By Bob Vila and Tom Scalisi | Updated Jan 31, 2023 11:55 AM
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“If the only tool you have is a hammer, it is tempting to treat everything as if it were a nail,” wrote Abraham Maslow. While this timeless quote has more to do with solving problems than it does hardware nails, we like to think that it’s also a nod to the multitude of types of nails available (at least for this article’s sake!). Each with its different function and purpose, there are more than 20 nail types that DIYers and pros might run into. For example, installing trim and molding calls for finishing nails, while a new roof needs a—you guessed it—roofing nail.
This guide will explain some of the most common (and some specialized) nail types DIYers might run into. From light-duty to heavy-duty and big to small, keep reading to learn more about 25 nail types and the applications for each type.
In most cases, there are three main parts of a nail. These three parts include the head, the shank, and the point. Each of these parts serves a purpose.
The D in nail sizes indicates “penny,” and they’re pronounced as such: 10D is pronounced “ten-penny.” Originally, the term indicated how many pennies a carpenter would have to pay for 100 nails of a specific length. The longer the length, the more pennies they’d have to pay for the lot.
For example, 100 nails that are 3½ inches long would cost the carpenter 16 pennies, so those nails were called “sixteen-penny” nails. Even if the carpenter were only buying 30, they would say “Can I please have 30 sixteen-penny nails?”
The penny system is primarily used for nails for wood framing, such as sinkers, common nails, and box nails. And despite the clear and reasonable preference for nail guns, most framing carpenters often carry three nail sizes, and they are 8D, 10D, and 16D.
The typical use for an 8D nail is attaching a wall plate to the subfloor. Since they’re cheaper, they’re also commonly used for attaching chalk lines to sheet goods or to act as hinges when lifting framed wall assemblies. They can also attach furring strips, sheathing, and other thinner materials.
Ten-penny (10D) nails are typically used for building header assemblies and framing walls. Their 3-inch length means they can punch through two 2x6s, 2x8s, or 2x10s with a ½-inch piece of plywood between them (a header sandwich) without poking through the other side. They may also be used for non-loadbearing walls.
The 16D nail is the workhorse of the framing crew. These nails are long and strong, and they’re used for actual wall assemblies. The carpenter nails through the face of the top and bottom plates and into the ends of the individual wall studs, pinning them in place as a wall assembly. These nails provide enough holding power while also allowing the walls to rack and adjust a bit over time without breaking.
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As far as materials go, most kinds of nails are steel. However, there are also nails in materials such as stainless steel, copper, iron, aluminum, or bronze. Stainless steel nails are useful since they don’t react with materials like cedar or redwood. Copper nails are useful when installing copper flashing or copper ceiling tiles. Iron nails are from years gone by, but some DIYers and craftspeople use them in their projects for a vintage flare.
Believe it or not, there are many types of nail finishes as well. Most of the time, the finish either affects the way the nail sinks into the wood or how corrosion-resistant the nail is. Common nail finishes include:
One walk down the fasteners aisle at a big box home improvement store will prove that nail varieties abound. However, some nails are more common than others, and this guide will break down some of the different types of nails.
Note: Some of these building nails do overlap, as there is often more than one name used for an item on a construction site.
As the name suggests, common nails are your everyday nails. They are generally used for rough construction work, and can be driven into hard materials. They typically have a bright finish, which means they won’t last long in outdoor applications.
Best For: Framing and general construction work that isn’t exposed to weather
These look like common nails, but they are thinner. This means they are less likely to cause splits in the wood but they also have less holding power. So, if structural strength is critical, avoid box nails.
Best For: General construction, but they don’t have the strength of a common nail
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The duplex nail is a variation of the common nail. It features a second head along the shaft which allows the duplex nail to be used for temporary construction (like scaffolding and staging); after it is driven snug, it can still be easily removed.
Best For: Scaffolding, staging, and other temporary structures
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Framing nails are essentially the same as common nails, and they are the general construction nails many are used to seeing. They have thick shanks, wide heads, and provide a lot of holding power and strength. They come in a bright finish for indoor projects and galvanized for outdoor projects. They’re also available in many sizes.
Best For: Framing and general construction work
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Deck nails are not a specific type of nail, but any nail used to attach exterior decking material to a frame. They’re usually just galvanized framing nails, and they’re the fastest, easiest, and cheapest way to build decks, though they have a tendency to back out of the framing over time.
Best For: Installing deck boards to a subframe
Finishing nails are (surprise, surprise) used for finish work. Their barrel-shaped heads are small and can be driven below the surface of the wood using a nail set (a technique called countersinking). Finishing nails are useful for installing trim, crafting furniture, and building other projects where you want to hide the head of the fastener.
Best For: Trim, moldings, and other finish work
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A close cousin of the finishing nail, the casing nail is slightly larger and has increased holding power. It is commonly used for attaching moldings such as window and door casings (often outdoors) where added strength is needed.
Best For: Attaching window and door casing as well as other heavy trim
Brads are used as finishing nails but are proportionately smaller in diameter, with smaller heads. Brads are used in building frames, attaching plywood paneling, some moldings, and in cabinet work. Their slightly thinner diameter and smaller heads make them less likely to split wood, and easier to hide.
Best For: Building frames, attaching paneling, moldings, and some cabinet work
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The cut nail is used for installing flooring. These nails are large and strong, with four flat sides and a tapered wedge design. They were extremely common before wire nails took their place, and today they’re hand-nailed into flooring and other projects for a vintage look.
Best For: Flooring and other projects that require a vintage look
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Landscape spikes aren’t traditional nails, though they can be useful for connecting landscape timbers. Instead, they hold landscape items such as edging or flower beds in place. The user drives them into the ground, where their long length and textured shanks prevent them from backing out easily.
They come in galvanized varieties, but they’re also available in plastic. Both materials are resistant to the elements, making them ideal for driving into the ground and burying with topsoil or mulch.
Best For: Landscape edging, flower bed construction, and other outdoor applications (tent poles, tarp anchoring, etc.)
A sinker nail is a variety of the framing nail. They may be just slightly thinner than a framing or common nail, but they have a light coating on their shank to make them easier to drive into framing materials. While hand-nailing framed walls is less common today, sinkers can increase speed and efficiency.
Best For: Framing, particularly in a production environment
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Hanger nails are stubby galvanized nails used to attach joist hangers to ledgers. They don’t have to be long because they simply pinch the joist hanger (which is under 1/8-inch thick) to the ledger, and then the joist to the joist hanger. They may also be used to attach stair stringers, hurricane ties, strapping, and other galvanized brackets. Joist hanger nails provide much more holding and sheer strength than nailing into the end of the joist.
Best For: Attaching joist hangers, stringer hangers, hurricane ties, and strapping on outdoor decks
Pole barn nails are long, thick nails that often feature textured shanks and galvanized dipping. Their traditional use is attaching heavy timbers to each other in pole barn construction. Their improved strength allows them to carry more force, a necessary trait in a barn built with fewer framing members and fasteners than traditional framing. They may also be ideal for building wood retaining walls and spiking landscape edging to the ground.
Best For: Pole barns and heavy-duty outdoor construction applications
“Connector nail” is another name for a joist hanger nail. These nails are short, thick, and galvanized, and they’re used to attach hurricane ties, joist hangers, strapping, and other thin metal reinforcements to outdoor framing materials.
Best For: Attaching joist hangers, hurricane ties, and strapping to exterior wood framing
“Trim nail” is another term used to describe finish nails. They have cupped heads, a bright finish, and thin shanks, and they’re used to install larger moldings to walls and ceilings.
Best For: Installing trim and moldings to walls and ceilings
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Pin nails are small wire nails without heads. They’re extremely thin, can only be fired from a pin nailer, and don’t offer much holding strength. However, their thin design and lack of a head make them almost invisible once fired and they hardly ever split wood. This makes pin nails a popular choice for picture framing, attaching delicate moldings such as thin beads or rope patterns, as well as fastening thin cornice moldings to cabinets.
Best For: Building picture frame, attaching delicate moldings, and installing cornice molding to cabinets
Spiral shank nails include several types of nails with twisted shanks. They’re difficult to drive, but these nails twist as they enter the wood, creating a screw-like effect that increases their holding strength. In framing applications, they may be required in high-wind zones and some types of subfloor systems.
Best For: Framing in high-wind zones, and when assembly certain subfloor systems
Roofing nails have disproportionately large, round heads and heavier shanks than many other nails. Designed to hold composite and asphalt roofing materials in place without tearing, roofing nails are heavily galvanized to resist rust.
Best For: Fastening shingle tabs to roof decks
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There are several types of masonry nails available; all are designed to be driven into brick or concrete walls. The shape of the masonry nail varies by type, but all are hardened to resist bending and breaking as they are driven into almost rock-hard materials. They can be used to attach wood framing to a concrete slab, hang pictures from a brick wall, or attach furring strips for drywalling over a masonry surface. Be sure to wear safety glasses when using masonry nails, as flying concrete or masonry chips or errant nails could harm your eyes.
Best For: Hanging pictures, or attaching items and wood frames to concrete and brick surfaces
Often made of galvanized steel, annular ring nails are commonly used to hold clapboards or shingles in place on home exteriors. These thin nails, lined with rings for added holding power, are resistant to rust.
Best For: Attaching siding and shingles to homes, as the rings on the shank increase holding power
Drywall nails are thin-shanked, have wide heads and, as the name implies, are used for installing drywall over wood framing. These wood nails are designed this way so they may penetrate the drywall and wood framing behind it, yet spread the holding power over a wider surface area (under the head). They’re coated with black phosphate to improve adhesion with drywall mud and paint, as well.
Note: These are the nails that sometimes appear to pop through a finished drywall surface. This occurs for many reasons, and it’s important to repair the nail pops.
Best For: Installing drywall to wood framing underneath
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There are a couple of types of siding nails, including the annular ring shank nail described above, and those with spiral shanks. These nails have thin shanks (with a ring or spiral) and wide heads. Siding nails used to nail through the face of clapboard will have exposed heads, so it’s best to use galvanized siding nails in these cases. The exception would be if the clapboard is cedar, which would require stainless steel nails.
Best For: Hanging siding and clapboard
Cap nails are a combination of a plastic washer and an annular ring shank nail. They’re used for installing roofing underlayment, tar paper, house wrap, and fanfold to a wood structure underneath. The nail slides through the center of the washer, drives into the wood structure, and loosely holds the material in place to prevent the head from ripping through the material.
Best For: Attaching roofing underlayment, tar paper, house wrap, and fanfold to wood structures
Panel board nails are a variation of the annular ring shank nail, but they’re typically smaller and thinner. Their common use is to attach sheets of hardboard, such as beadboard paneling, to wood studs and furring strips. They’re small but provide plenty of holding strength when used together. They’re also available pre-painted to blend in better with panel finishes.
Best For: Attaching hardboard paneling to wood framing and furring strips
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Furniture nails are decorative fasteners used for attaching (or give the appearance of attaching) upholstery to wooden furniture. They have thin shanks, wide heads, and often come in a variety of materials and finishes.
Best For: Decorative attachment of upholstery to wooden furniture
The following are some helpful tips to consider when fastening with nails:
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