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Tap Drill Size Chart: Metric & Imperial Thread Sizes

Steel thread tap and drill bit for metric and imperial size chart reference

Tap Drill Size Chart — Metric Coarse Quick Reference

For M8 × 1.25 coarse thread, the tap drill is 6.8mm. For M10 × 1.5, use 8.5mm. For M12 × 1.75, use 10.2mm.

Thread Pitch (mm) Tap Drill
M3 0.5 2.5mm
M4 0.7 3.3mm
M5 0.8 4.2mm
M6 1.0 5.0mm
M8 1.25 6.8mm
M10 1.5 8.5mm
M12 1.75 10.2mm
M16 2.0 14.0mm
M20 2.5 17.5mm
M24 3.0 21.0mm

BSP (British Standard Pipe) tap drills: 1/8" BSP = 8.8mm, 1/4" BSP = 11.8mm, 3/8" BSP = 15.0mm, 1/2" BSP = 19.0mm, 3/4" BSP = 24.3mm, 1" BSP = 30.5mm.

UNC tap drills: 1/4"-20 = 5.1mm (#13), 5/16"-18 = 6.9mm (F), 3/8"-16 = 8.0mm (5/16"), 1/2"-13 = 10.7mm (27/64"). UNF tap drills: 1/4"-28 = 5.5mm (3), 5/16"-24 = 7.1mm (I).

Tap drill size determines the percentage of thread engagement. Standard is 75% engagement — provides adequate strength in most materials while reducing tap breakage risk. Reduce to 65% for hard or brittle materials; increase to 85% for soft materials where maximum strength is needed.

People Also Ask — Tap Drill Size Chart: Metric & Imperial Thread Sizes

Q: What drill size do I use for an M10 tap?

For M10 × 1.5 coarse thread, use an 8.5 mm pilot drill. For M10 × 1.25 fine thread, use a 8.75 mm drill (often rounded to 9.0 mm in practice). Using the correct pilot hole is critical — too small risks tap breakage; too large produces insufficient thread engagement and weak joints.

Q: What is the difference between a taper tap and a plug tap?

A taper tap has a long chamfer (8–10 threads) that guides it into the hole gradually — best for starting threads in blind or through holes. A plug tap (4–5 thread chamfer) picks up where the taper left off and is the most common general-purpose tap. A bottoming tap has just 1–2 threads of chamfer for cutting threads to the very bottom of a blind hole.

Q: What is the difference between BSP and NPT threads?

BSP (British Standard Pipe) uses a 55° thread angle and is the standard for most Australian, British, and European hydraulic and pneumatic fittings. NPT (National Pipe Taper) uses a 60° thread angle and is common on American equipment. The two are not interchangeable — mismatching causes leaks and can damage fittings even if they appear to thread together.

Q: How do I know which tap size to buy?

Match the tap to the bolt thread you need — an M6 × 1.0 tap cuts the thread for an M6 coarse bolt. Always pair taps with the correct pilot drill from a tap drill chart. For blind holes, buy a taper, plug, and bottoming tap set. For through holes, a plug tap alone is usually sufficient for most trade applications.

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