What is a dowel?

A dowel is a short, round wooden or plastic pin that serves as a connector between two workpieces. A hole is drilled in each side, the dowel is inserted with glue into one hole, and the other workpiece is pressed onto it. Dowels are a simple, invisible joining method.

How does it work?

  1. Drill a hole in workpiece A the size of the dowel
  2. Drill a hole in workpiece B at exactly the same position
  3. Insert the dowel (with glue) into workpiece A
  4. Press workpiece B onto the dowel
  5. Clamp until the glue has cured

The dowel provides:

Dimensions

Dowel diameter Suitable for wood thickness
6 mm Up to 15 mm (thin boards, moulding)
8 mm 15-25 mm (furniture panels, boards)
10 mm 25-40 mm (solid wood, heavier joints)
12 mm 40+ mm (structural woodwork)

Rule of thumb: the dowel diameter is approximately 1/3 of the wood thickness.

Standard dowel length: 30-40 mm (half inserted in each workpiece).

Types of dowels

Wooden dowels (fluted)

Plastic dowels

Domino dowels (Festool)

Placing dowels — tips

Accuracy is everything

The biggest challenge with dowels: the holes must line up exactly. Aids:

Basic rules

Related terms

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