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Corded vs Cordless Tools: Which Should You Buy in 2026?

Corded and cordless power tools on a workbench

Photo via Unsplash

Updated February 2026 3,500+ words 14 min read

The corded vs cordless tools debate has shifted dramatically. Modern brushless cordless tools now rival corded performance for most tasks, but corded tools still dominate in sustained power and unlimited runtime. This guide breaks down the comparison tool by tool, covers the major battery platforms, and helps you decide where to spend your money building the ideal workshop.

Quick Verdict: Corded or Cordless?

Go Cordless for Handheld Tools

For drills, impact drivers, circular saws, jigsaws, and reciprocating saws, cordless is now the clear winner. Modern brushless motors deliver equivalent power, the portability is unbeatable, and battery platforms from DeWalt, Milwaukee, and Makita cover virtually every tool you need. The convenience of no cord management alone justifies the premium for tools you use regularly.

Stay Corded for Stationary and High-Draw Tools

For table saws, planers, jointers, router tables, dust collectors, and bench grinders, corded remains the practical choice. These tools demand sustained high power, never leave the shop, and the cord is a non-issue. Full-size routers still benefit from corded power for heavy profiling and continuous table use.

The real-world answer for most woodworkers in 2026 is a hybrid workshop: cordless handheld tools on a single battery platform, plus corded stationary machines. This gives you maximum portability where it matters and unlimited power where you need it.

Corded vs Cordless Tools: Head-to-Head Comparison

Here is a side-by-side comparison of the key differences between corded and cordless power tools:

Feature Corded Tools Cordless Tools Winner
Power Output Consistent, unlimited by outlet capacity Near-equivalent with brushless; drops as battery drains Corded (slight edge)
Runtime Unlimited — plug in and go 30-60 min per battery; swap and continue Corded
Weight Lighter (no battery pack) Heavier due to battery; 0.5-2 lbs more Corded
Upfront Cost Lower — no batteries or charger needed Higher — battery + charger add $80-150 Corded
Long-Term Cost Low — just replace brushes or worn parts Battery replacement ($60-120) every 3-5 years Corded
Portability Limited to cord length; needs outlet or extension Fully portable — use anywhere, anytime Cordless
Convenience Cord management, tripping hazard Grab and go; no tangles, no tripping Cordless
Maintenance Minimal — cord inspection, brush replacement Battery care, storage temp management Tie
Availability Shrinking selection; some being discontinued Rapidly expanding; all major brands invest heavily Cordless
Safety Cord hazard; easier to accidentally start No cord hazard; battery removal is a safety lock Cordless
Noise Level Comparable Comparable; some brushless models quieter Tie

When Each Type Excels

When Corded Tools Are the Better Choice

Corded power tools remain the right call in several important scenarios. Their unlimited runtime and consistent power delivery make them indispensable for certain workshop applications.

  • Stationary workshop machines: Table saws, jointers, planers, and dust collectors draw 15+ amps continuously and simply cannot run effectively on batteries
  • Extended routing sessions: A full-size router in a table running profiles on dozens of pieces benefits from unlimited corded power and no battery swaps
  • Budget-conscious builds: If you are equipping a workshop on a tight budget, corded tools cost 30-50% less than their cordless equivalents when you factor in batteries
  • Infrequently used tools: A corded bench grinder or scroll saw is always ready, while batteries left idle for months may lose charge or degrade
  • Maximum sustained power: Heavy ripping, thick hardwood planing, and large-scale demolition still favor the steady amperage of a corded connection
  • Dedicated shop setups: Tools bolted to benches or mounted on stands never need to be portable, so the cord is irrelevant

Electrical Tip

Running multiple corded tools requires proper workshop wiring. Dedicated 20-amp circuits are essential for high-draw tools. See our Workshop Electrical Guide for circuit planning, subpanel sizing, and outlet placement best practices.

When Cordless Tools Are the Better Choice

Cordless tools have become the default choice for most handheld applications. The freedom from cords transforms how you work, especially when moving between tasks or working on site.

  • Drilling and driving: Cordless drills and impact drivers are universally better than corded for everyday use — lighter, more maneuverable, and powerful enough for any fastening task
  • Job site work: Framing, trim carpentry, deck building, and any outdoor project where outlets are scarce or nonexistent
  • Quick tasks: Grabbing a cordless drill for one screw is instant; finding a cord, plugging in, and managing cable for the same task wastes time
  • Overhead and awkward positions: No cord weight pulling down or tangling when working on ladders, in cabinets, or under vehicles
  • Saw work on the move: Cordless circular saws, jigsaws, and reciprocating saws let you cut where the workpiece is, not where the outlet is
  • Safety advantage: No cord across the floor to trip over, no risk of cutting through the cable with a saw
  • Small and mid-size sanding tasks: Cordless random orbital sanders with brushless motors handle most sanding jobs without fatigue from cord drag

Battery Management Warning

Cordless convenience depends on charged batteries. Always keep at least two batteries per platform and charge them after each session. Batteries left depleted for extended periods suffer permanent capacity loss. Store batteries at 40-60% charge in a climate-controlled space for maximum lifespan.

Tool-by-Tool Breakdown: Corded vs Cordless

Not every tool category has the same corded vs cordless answer. Here is a detailed breakdown of the most common workshop tools and whether corded or cordless is the better investment in 2026.

Drills & Impact Drivers

Cordless Wins

This category is not even close. Cordless drills and impact drivers outsell their corded equivalents by a massive margin, and for good reason. A modern brushless 20V drill delivers 600-750 in-lbs of torque, weighs under 4 lbs with battery, and runs for hundreds of screw-drives per charge. Corded drills are heavier without the battery but the cord eliminates the portability that makes drills so useful.

Impact drivers are an even more dramatic cordless win. The compact form factor, high torque (1,200-2,000+ in-lbs), and one-handed operation make corded impact drivers essentially obsolete. Every major brand's best impact driver is cordless.

Bottom line: Buy cordless. There is no practical reason to buy a corded drill or impact driver in 2026 unless you are on an extremely tight budget and will only use the tool at a fixed workstation.

Circular Saws

Cordless Catching Up

Cordless circular saws have improved dramatically. Brushless models from DeWalt (FLEXVOLT 60V), Milwaukee (M18 FUEL), and Makita (36V/40V XGT) now cut through 2x lumber and sheet goods with authority. A cordless 7-1/4" circular saw can make 200-400 crosscuts per battery charge in dimensional lumber.

However, corded circular saws still have a slight edge in sustained ripping. A 15-amp corded saw never bogs down during long rip cuts through thick hardwood, while a cordless saw may slow slightly as the battery depletes. Corded saws are also lighter (no battery) and cost significantly less.

Bottom line: For general construction, remodeling, and shop crosscuts, go cordless. For a dedicated shop saw primarily doing long rip cuts in hardwood, a corded 15-amp sidewinder remains hard to beat for the price. Most users are best served by cordless in 2026.

Routers

Corded Still Preferred

Routers are one of the last strongholds for corded power. A full-size plunge router draws 12-15 amps and runs at 10,000-25,000 RPM under heavy load — a massive sustained power demand that drains batteries rapidly. Corded routers from Bosch, DeWalt, and Makita deliver consistent power through hours of edge profiling, dado cutting, and template routing.

Cordless compact routers (like the DeWalt 20V MAX, Milwaukee M18, and Makita 18V LXT trim routers) are excellent for light edge work, roundovers, and chamfers. But they cannot match a 2.25 HP corded router for deep mortises, large raised panels, or continuous router table use.

Bottom line: If you only do light trim routing and edge work, a cordless compact router is convenient and capable. For a router table, heavy profiling, or any sustained routing, corded is strongly preferred. Many serious woodworkers own both: a cordless trim router for quick tasks and a corded full-size router for the table.

Sanders

Either Works Well

Sanders are a toss-up, and the right choice depends entirely on how and where you sand. Corded random orbital sanders are lightweight, inexpensive ($40-80 for a quality model), and run indefinitely — important since sanding sessions can last a long time. The cord is less annoying on a sander than on a saw because the tool moves slowly and stays on the workpiece surface.

Cordless random orbital sanders (like the DeWalt 20V MAX, Makita 18V LXT, or Milwaukee M18) offer genuine freedom. Sanding a piece outdoors, working in a finishing area away from outlets, or sanding between coats without dragging a cord through wet finish — these are real advantages. Battery life for sanding is decent, typically 20-40 minutes per 5.0Ah battery.

Bottom line: If you sand primarily at a fixed bench in the shop, corded saves money and never runs out. If you move between stations, work on-site, or value the cordless convenience, the modest premium is justified. See our Best Random Orbital Sanders guide for specific model recommendations.

Table Saws

Corded Only

Table saws are corded tools, full stop. Even the job-site portable models run on 15-amp corded power. A table saw blade spinning at 4,000 RPM through hardwood requires sustained high amperage that no battery platform can deliver for a meaningful duration. While DeWalt offers an 8-1/4" cordless table saw (FLEXVOLT), it is a specialized job-site compromise — not a workshop replacement.

Contractor table saws run on 120V/15A circuits, while cabinet saws typically require 240V/20A or higher. These power demands are firmly in corded territory and will remain so for the foreseeable future.

Bottom line: Always buy a corded table saw for your workshop. The DeWalt FLEXVOLT cordless table saw has a niche for job-site trim work, but it is not a substitute for a real shop table saw.

Battery Platform Overview

Choosing a battery platform is one of the most important decisions for your cordless tool collection. Once you invest in batteries and chargers for one brand, switching becomes expensive. Here is what each major platform offers in 2026.

DeWalt 20V MAX / FLEXVOLT

Voltage: 20V MAX / 60V FLEXVOLT Tools Available: 300+ Battery Range: 1.5Ah - 15.0Ah

DeWalt's 20V MAX platform is one of the most popular in North America. The FLEXVOLT system is the standout feature: batteries automatically switch between 20V and 60V depending on the tool, giving you backward compatibility with the entire 20V lineup while enabling high-power tools like the 60V circular saw, reciprocating saw, and table saw.

  • Strengths: FLEXVOLT dual-voltage system, widest range of high-power cordless tools, strong presence at big-box retailers, excellent value in combo kits
  • Weaknesses: Some older 20V tools lack brushless motors, FLEXVOLT batteries are expensive ($120-200), chargers are slower than Milwaukee's
  • Best for: Contractors, remodelers, woodworkers who need high-power cordless saws, users who want one battery system from trim router to miter saw

Milwaukee M18 FUEL / M12

Voltage: 18V (M18) / 12V (M12) Tools Available: 250+ (M18) / 125+ (M12) Battery Range: 2.0Ah - 12.0Ah (M18 HIGH OUTPUT)

Milwaukee's M18 FUEL line is widely regarded as having the best build quality and performance in the 18V class. The M18 HIGH OUTPUT batteries deliver exceptional runtime and power. Milwaukee also offers the M12 platform for compact tools, giving users a two-tier system: M18 for full-size tools and M12 for compact, low-draw tasks.

  • Strengths: Industry-leading impact drivers and wrenches, excellent M12 compact line for light-duty, REDLITHIUM battery intelligence, fastest super charger, ONE-KEY digital tracking
  • Weaknesses: No dual-voltage system like FLEXVOLT, M12 batteries not compatible with M18 tools, premium pricing on most tools
  • Best for: Electricians, plumbers, mechanics, users who value build quality over price, anyone who needs the best impact drivers and specialty tools

Makita 18V LXT / 40V XGT

Voltage: 18V LXT / 36V (2x18V) / 40V XGT Tools Available: 325+ (18V LXT) / 75+ (40V XGT) Battery Range: 2.0Ah - 6.0Ah (LXT) / 2.5Ah - 8.0Ah (XGT)

Makita pioneered the 18V lithium-ion platform and has the largest tool count of any brand. Their unique approach uses two 18V batteries in parallel for 36V tools, maintaining backward compatibility with the massive LXT lineup. The newer 40V XGT platform targets the most demanding professional applications with a completely separate battery system.

  • Strengths: Largest 18V tool selection, excellent ergonomics and balance, dual-battery 36V system is clever, 40V XGT for extreme power needs, generally lighter tools
  • Weaknesses: 40V XGT batteries are not compatible with 18V LXT tools (adapter available), smaller batteries mean more frequent swaps on high-draw tools, less big-box retail presence than DeWalt
  • Best for: Woodworkers, finish carpenters, users who prioritize ergonomics and weight, anyone with a large existing 18V LXT collection, professionals needing the widest tool selection

Platform Commitment Tip

Before committing to a platform, identify the 5-10 cordless tools you will definitely buy and compare those specific models across brands. It does not matter that Brand A has 300 tools if Brand B makes the best versions of the 8 tools you actually need. Also check which brand your local dealer or service center supports for warranty work. For brand-specific comparisons, see our DeWalt vs Makita and Milwaukee vs DeWalt guides.

Corded Tools: Pros and Cons

Advantages

  • Unlimited runtime — never stops for a battery swap
  • Consistent power output from start to finish
  • Lower upfront cost (no batteries or charger)
  • Lighter weight — no battery pack to carry
  • No battery degradation over time
  • Always ready to use — no charging required
  • Higher sustained power for demanding stationary tools
  • Lower long-term cost — no battery replacement every 3-5 years
  • Simpler maintenance with fewer electronic components

Disadvantages

  • Limited mobility — tethered to an outlet
  • Cord management is annoying and a tripping hazard
  • Requires extension cords for outdoor or remote work
  • Risk of cutting through the cord with saws
  • Shrinking product selection as manufacturers shift to cordless
  • Requires proper workshop wiring for multiple tools
  • Cannot be used during power outages
  • Older corded tools may lack brushless motor efficiency

Cordless Tools: Pros and Cons

Advantages

  • Complete portability — work anywhere, no outlet needed
  • No cord management, tangles, or tripping hazards
  • Modern brushless motors nearly match corded power
  • Battery platform ecosystems cover 200+ tools per brand
  • Safer — remove the battery as an instant safety lock
  • Faster workflow — grab, trigger, done
  • Rapidly improving technology with each generation
  • Better for overhead, tight-space, and awkward-position work
  • Growing selection of professional-grade options

Disadvantages

  • Higher upfront cost (batteries + charger add $80-150)
  • Limited runtime per battery charge (30-60 min typical)
  • Heavier than corded equivalent (battery adds 0.5-2 lbs)
  • Batteries degrade over time (3-5 year lifespan)
  • Battery replacement is expensive ($60-120 each)
  • Cannot match corded power for sustained high-draw applications
  • Requires battery management — charging, storage, temperature care
  • Platform lock-in — switching brands means replacing all batteries
  • Cold weather reduces battery performance significantly

Frequently Asked Questions

Are cordless tools as powerful as corded?

Modern brushless cordless tools have closed the gap significantly. For drills, impact drivers, and compact circular saws, top-tier cordless models from DeWalt, Milwaukee, and Makita match or exceed their corded equivalents. However, for sustained high-draw applications like routers running continuously, large table saws, and planers, corded tools still deliver more consistent power without the runtime limitations of batteries. The introduction of higher-voltage platforms like DeWalt FLEXVOLT (60V) and Makita XGT (40V) has further narrowed the gap for demanding tasks.

When should I choose corded over cordless?

Choose corded tools when you need unlimited runtime for extended sessions (like running a router table all day), maximum sustained power for stationary workshop tools (table saws, planers, jointers), or when the tool stays in one place in your shop. Corded tools also make sense when budget is tight since they cost less upfront and you avoid battery expenses, or for tools you use infrequently where batteries might degrade from sitting idle.

Is it worth switching to one battery platform?

Absolutely. Committing to a single battery platform (DeWalt 20V MAX, Milwaukee M18, or Makita 18V LXT) saves significant money long-term. Batteries and chargers are the most expensive part of cordless tools, so buying bare tools within your platform avoids redundant purchases. Each major brand offers 200+ tools on their platform. The key is choosing your platform carefully based on which brand best covers the specific tools you need most.

How long do cordless tool batteries last?

Cordless tool battery lifespan depends on two factors: runtime per charge and total battery life. A 5.0Ah battery typically provides 30-60 minutes of continuous use depending on the tool and load. For total lifespan, quality lithium-ion batteries last 3-5 years or 1,000+ charge cycles before significant capacity loss. Store batteries at 40-60% charge in moderate temperatures to maximize lifespan. Avoid leaving batteries on the charger indefinitely or storing them fully depleted.

Which tools should always be corded?

Stationary workshop tools should remain corded: table saws, jointers, planers, dust collectors, and air compressors. These tools draw too much sustained power for batteries and never leave the shop anyway. Full-size routers running in a router table benefit from corded power for continuous operation. Bench grinders, scroll saws, and drill presses are also best as corded stationary tools. The general rule is: if the tool lives permanently in your shop and runs for long sessions, corded is the better choice.

Best cordless tool brand for 2026?

The three dominant brands are DeWalt (20V MAX/FLEXVOLT), Milwaukee (M18 FUEL), and Makita (18V LXT/40V XGT). DeWalt offers the widest FLEXVOLT range for high-power cordless tools and strong value across their lineup. Milwaukee M18 FUEL leads in impact drivers, wrenches, and has excellent build quality. Makita 18V LXT has the largest tool count and outstanding ergonomics, plus their 40V XGT platform handles the most demanding applications. There is no single best brand — the right choice depends on which tools you prioritize and what your local dealer stocks for service.