitely. LG says this model can complete a full wash-and-dry cycle in about one hour, thanks to a combination of QuadWash Pro, Dynamic Heat Dry+ and TrueSteam.

QuadWash Pro swaps the traditional two spray arms for four arms with high-pressure jets and microbubbles, hitting dishes from multiple angles to loosen grime more aggressively. Dynamic Heat Dry+ uses a moisture‑absorbing material to pull humidity out of the tub while generating warm, dry air more efficiently, and TrueSteam brings in high‑temperature steam both to sanitize and to reduce water spots on glassware. As with the fridge, LG is emphasizing A-grade energy efficiency on key dishwasher models, not just on top-tier flagships but across both premium and volume segments.
Zooming out, the six product lines—fridge, two ovens, two induction cooktops and the dishwasher—are all built around three pillars: maximum efficiency, maximum capacity and AI-powered performance. In practice, that means every appliance is designed to use less energy, pack more into the same footprint and hand off more routine decision-making to software. For Europe specifically—where energy prices are high, apartments are compact and open-plan layouts are everywhere—LG is clearly positioning this lineup as a “we’ve actually been paying attention to your constraints” answer.
You can also read the move as a strategic step: LG has long sold individual built-in appliances in Europe, but this is a push into full-suite, premium integrated kitchens, an area where European and high-end niche brands traditionally enjoy strong name recognition. By anchoring the story in AI, energy labels, flexible design and connected features, LG is hoping to sidestep some of that heritage narrative and instead compete on “smartness” and day-to-day comfort.
That’s also reflected in how the company is talking about the launch. Baek Seung-tae, president of LG’s Home Appliance Solution Company, frames it as a “more balanced approach to the kitchen experience”—one that tries to juggle energy efficiency, space utilization and everyday usability rather than chasing a single spec headline. The bet is straightforward: if LG can make a small European kitchen feel a bit bigger, a bit quieter and a bit less demanding to run, then the brand has a shot at being seen not just as an appliance maker, but as a go-to platform for premium built-in living spaces in Europe.
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