Best Chisels for Woodworking
Chisels are the most personal tools in a hand-tool shop. The right set shapes mortises, pares joints, and cuts the fine details that machines cannot reach. The r/handtools community debates this endlessly - Narex versus Two Cherries, bevel-edge versus pigsticker, O1 versus A2 steel - but most of the debate is refinement once you own a sharp chisel. What matters first is geometry, steel that takes and holds an edge, and a handle that does not split when you mallet it. These picks cover the full range from sensible first sets to workshop tools the community reaches for daily.
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The short answer
The Narex Classic Bench Chisel Set is the best starting point for most woodworkers, pairing budget-accessible pricing with chrome-manganese steel that takes a genuinely sharp edge and handles that survive mallet work. Paul Sellers and Rex Krueger both recommend Narex for beginners, and r/handtools consistently endorses them as the best value in production chisels.
Lie-Nielsen A2 Bench Chisel Set (4-Piece)
The American-made benchmark. Lie-Nielsen bench chisels use A2 tool steel, oval hornbeam handles, and are ground to a precise geometry at the factory. They arrive nearly ready to use and are the tools r/handtools enthusiasts eventually buy when they decide to stop upgrading.
- A2 tool steel holds an edge longer than any production chisel at a lower price
- Factory geometry and grind are as close to ready-to-use as any production chisel gets
- Built to last a lifetime with handles that can be replaced if needed
- Premium price that is hard to justify until you have mastered sharpening your current chisels
Narex Richter Bench Chisel Set (6-Piece)
The premium tier of the Narex line, using their proprietary Cr-Mn-V steel with a higher chromium content for better edge retention than the Classic. The octagonal handles seat firmly in the hand and resist rotation. A genuine step up for the woodworker who has mastered sharpening.
- Cr-Mn-V steel holds an edge noticeably longer than the Classic grade
- Octagonal handle resists rolling off the bench and seats firmly under mallet blows
- Factory geometry is more refined than the Classic series
- Premium price over the Classic set for incremental improvement in steel
Pfeil Swiss-Made Carving Chisel Set (5-Piece Starter)
Pfeil (Swiss Made) is the standard reference for carving chisels, used by professional carvers and furniture makers worldwide. The high-carbon steel is hardened to Rc 63-64 and arrives sharp enough to carve with immediately. These are not bench chisels - the curved sweeps and gouges are for relief carving and shaped joinery.
- Swiss high-carbon steel arrives shave-sharp from the factory, a genuine rarity
- Full range of sweeps available so the set grows alongside your carving
- Professional-grade tool trusted by the carving community worldwide
- These are carving tools, not bench chisels - wrong choice if you need mortise and paring work
Narex Classic Bench Chisel Set (6-Piece)
The community's most-recommended production chisel set for beginners. Chrome-manganese steel holds a keen edge, the hornbeam handles survive mallet work, and the bevel geometry is consistently good from the factory. Paul Sellers and Rex Krueger both point beginners here.
- Chrome-manganese steel sharpens easily and holds an edge well at the price
- Hornbeam handles are durable and comfortable for both hand pressure and mallet use
- 6-piece set covers 6mm through 32mm for all routine bench work
- Arrive needing light honing out of the box - not scary to sharpen but not shave-sharp from the factory
Two Cherries (Zwilling) Bench Chisel Set
German heritage chisels from the Solingen cutlery tradition. Two Cherries (now under the Zwilling umbrella) use high-carbon steel with a traditional oval-head beech handle and a leather cap. The bevel geometry is classic and the finish is excellent. The community debates these against Narex constantly.
- High-carbon steel sharpens to a fine edge with a traditional character
- Classic beech handle with leather cap absorbs mallet blows without splitting
- German heritage steel and craftsmanship with a long track record in the community
- Slightly more expensive than comparable Narex sets for equivalent performance
Stanley Sweetheart 750 Series Bench Chisel Set (5-Piece)
Stanley's premium socket chisel revival, made in the UK with chrome vanadium steel and a traditional round-head hornbeam handle. The 750 series uses a socket design rather than tang-and-ferrule, which lets you replace the handle without special tools. An honest working chisel with Stanley heritage.
- Socket construction allows handle replacement without destroying the tool
- Chrome vanadium steel takes a good edge at an accessible price
- UK manufacturing revives the classic Stanley chisel quality
- Arrive needing honing - not factory sharp
The method
How we chose
We evaluated each option on fit, build quality, daily usability, and value. Our top pick, Lie-Nielsen A2 Bench Chisel Set (4-Piece), earned the spot because the best bench chisel set available without going bespoke. worth saving up for. The comparison above highlights exactly who each pick is best for.
Related guides
Head-to-head comparisons
FAQ
Best Chisels for Woodworking: FAQ
Narex or Two Cherries: which chisel set should a beginner buy?+
Both are genuine working tools, not beginner toys. Narex wins on value and steel quality for the price; their chrome-manganese steel sharpens easily and holds an edge longer than many pricier options. Two Cherries (Zwilling brand heritage) have a firmer, more traditional feel and beautiful handles, but cost more. r/handtools leans toward Narex for a first set, then Two Cherries or Lie-Nielsen for an upgrade.
What chisel bevel angle should I sharpen to for bench work?+
25 degrees primary bevel with a 30-degree micro-bevel is the standard starting point for general bench work. Paul Sellers sharpens at a consistent 30 degrees freehand, which is simpler and works well. For paring chisels you want 20 to 25 degrees to keep them slicing freely. Harder steel like A2 tolerates a slightly lower angle than O1 or chrome-manganese before chipping.
What is the difference between a bench chisel and a mortise chisel?+
Bench chisels are thinner, lighter, and bevel-edged for general cutting, paring, and joinery. Mortise chisels are thick, stout, and lever-proof - designed to chop waste from mortises by hand and handle the prying and levering that would break a bench chisel. A beginner needs bench chisels first; mortise chisels matter once you cut furniture-quality mortise and tenon joints.
Do I need a full set of 8 chisels or can I start with 3?+
Start with three or four: a 6mm (1/4 inch), 12mm (1/2 inch), 19mm (3/4 inch), and 25mm (1 inch) cover the vast majority of bench work. A full set looks appealing in a catalog but beginners rarely use the very narrow or very wide chisels at first. Buy a tight set, learn to sharpen them well, and add sizes as specific joinery demands them.
What is A2 steel versus O1 steel in chisels?+
O1 is oil-hardened tool steel that sharpens easily to a very keen edge and is the classic choice. A2 is air-hardened alloy steel that is tougher and holds an edge longer but is slightly harder to sharpen to the same polished finish. Most woodworkers start with O1 or chrome-manganese and move to A2 for bench chisels once they have sharpening dialed in.