Drills & Drivers

Drills and drivers cover most fastening and hole-making tasks in home projects. The key is choosing the right type for the material and workload. Most people overbuy specs and underbuy the right tool type.

This page breaks down the main drill and driver categories, where each one fits, and the practical factors that matter for real use.

Tool Types

Drill

General-purpose drilling and light fastening. Best starting point for most home toolkits.

Impact Driver

Fastening with high torque. Best for long screws, deck work, framing connectors, and repetitive driving.

Hammer Drill

Drilling into masonry and concrete. Useful for anchors, tapcons, and harder materials.

Right Angle Drill

Access tool for tight framing bays and awkward angles where standard drills do not fit.

Rotary Hammer

Heavier-duty masonry drilling and chipping. Not the same as a hammer drill.

Bit Sets

Driver bits and drill bits. Often the cheapest upgrade that improves results immediately.

Best Picks & Buying Guides

What Matters When Choosing

  • Battery platform compatibility and runtime
  • Torque and control for the materials you actually work with
  • Chuck type and bit retention
  • Speed ranges and clutch settings for consistent fastening
  • Weight and ergonomics for overhead or long sessions