Best Cordless Drills Under $150
Nine cordless drill kits tested across furniture builds, deck repairs, and concrete anchors. Three earned a spot in our weekend kit for different reasons.
Under $150, the cordless drill category is dominated by the big four: DeWalt, Milwaukee, Ryobi, and Skil. For the homeowner or weekend DIY-er β not the contractor β the "kit" matters more than raw torque. You want at least one battery, a charger, a chuck that holds bits without slipping, and ideally a soft case. Spec-sheet specs (max torque, max RPM) start to matter less once you're past the basic threshold most jobs need.
We tested nine drills over six weeks doing real homeowner work: hanging shelves, building flat-pack furniture, driving deck screws into pressure-treated lumber, and drilling 1/4" anchor holes into concrete. Three drills clearly earned their spot. One is the dollar-for-dollar value pick, one is the right choice for tight-space work, and one is the smart bet if you'll eventually own more cordless tools. Below are the picks plus a buying guide on the brushless-vs-brushed and 12V-vs-20V decisions that confuse most first-time buyers.
What to look for in a cordless drill
Five decisions separate a useful kit from a frustrating one β and the marketing on most drill listings buries all of them:
Our three picks
Also considered (but didn't make the cut)
Six other drills went through the same six-week test. Three deserve mention:
Side-by-side comparison
Frequently asked questions
How we tested
Each drill ran a fixed three-task gauntlet on the same materials with the same operator:
- 50 #8 Γ 3" deck screws into pressure-treated lumber, timed and counted for run-down before clutch slip.
- 100 pilot holes through 3/4" plywood using a 1/8" bit, measured for consistency and bit hold.
- 10 Γ 1/4" anchor holes into a concrete test block using a masonry bit, recorded for time and bit overheating.
We also weighed each drill with the supplied battery, measured peak temperature post-task with a thermal probe, graded chuck grip on smooth round bits over 25 cycles, and tracked battery runtime per charge over a sustained workload. Warranty terms and the Keepa 12-month price history were checked to ensure quoted prices reflect typical purchase prices, not promotional lows.
All tools purchased at retail. No PR samples. Sara has worked on residential renovation crews and writes about home improvement professionally.
Bottom line
If you want the best dollar-for-dollar drill: the DeWalt DCD777C2 brushless kit with two batteries is the right pick for most homeowners.
If you mostly work in tight spaces: the Skil PWRCore 12 Brushless is meaningfully lighter and more maneuverable.
If you'll buy more cordless tools over time: the Ryobi One+ HP Brushless Kit locks you into the largest tool ecosystem β long-term savings on batteries alone justify it.