Screw & Fastener Guide

Match screw gauge, length, and thread type to your joinery application and species.

Standard wood screws

Gauge Shank dia. Typical lengths Drive Best for
#4 0.112" 3/4″–1″ Phillips / Square Small boxes, hinges, light hardware
#6 0.138" 1″–1-5/8″ Phillips / Square Cabinet hardware, thin face frames, small trim
#8 0.164" 1-1/4″–2-1/2″ Phillips / Square / Star General cabinet construction, face frames, shelf pins, most furniture joinery
#10 0.190" 2″–3″ Phillips / Square / Star Heavier joinery, stair treads, structural connections
#12 0.216" 2-1/2″–3-1/2″ Phillips / Star Heavy-duty framing connections, ledgers, large structural members
#14 0.242" 3″–4″ Star (Torx) Structural and heavy timber connections

#8 is the workhorse of the cabinet shop — covers most face-frame, box, and hardware jobs. Always drill a pilot hole in hardwood; in softwood or end grain for any gauge.

Specialty fasteners

Type Sizes Thread Notes
Pocket-hole screw 1″–2-1/2″ Coarse (soft) / Fine (hard) Pan or washer head; designed for pocket holes at 15°. See Pocket Hole Calculator for sizing.
Lag screw / lag bolt 3/8″–3/4″ dia, 1″–12″ length Coarse / partial thread Driven with a wrench or socket, not a screwdriver. Used for timber-to-timber and hardware connections.
Brad nail (18 ga.) 3/4″–2″ N/A Very fine shank — minimal splitting. Good for light trim, small mouldings. Little holding power without glue.
Finish nail (16 ga.) 1-1/4″–3-1/2″ N/A Standard trim nail — sets below surface and fills. Good for casing, base moulding, stair treads.
Confirm (barrel) bolt 5/16″ dia, 25–50 mm Euro thread Used with a cam connector for flat-pack / knock-down furniture (32 mm system).
Dowel screw #8–#12 Coarse both ends Both ends are threaded (no head). Used to join two wooden pieces end-to-end or to thread into end grain.
Connector bolt 6–8 mm dia Metric Goes through one piece and threads into a barrel nut in the adjacent piece. Common in flat-pack furniture.

Screw length rules of thumb

Face-to-face joints

Screw should penetrate the receiving piece by at least ⅔ of the screw length. For a ¾″ face frame into a ¾″ box side, a 1-5/8″ screw leaves about 7/8″ in the box side.

Hinge screws

Use the screw supplied with the hinge; it is sized for the hinge leaf thickness. If substituting, never go shorter. For soft wood, one size up adds grip.

Hardware & handles

Bolt should protrude 3–4 threads beyond the nut or threaded insert. If through-bolting a drawer front, measure actual door + front thickness and add ¼″.

Lag screws

For structural connections, lag should penetrate the main member by at least 8× the shank diameter. Pre-drill with a full-shank clearance hole in the first piece.

Drive type quick guide

  • Phillips (#2): Universal but cam-out prone. Use with light torque.
  • Square (Robertson): Better cam-out resistance. Common in Canada and cabinetry screws.
  • Star / Torx (T20, T25): Best for high-torque driving, structural screws. Minimal cam-out.
  • Combination (Phil/Square): Common on construction screws — works with either bit.