Tile Cutting Tools for Ceramic, Porcelain, Stone & Glass
Tile cutting tools are used to cut, score, drill, shape, and trim ceramic tile, porcelain tile, glass tile, stone, pavers, slabs, and large-format tile. This collection includes wet tile saws, dry tile saws, manual tile cutters, rail cutting systems, diamond blades, core bits, tile nippers, scoring wheels, cutting guides, dressing stones, and saw accessories used across residential and commercial tile installations.
These tools support straight cuts, diagonal cuts, plunge cuts, miter cuts, hole drilling, notching, trimming, and edge shaping during floor tile, wall tile, shower, backsplash, countertop, and slab installation work.
Types of Tile Cutting Tools
- Wet Tile Saws:Â Powered saws that use water to cool the blade, reduce dust, and support clean cuts on tile and stone.
- Dry Tile Saws:Â Cutting tools designed for dry cutting where water-fed cutting is not practical.
- Manual Tile Cutters:Â Score-and-snap cutters used for straight and diagonal cuts in ceramic and porcelain tile.
- Rail Cutting Systems:Â Track-guided cutting systems used for large-format tile, panels, slabs, and thin porcelain materials.
- Diamond Blades:Â Blades designed for cutting porcelain, ceramic, glass, stone, pavers, and masonry materials.
- Core Bits & Drill Guides:Â Diamond drilling tools used to create holes for plumbing, fixtures, anchors, and tile penetrations.
- Tile Nippers & Scoring Wheels:Â Hand tools and replacement parts used for trimming, shaping, and maintaining manual tile cutters.
Choosing the Right Tile Cutting Tool
Selecting the correct tile cutting tool depends on tile material, tile size, cut type, cutting method, blade compatibility, and jobsite requirements. Porcelain tile, glass tile, natural stone, and large-format tile often require different blades, saws, cutters, or drilling accessories.
Wet Cutting vs Dry Cutting
Wet cutting helps reduce heat, dust, and blade wear during continuous cutting. Dry cutting is used when water is not available or when portable cutting is needed. The right method depends on the tool, blade, material, and installation area.