The Miter Saw: A Complete Guide

The miter saw — also called a “chop saw” — is one of the most essential power tools in woodworking, carpentry, and construction. Whether you’re framing a house, installing crown molding, or building furniture, a miter saw delivers fast, precise angled cuts that would be difficult to achieve any other way.
What Is a Miter Saw?
A miter saw is a stationary power tool with a circular blade mounted on a pivoting arm. The blade swings downward through the workpiece, making it fast and repeatable. What sets it apart from other saws is its ability to rotate on a horizontal axis (the miter angle) and, depending on the type, also tilt on a vertical axis (the bevel angle) — allowing complex compound cuts.
Types of Miter Saws
Standard miter saw — The most basic type. The blade pivots left and right to cut miter angles but does not tilt. Best for simple crosscuts and basic angle cuts.
Compound miter saw — Can tilt as well as pivot, allowing both miter and bevel cuts simultaneously. Ideal for crown molding and frames.
Sliding compound miter saw — Adds rails that let the blade slide forward, dramatically increasing the width of the board it can cut. The most versatile and popular type for professional use.
Dual-bevel (double-bevel) miter saw — The blade tilts in both directions, so you don’t have to flip the workpiece when cutting opposing bevels. A major time-saver for production work.
Common Miter Saw Cuts
Crosscut — A straight 90° cut across the grain of a board. The most common use is fast and perfectly square every time.
Miter cut — The blade pivots left or right to cut at an angle across the face of the board. Used for picture frames, baseboards, and any corner joinery.
Bevel cut — The blade tilts to cut at an angle through the thickness of the board. Used when the edge itself needs to be angled.
Compound cut — Combines both a miter and a bevel simultaneously. Essential for crown molding, which must sit at a complex angle where the wall meets the ceiling.
What to Look for When Buying
When shopping for a miter saw, consider these factors:
Blade size — 10-inch and 12-inch are the two standard sizes. A 12-inch blade handles wider stock, but the saw is heavier and more expensive. A 10-inch is sufficient for most DIY and trim work.
Sliding vs. non-sliding — Sliding rails extend cutting capacity significantly. A 12-inch non-sliding saw might cut only 8 inches wide; a sliding version of the same blade size can cut 12–14 inches.
Bevel range — Most compound saws tilt to 45° on one side. Dual-bevel models tilt both ways, saving time on crown molding runs.
Laser guide or LED shadow line — Many modern saws project a laser or shadow line onto the workpiece so you can align cuts without marking every time.
Dust collection — A dust port connected to a shop vac keeps your workspace clean. Look for models with efficient dust bags or integrated ports.
Safety Tips
The miter saw is powerful and precise — but it demands respect. A few key safety practices:
- Always keep both hands clear of the blade path before pulling the trigger.
- Use the blade guard at all times; never remove or defeat it.
- Clamp small pieces — never hold short offcuts with your fingers near the blade.
- Let the blade come to a complete stop before raising the arm.
- Wear safety glasses and hearing protection on every cut.
- Check for knots, nails, or embedded hardware in reclaimed lumber before cutting.
Common Applications
The miter saw is used across a remarkably wide range of projects — from rough framing lumber on a job site to delicate finish trim in a fine woodworking shop. Typical uses include installing baseboards, door casings, window trim, and crown molding; building picture frames and shadow boxes; cutting deck boards and railing components; rough framing for walls and rooflines; and furniture making where consistent, repeated cuts are needed.
A miter saw is often one of the first major power tools a woodworker, or DIYer, buys — and for good reason. Once you’ve made a few dozen fast, perfectly repeatable cuts with one, it’s hard to imagine working without it.
