Stitch drilling is exactly what it sounds like — a line of overlapping core holes that, taken together, form a cut. Think of perforating a piece of paper to tear it cleanly. Same idea, in concrete or masonry.

When stitch drilling is the right call

Wall and floor saws are faster than stitch drilling for most openings — but they need depth, blade clearance and somewhere to put the saw rail. Stitch drilling is what we use when one or more of those is missing:

How it works on site

The crew sets up a stand-mounted core rig over the marked-out line, drills the first core, moves the rig the agreed pitch, drills the next. Cores are typically 100–200 mm Ø, overlapping by 20–40 mm so each core breaks into the previous one. When the line is complete, the resulting "stitched" opening is broken out — sometimes by lifting, sometimes by light percussion on the remaining ligaments.

Slurry is contained the same way as for any wet diamond drilling — vacuumed, captured, bagged out. Slab handed back clean.

Stitch drilling is slower than sawing. The only reason to choose it is when sawing isn't possible — and when that's the case, stitching is usually the cleanest, lowest-risk option you have.

Time on site

Stitch drilling is a measured-pace job. A typical 1 m × 1 m opening through a 600 mm slab might take a half to a full crew-day, depending on substrate, rebar density and access. We give you a realistic time on the quote — not the optimistic one — so you can sequence the rest of the programme around it.

What to send for a stitch-drilling quote

To price a stitch-drilling job we need:

If you're not sure whether stitch drilling is the right method or whether a saw will do — send the brief and we'll come back with the right approach. More on specialist works.


Got an opening to cut? Send the brief → · or read why we scan first.