When the chart is enough
For ordinary cut taps in common materials, the listed drill size is usually the right starting point. That covers many repair, fixture, bracket, and general shop jobs.
A drill and tap chart keeps the thread callout and drill size in one place. Use it before drilling the pilot hole, then verify the value against the tap style and material.
For ordinary cut taps in common materials, the listed drill size is usually the right starting point. That covers many repair, fixture, bracket, and general shop jobs.
Check the tap maker when using form taps, coated taps, pipe taps, hard material, thin walls, or a print that calls out a specific thread percentage.
| Tap size | Thread pitch / TPI | Recommended tap drill | Decimal inch | Metric mm | Clearance drill | Thread type |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 10-24 | 24 TPI | #25 | 0.1495 | 3.797 | 3/16 | UNC |
| 1/4-20 | 20 TPI | #7 | 0.2010 | 5.105 | 9/32 | UNC |
| 5/16-18 | 18 TPI | F | 0.2570 | 6.528 | 11/32 | UNC |
| 3/8-16 | 16 TPI | 5/16 | 0.3125 | 7.938 | 13/32 | UNC |
| 1/2-13 | 13 TPI | 27/64 | 0.4219 | 10.716 | 17/32 | UNC |
| 10-32 | 32 TPI | #21 | 0.1590 | 4.039 | 13/64 | UNF |
| 1/4-28 | 28 TPI | #3 | 0.2130 | 5.41 | 9/32 | UNF |
| 3/8-24 | 24 TPI | Q | 0.3320 | 8.433 | 13/32 | UNF |
| M6 x 1.0 | 1.0 mm pitch | 5.0 mm | 0.1969 | 5 | 6.6 mm | Metric |
| M8 x 1.25 | 1.25 mm pitch | 6.8 mm | 0.2677 | 6.8 | 9.0 mm | Metric |
| M10 x 1.5 | 1.5 mm pitch | 8.5 mm | 0.3346 | 8.5 | 11.0 mm | Metric |
| M8 x 1.0 | 1.0 mm pitch | 7.0 mm | 0.2756 | 7 | 9.0 mm | Metric Fine |
| M10 x 1.25 | 1.25 mm pitch | 8.8 mm | 0.3465 | 8.8 | 11.0 mm | Metric Fine |
| 1/8 NPT | 27 TPI | Q | 0.3320 | 8.433 | n/a | NPT |
| 1/4 NPT | 18 TPI | 7/16 | 0.4375 | 11.113 | n/a | NPT |
Tap drill = major diameter - pitch.
Example: M8 x 1.25 uses 8.00 - 1.25 = 6.75 mm, rounded to 6.8 mm.
Tap drill = major diameter - (1 / TPI).
Example: 1/4-20 gives about 0.200 in, commonly #7.
Form taps usually use a larger drill size and create threads by displacing material.
Use clearance drills when a fastener must pass through a part instead of cutting threads.
A common recommendation is a #7 drill bit, which is 0.2010 in or about 5.105 mm.
For metric threads, subtract the pitch from the major diameter. For inch threads, subtract 1 divided by TPI from the major diameter.
No. Roll taps usually need a larger hole than cut taps. Check the tap manufacturer data for the material you are working with.
A tap drill prepares a hole for threading. A clearance drill makes a hole large enough for a fastener to pass through.