DIYPicks

Best Table Saw Blades for 2026

By The DIYPicks Team ยท Updated July 2026

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A table saw is only as good as the blade on the arbor. For most DIYers a single 40-tooth combination blade handles both ripping and crosscutting, but adding an 80-tooth finish blade transforms cut quality on sheet goods and hardwood. Here are the two blades that cover almost every table saw job.

4.7$30About $30 street; frequent 2-pack bundles

The default do-everything table saw blade: a 40-tooth combination grind that rips lumber and crosscuts sheet goods well enough that most DIYers leave it mounted year-round.

  • Ripping
  • General purpose
  • Crosscut

Pros

  • 40-tooth ATB grind rips and crosscuts acceptably, so you rarely swap blades for general shop work
  • TiCo carbide holds an edge far longer than budget blades and can be resharpened several times
  • Perma-Shield non-stick coating resists pitch buildup and gum, keeping cuts cooler under load

Cons

  • 40 teeth leave a coarser edge than a dedicated 80T crosscut blade on trim and plywood veneers
  • Full 0.098 in kerf wastes more material and asks more of underpowered contractor saws than a thin-kerf blade
  • ATB teeth chip melamine and double-sided laminate unless you score first or add a zero-clearance insert
4.8$40About $40 street at home centers

A dedicated fine-finish crosscut blade: 80 alternating-bevel teeth deliver the cleanest possible edge on a miter saw for trim carpentry and cabinetry, at the cost of ripping ability.

  • Fine crosscut
  • Trim molding
  • Crosscut

Pros

  • 80 Hi-ATB teeth leave a near-sanded edge on hardwood, molding and veneered plywood with almost no tearout
  • High tooth count cuts melamine and paneling cleanly with minimal chipping on the show face
  • Perma-Shield coating and thin plate reduce grabbing and burning on slow, controlled miter cuts

Cons

  • 80 teeth clog and burn if you try to rip solid stock or feed thick material fast
  • More teeth mean a slower cut and more heat, so it is the wrong blade for framing or rough demolition
  • Fine tips are easy to chip on hidden nails or staples, and resharpening 80 teeth costs more than a 40T

Still deciding? Compare them

Frequently Asked Questions

What tooth count should a general-purpose table saw blade have?
A 40-tooth ATB combination blade is the sweet spot: enough teeth to crosscut cleanly but few enough to rip solid lumber without burning. Drop to 24 teeth for fast ripping or jump to 80 teeth for the finest crosscuts.
Should I use a thin-kerf or full-kerf blade?
Thin-kerf blades waste less wood and are easier on underpowered contractor and jobsite saws. Full-kerf blades like the D1040X are more rigid and track straighter on cabinet saws with 3+ HP. Match the kerf to your saw's power.