An impact driver is built for driving screws, lag bolts, and other fasteners into dense materials at high speed and torque while eliminating the wrist-twisting kickback a standard drill produces.
A standard drill and an impact driver look similar at a glance, but grab the wrong tool for a deck-building afternoon and you’ll feel it by lunch. The impact driver swaps the drill’s adjustable chuck for a 1/4-inch hex collet and replaces smooth rotation with rapid rotational bursts when resistance builds. That change makes it the better pick for any job where the goal is driving a lot of fasteners deep into wood, metal, or concrete without wearing out your arm or stripping screw heads.
What Makes an Impact Driver Different From a Drill
Inside an impact driver, a spring-loaded hammer mechanism sits behind the collet. The motor spins normally until the fastener meets resistance. At that point the hammer delivers short, powerful rotational strikes — impacts — that drive the bit deeper while the tool body barely twists. A standard drill responds to resistance by torquing the whole housing, which is what snaps bits and cranks your wrist.
The torque numbers tell the story. Impact drivers typically deliver 1,400 to 2,000 inch-pounds, enough to sink a 3-inch lag screw into pressure-treated lumber without predrilling. Most cordless drills top out well under that while adding weight. An impact driver runs about 35% lighter than a comparable drill — a Milwaukee M12 Surge weighs roughly 1.5 pounds without the battery.
When an Impact Driver Beats Every Other Tool
Certain jobs turn into a test of patience with a standard drill. An impact driver makes them fast and nearly effortless.
Deck and Pergola Construction
Deck screws and structural lag bolts are the impact driver’s natural habitat. Driving them with a drill means fighting the tool’s torque and switching bits often because the chuck grabs standard round-shank bits. An impact driver’s hex collet snaps in screw-tip bits instantly and sinks each fastener in one smooth trigger pull. For deep pilot holes or dense treated lumber, you may still want a drill for the hole and the impact driver for the screw — but many builders skip the predrill entirely with an impact driver and coarse-thread deck screws.
Fence, Siding, and Framing Work
Repetitive fastening — fence pickets, sheathing, framing ties — is where the weight advantage matters most. Holding a 4-pound drill overhead for 50 screws fatigues the forearm fast. An impact driver that weighs a pound less, with zero kickback when the screw seats, lets you keep going. The Lowe’s buying guide notes that the design “reduces strain on the wrist and arm,” which matters on any job that runs past the first hour.
Automotive Fasteners and Seized Bolts
The impact driver’s hammering action also breaks loose corroded or overtightened fasteners that a drill would cam out on. Self-tapping screws into sheet metal, exhaust shield bolts, and rusted brackets all submit faster to the rotational hammer blows. Just be careful: an impact driver is not an impact wrench. Removing lug nuts or large suspension bolts still calls for the square-drive impact wrench with 300-plus foot-pounds.
Concrete Anchors and Masonry Brackets
Driving Tapcon screws or wedge anchors into concrete requires both high torque and no wrist feedback. The impact driver delivers — you push the bit into the pilot hole, pull the trigger, and the hammer mechanism does the work. Same for anchoring pergola brackets to a concrete patio pad or fastening shelving tracks into a basement wall.
Where You Still Need a Standard Drill
The impact driver’s hex collet does not accept round-shank drill bits without a hex adapter, and even with one the tool’s impact action can chip edges on precision holes. A standard drill with a three-jaw chuck stays the right choice for drilling large or clean holes and for driving screws into soft or thin materials where 2,000 inch-pounds would split the wood. Most people keep both tools in the kit — the drill makes the hole, the impact driver drives the fastener.
| Task | Best Tool | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Sinking deck screws into lumber | Impact driver | High torque, no kickback, fast collet swap |
| Drilling clean 1/2-inch holes in plywood | Standard drill | Adjustable chuck, smoother rotation |
| Assembling flat-pack furniture | Impact driver | Lightweight, prevents cam-out on particle board |
| Driving Tapcon anchors into concrete | Impact driver | Hammer action does the work, no wrist fatigue |
| Removing car lug nuts | Impact wrench | Square drive + 300+ ft-lbs needed |
| Sheathing or OSB fastening | Impact driver | Faster than a drill, less weight overhead |
| Precision woodworking pilot holes | Standard drill | Chuck accepts brad-point bits, less runout |
| Breaking loose rusted exhaust bolts | Impact driver | Rotational hammer bursts free seized threads |
Three Mistakes That Waste Time or Break Bits
Using Standard Drill Bits in the Hex Collet
A round-shank drill bit won’t grip in the 1/4-inch hex collet unless you add a hex adapter, and even then the impact action can shatter non-impact-rated bits. Stick with hex-shank bits designed for impact drivers. They handle the hammer blows without snapping.
Confusing an Impact Driver With an Impact Wrench
The impact driver’s 1,400 to 2,000 inch-pounds sound impressive until you realize an impact wrench starts at about 300 foot-pounds — more than ten times the rotational force. An impact driver won’t loosen a stubborn lug nut. Use a real impact wrench for automotive fasteners that require a square drive and massive torque.
Over-Torquing Thin Materials
That same high torque works against you on drywall, thin plywood, or plastic. The fastener can punch through or the material can split before you feel resistance. Back off the trigger early on delicate work, or switch to a standard drill with its lower torque range and better modulation.
How to Pick the Right Impact Driver for Your Projects
Battery voltage is the first fork in the road. A 12-volt impact driver (like the Milwaukee M12 Surge) weighs even less and handles furniture assembly, cabinet hardware, and light deck work. An 18- or 20-volt model delivers the full torque spec and powers through thick lumber, concrete anchors, and automotive bolts. For a deeper look at the best compact options that balance weight and muscle for typical yard and shop projects, our tested roundup of compact impact drivers covers the models worth your money.
Run-time comes down to amp-hours. A 2.0 Ah battery is fine for a day of furniture assembly. For deck building or fencing, grab a 4.0 Ah or higher pack so you aren’t swapping batteries every 45 minutes.
| Situation | Voltage | Battery Size | Example Model |
|---|---|---|---|
| Furniture assembly, cabinets | 12V | 2.0 Ah | Milwaukee M12 Surge |
| Decking, light framing, fencing | 18V / 20V | 4.0 Ah | DeWalt 20V Max |
| Concrete anchors, heavy timber | 18V / 20V | 5.0+ Ah | Milwaukee M18 Fuel |
| Budget DIY, general home use | 18V | 2.0–4.0 Ah | Ryobi One+ |
What You Should Own First: Drill or Impact Driver
If you own no tools, start with a standard drill — it drills holes and drives basic fasteners. The impact driver is the second purchase, and it earns its place on the first deck screw you drive without predrilling. Together they cover every fastening job on a typical property. For anyone who has already caught the bug and wants the all-day-driving companion, the compact impact driver link to best compact impact drivers from our top picks page.
Once you feel the difference — a full day of deck screws with no wrist fatigue, no stripped heads, no cussed-out bits — the question isn’t whether an impact driver is good for anything. The question becomes why you didn’t buy one sooner.
FAQs
Can an impact driver drill holes into wood?
Yes, if you use hex-shank drill bits designed for impact drivers. The tool works fine for drilling pilot holes and smaller diameters in wood and metal. For large-diameter holes or precision work where runout matters, a standard drill with a keyless chuck still performs better.
Will an impact driver remove lug nuts on a car?
No. The 1/4-inch hex collet cannot accept standard sockets, and the 2,000 inch-pounds of torque is only 166 foot-pounds — far below the 300-plus foot-pounds an impact wrench delivers. For lug nuts, use a breaker bar or a proper cordless impact wrench with a square drive.
Does an impact driver damage screw heads?
Less than a drill does. The impact driver’s hammer mechanism engages only when resistance builds, which reduces cam-out — the bit slipping out of the screw head. Using quality impact-rated bits and applying steady forward pressure further prevents stripping.
Is an impact driver necessary for DIY home projects?
Not strictly, but it saves significant time and wrist strain on any project that involves more than a dozen fasteners. For building a deck, assembling a shed, hanging drywall, or installing fencing, it turns a two-hour job into a 45-minute one and your hands will thank you the next day.
What size impact driver should a beginner buy?
An 18V or 20V model with a 1/4-inch hex collet is the standard for most DIY and construction work. Brands like DeWalt, Milwaukee, and Ryobi offer reliable entry-level models. A 4.0 Ah battery provides enough run time for a full day of moderate driving without needing a second pack.
References & Sources
- Lowe’s. “Impact Driver: How It Works & What It’s Used For.” Covers torque specs, applications, and bit compatibility guidance.
- Home Depot. “Impact Drivers vs. Drills.” Comparison of tool features, torque ranges, and best-use scenarios.
- Benchmark Abrasives. “Impact Wrench vs Impact Driver: The Ultimate Guide.” Details the torque and collet differences between tool types.
- Wikipedia. “Impact driver.” Describes the hammer mechanism and engineering principles.
