Plastic is everywhere — in your home, your workshop, your garden. And sooner or later, you’ll need to put a hole through it. The problem? Plastic is slippery, brittle, and surprisingly unforgiving when you treat it like wood or metal. Get the speed wrong and it melts. Use the wrong bit and it cracks. Rush it and the whole piece is ruined.
This guide walks you through every method, every tool, and every mistake worth avoiding — so you get a clean, smooth hole on the first try.
Why Plastic Is Tricky to Drill
It’s Not Just One Material
“Plastic” isn’t a single thing. It’s a family of materials — each with its own personality. Acrylic (Perspex) is hard and brittle. PVC is softer and more forgiving. Polypropylene tends to flex rather than crack. ABS is strong but can melt fast. Knowing which plastic you’re working with changes everything — your bit choice, your speed, your technique.
Heat Is the Enemy
A drill bit spinning too fast generates friction. Friction generates heat. And heat in plastic means one of two disasters: the plastic melts and welds itself back around the bit, or the heat stress causes micro-cracks that spread outward from the hole. This is why speed control is the single most important skill in plastic drilling.
Tools and Materials You’ll Need
Before touching the drill, gather everything up front. Stopping mid-job to hunt for a clamp is how mistakes happen.
| Tool/Material | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Electric drill with speed control | Core tool — variable speed is essential |
| Spur-point (brad-point) drill bit | Cleanest cut in plastic; recommended over standard twist bits |
| High-speed steel (HSS) twist bit | Acceptable for softer plastics and smaller holes |
| Clamp or bench vise | Holds plastic steady and prevents spinning |
| Pencil or marker | Marks the drill point accurately |
| Scrap wood (backer board) | Placed under plastic to prevent breakout on the exit side |
| Fine-grit sandpaper (220–400 grit) | Smooths rough edges after drilling |
| Safety goggles | Protects eyes from flying plastic chips |
| Masking tape | Applied over the drill point to reduce cracking on brittle plastics |
The Best Drill Bits for Plastic
Spur-Point (Brad-Point) Bits — The Gold Standard
Spur-point bits have a sharp central tip that registers exactly on your mark, and two outer spurs that score the material cleanly before the main body removes it. For plastic, this is your best friend. The scored edge dramatically reduces cracking and leaves a near-perfect hole.
HSS Twist Bits — The Practical Option
Most people already own high-speed steel twist bits, and they work fine on softer plastics like PVC and polyethylene, provided you use slow speed and light pressure. For harder or more brittle materials like acrylic, they’re more likely to chip or grab.
Step Drill Bits — For Thin Sheet Plastic
A step drill bit (cone-shaped, with graduated diameters) is ideal for thin plastic sheets like those used in enclosures and panels. It widens the hole gradually, reducing the sudden bite that causes cracks.
What to Avoid
Never use a spade bit or auger bit on plastic. These are aggressive cutters designed for wood — they grab, tear, and fracture plastic with brutal efficiency.
Step-by-Step: How to Drill a Hole in Plastic
Step 1 — Mark and Prepare Your Surface
Use a pencil or permanent marker to mark the exact center of your hole. If your plastic is smooth and polished (like acrylic sheeting), lay a small strip of masking tape over the drilling spot. The tape gives the bit something to grip and prevents it from skating across the surface before it bites in.
Step 2 — Secure the Plastic
This step is non-negotiable. A loose piece of plastic will spin with the bit, crack under pressure, or skate sideways and ruin your measurement. Clamp it firmly to a workbench, or hold it in a bench vise. Place a piece of scrap wood directly underneath the drill point — this acts as a backer board, supporting the exit side of the hole and preventing blowout when the bit breaks through.
Step 3 — Choose Your Speed — Go Slow
Set your drill to its lowest speed setting. A good rule of thumb: the harder or thicker the plastic, the slower the speed. For acrylic, PETG, or polycarbonate, this is especially critical. You’re aiming for clean cutting action, not brute-force friction.
Speed Guide by Plastic Type:
Plastic Type Recommended Drill Speed Acrylic / Perspex Very slow — under 500 RPM Polycarbonate Slow — 500–1,000 RPM PVC Moderate — 1,000–1,500 RPM Polyethylene / HDPE Moderate — 1,000–1,500 RPM ABS Slow to moderate — 500–1,200 RPM
Step 4 — Start the Hole
Position the drill bit tip on your marked center. Apply gentle, steady downward pressure — let the bit do the work. Don’t lean your body weight into the drill. The moment the bit starts cutting, maintain that light, consistent pressure. If you hear squealing or see plastic threads melting around the bit, stop immediately — your speed is too high.
Step 5 — Clear the Chips Regularly
Every few seconds, pull the bit partially out of the hole without turning off the drill. This clears the plastic swarf (the curly shavings) from the flutes and prevents heat buildup in the bore. Think of it like a surgeon lifting a scalpel briefly between strokes — the brief pause keeps things clean and controlled.
Step 6 — Drill Through and Finish Clean
Ease off the pressure as the bit nears the exit side. Slow down even further in the final millimeters — this is where blowout and cracking most commonly happen. Once through, reverse the drill to a slow setting and withdraw the bit cleanly. Sand the edges of the hole lightly with 220-grit sandpaper in circular motions to remove burrs and leave a smooth finish.
Alternative Method: The Heated Pin/Nail (For Tiny Holes)
For holes smaller than 6mm (¼ inch) — like drainage holes in plant pots or ventilation holes in enclosures — a drill isn’t even necessary.
- Take a metal pin, nail, or thick sewing needle.
- Heat the tip with a lighter or gas torch for 30–60 seconds until it glows.
- Using a cloth or pliers to hold the base, press the heated tip firmly and steadily through the plastic.
- If it cools before breaking through, withdraw it, reheat, and continue.
- Slide it out cleanly and let the plastic cool.
The result is a clean, sealed-edge hole with minimal cracking risk, since the heat melts rather than cuts the material. Do this in a well-ventilated area — melting plastic releases fumes you don’t want to breathe.
Drilling Large Holes in Plastic
Step Up in Stages
Never jump straight to a large bit on brittle plastic. Start with a small pilot hole — typically 3–4mm — then graduate upward in stages using progressively larger bits. This technique releases tension from the cut incrementally, dramatically reducing cracking risk.
Hole Saws for Very Large Diameters
For holes larger than 25mm (1 inch) — say, cable entry holes in enclosure panels or drainage ports — use a hole saw fitted in your drill. Keep speed very low, apply cutting lubricant (a drop of machine oil or even water-soluble cutting fluid works), and use a backer board. The lubricant reduces heat and helps eject chips from the cutting teeth.
Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them
| Mistake | Why It Happens | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Plastic cracks | Too much speed or pressure | Slow down, use spur-point bit, use backer board |
| Hole edges melt | RPM too high, bit too dull | Lower speed, use a sharp bit, clear chips often |
| Drill bit wanders | No pilot dimple or tape | Mark carefully, use masking tape, start slowly |
| Blowout on exit side | No backer board | Always clamp scrap wood underneath |
| Bit grabs and spins plastic | Plastic not clamped | Clamp securely before starting |
| Rough, ragged hole edges | Bit pulled out too fast | Withdraw slowly, sand edges with 220-grit |
Safety First — Always
- Wear safety goggles every single time. Plastic chips are light, fast, and sharp.
- Work in a well-ventilated area, especially with the heated-nail method.
- Keep fingers well away from the cutting zone. Clamps exist for exactly this reason.
- If the drill bit snags and the plastic starts spinning, release the trigger immediately — never try to muscle it still with your hand.
Key Takeaways
- Use a spur-point (brad-point) bit for the cleanest holes — standard twist bits can grab and crack brittle plastics.
- Speed kills in plastic drilling — always use the slowest setting your drill allows, especially on acrylic and polycarbonate.
- A scrap wood backer board underneath the plastic is your best insurance against blowout and cracking on the exit side.
- Masking tape over the drill spot prevents skating and surface scratching on polished plastics.
- For holes under 6mm, a heated pin is faster and cleaner than a drill.
- Always step up in hole sizes gradually when drilling large diameters — never start big on brittle material.
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)
What is the best drill bit to use on plastic?
The best drill bit for plastic is a spur-point (brad-point) bit. Its sharp central tip registers precisely on your marked spot, and the outer spurs score the edge cleanly before removing material. This significantly reduces cracking and produces a smooth, professional hole. For soft plastics, a standard HSS twist bit also works at low speed.
Why does plastic crack when I drill into it?
Plastic cracks when too much localized stress builds up during drilling. This is usually caused by drilling too fast, using a dull or wrong-type bit, applying too much downward pressure, or failing to support the exit side with a backer board. Acrylic and polycarbonate are especially prone to stress cracking.
Can I drill acrylic (Perspex) without it shattering?
Yes — but acrylic needs special care. Use a sharp spur-point bit, set your drill to under 500 RPM, place masking tape over the drill point, clamp a backer board underneath, and apply very light, steady pressure. Stepping up through progressively larger bits is safer than going straight to your final diameter.
How do I drill a clean hole in thin plastic sheet?
Use a step drill bit or a sharp twist bit at very low speed. Sandwich the plastic sheet between two pieces of scrap wood — one on top, one on the bottom — and clamp the whole assembly. Drilling through the sandwich prevents the thin sheet from flexing, vibrating, or cracking under bit pressure.
What speed should I drill plastic at?
As a general rule: slow is always safer than fast. For hard plastics like acrylic, stay under 500 RPM. For softer materials like PVC or polyethylene, 1,000–1,500 RPM is acceptable. If you see plastic melting around the bit or smell burning, your speed is too high — stop and reduce it.
How do I drill a hole in plastic without a drill?
For small holes (under 6mm), heat a metal nail or pin with a lighter until the tip glows, then push it steadily through the plastic. For thin sheets, a sharp craft knife or awl can pierce and widen a small hole cleanly. A rotary tool (like a Dremel) with a cutting attachment is another effective no-drill alternative for light plastics.
Why does my drill bit keep melting the plastic instead of cutting it?
This happens when the bit is spinning too fast, generating frictional heat faster than the material can dissipate it. Lower your drill speed, use a sharp bit (dull bits create more friction), and clear the chips regularly by pulling the bit out every few seconds. A drop of cutting lubricant — even plain water — on the bit also helps reduce heat buildup.
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