Impact Driver vs Drill Driver: What’s the Difference and Do You Need Both?

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Walk into any tool shop and you’ll see drills and impact drivers sitting side by side, looking almost identical. Same brand, same battery, similar price. The packaging doesn’t exactly make it clear why you’d want one over the other — or whether you need both.

The confusion is understandable. They’re both cordless, they both drive screws, and they both chuck in accessories. But the way they work is fundamentally different, and that difference matters more than you’d think. This guide explains the impact driver vs drill driver debate in plain terms, with honest advice on what to buy first.

The Fundamental Difference in How They Work

Despite looking similar, these tools generate force in completely different ways:

A drill/driver delivers a continuous, smooth rotation. You pull the trigger and the chuck spins. The torque (rotational force) comes purely from the motor. If you hit resistance — a screw biting into hardwood, for instance — the tool slows down and you feel the strain in your wrist. Most drill/drivers have a clutch that disengages at a set torque level to prevent overdriving.

An impact driver starts with smooth rotation, but when it hits resistance, an internal hammer mechanism kicks in. This delivers rapid, high-torque impacts — essentially smacking the bit around in quick succession. You’ll hear it as a loud, rhythmic “brrrt-brrrt-brrrt” sound. The result is massively more torque delivered to the fastener with minimal reaction force on your wrist.

Think of it like this: a drill/driver is like turning a screw with a screwdriver using your arm strength. An impact driver is like turning a screw with a screwdriver while someone taps the back of the handle with a hammer — each tap drives it a bit further.

Drill/Driver — What It Does Best

Drilling Holes

This is the drill/driver’s primary job and where it’s genuinely indispensable. A three-jaw chuck accepts round-shank drill bits in virtually any size (typically up to 10mm or 13mm depending on the chuck). You can drill into wood, metal, plastic, and masonry (with a hammer function, available on combi drills).

An impact driver cannot do this job properly. Its quarter-inch hex chuck only accepts hex-shank bits, and the impact mechanism makes it difficult to control for precision drilling. You can get hex-shank drill bits, but the impact action tends to wander on entry and overshoot the mark.

Driving Screws with Precision

For delicate work — driving screws into softwood, assembling furniture, attaching hinges — the drill/driver’s adjustable clutch is essential. You set the clutch to a number, and when the screw reaches that torque, the clutch slips and the chuck stops turning. This prevents:

  • Overdriving screws into soft material
  • Snapping screw heads off
  • Stripping screw holes
  • Splitting thin timber

An impact driver has no clutch. It hits and hits until you release the trigger or the battery dies. For fine work, that’s a problem — it’s very easy to overdrive screws, snap heads, or damage surfaces.

Impact Driver — What It Does Best

Driving Long Screws and Lag Bolts

This is where the impact driver earns its place. Driving a 100mm screw into hardwood? A drill/driver will stall, strip the screw head, and leave you with a sore wrist. An impact driver powers through it without breaking a sweat. The concussive impacts keep driving the screw even when friction resistance is enormous.

Decking screws, coach bolts, timber frame screws, structural fixings — anything long, thick, or going into hard material is dramatically easier with an impact driver. It’s not a minor difference; it’s the difference between struggling and effortless.

Removing Stubborn Fasteners

The impact mechanism is equally useful in reverse. Removing corroded screws, seized bolts, or overtightened fixings that a drill/driver simply can’t shift is the impact driver’s party trick. The impacts break the corrosion bond and walk the fastener out. It’s the reason every mechanic owns one.

Important: Always use impact-rated bits and sockets in an impact driver. Standard drill bits and chrome sockets are not designed for the impact forces and will shatter — which is both annoying and dangerous. Impact-rated accessories are marked with a black finish or labelled “impact” and are made from a more flexible steel that absorbs the impacts.

Can One Replace the Other?

In a pinch, yes — partially. But neither fully replaces the other:

Task Drill/Driver Impact Driver Better Tool
Drilling holes in wood Excellent Poor (imprecise) Drill/driver
Drilling holes in masonry Good (with hammer function) Not suitable Drill/driver (combi drill)
Drilling holes in metal Good Poor Drill/driver
Driving small screws (hinges, etc.) Excellent (clutch control) Risky (easy to overdrive) Drill/driver
Driving long screws (decking, framing) Struggles Excellent Impact driver
Removing stuck fasteners Poor Excellent Impact driver
Driving coach bolts/lag screws Very difficult Excellent Impact driver
Assembling flat-pack furniture Perfect Overkill (easy to damage) Drill/driver
Building a deck Tiring Effortless Impact driver

If you can only afford one tool, a combi drill (a drill/driver with a hammer function for masonry) is the more versatile choice. It can do every task on this list, just some of them slowly and with more effort. An impact driver alone leaves you unable to drill holes properly.

Side-by-Side Comparison Table

Feature Drill/Driver (Combi Drill) Impact Driver
Chuck type Three-jaw keyless chuck (10mm or 13mm) Quarter-inch hex collet
Clutch Yes — adjustable torque settings No
Hammer function Yes (combi drills) No
Max torque 50-80 Nm typical 150-220 Nm typical
Impact mechanism No (rotational only) Yes (concussive impacts)
Weight 1.5-2.0 kg 1.0-1.5 kg (usually lighter)
Size Slightly larger Compact — fits tighter spaces
Noise level Moderate Loud (the impacts are noisy)
Best for Drilling, precision screw driving Heavy-duty screw driving, bolt work

The Jobs Where Having Both Saves Massive Time

Once you own both, you’ll develop a workflow that’s hard to go back from:

  • Put a drill bit in the drill/driver and a screwdriver bit in the impact driver. Drill your pilot hole, set the drill down, pick up the impact driver, drive the screw. No bit changes. No chuck tightening. Just smooth, fast work.
  • Building anything with lots of screws — shelving, decking, timber framing — this two-tool setup halves your time. Professional carpenters and joiners work like this as standard.
  • Disassembly and reassembly: Use the impact to remove old fixings, the drill to drill new holes, the impact to drive new screws. Each tool stays set up for its job.

It sounds like a luxury, but it’s one of those efficiency gains that, once experienced, you can’t imagine going without.

Best Combo Kits (Drill + Impact Together)

The best value way to get both tools is a twin pack — a combi drill and impact driver with shared batteries and a charger. Every major brand offers these, and they’re significantly cheaper than buying the tools separately.

Brand Typical Kit Approx. Price (UK) Notes
Makita DLX2131JX1 or DLX2145TJ £200-300 Great value. Lighter than competitors.
DeWalt DCK2060M2T or DCK266P2 £230-320 Robust. FLEXVOLT-compatible batteries.
Milwaukee M18FPP2A2-502X £280-350 Most powerful. Premium pricing.
Bosch GSB 18V-55 + GDR 18V-200 £180-250 Solid DIY-to-pro crossover. Good value.

My Top Picks

If you’re buying one tool first: Get a combi drill. It drills, it drives, it handles masonry. It’s the Swiss Army knife of power tools and will cover 90% of what you need for general DIY.

If you’re buying both: Get a combo kit from whichever platform you’ve committed to (or are planning to commit to). The savings over buying separately are substantial — typically £50-80.

If you already own a drill and want to add an impact driver: Buy a body-only impact driver (no battery) from the same brand as your drill. You already have the batteries and charger — no need to pay for duplicates.

The impact driver vs drill driver question isn’t really about which is better — they’re designed for different jobs. But understanding those differences means you’ll buy the right tool first and, eventually, have a pairing that makes every screw-driving job faster, easier, and less likely to end with a stripped head or a sore wrist.

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AUTHOR

Adam White is the founder and chief editor at CraftedGarage.com. He has years of experience from years of Gardening, Garden Design, Home Improvement, DIY, carpentry, and car detailing. His aim? Well that’s simple. To cut through the jargon and help you succeed.

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