
Black Friday 2025 tool deals are in full swing, and I’ve been asked if there are any good miter saw deals this year. Good news, there are.
Following are the best name-brand miter saw deals that I could find.
There are usually some Black Friday and Cyber Monday deals on smaller miter saws. Things are very different this year, making it very difficult to predict what we might see.
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Dewalt DWS780 12″ Sliding Miter Saw – $499 at Amazon
Here are other DWS780 promos at different retailers:
Acme Tools – $499
Home Depot – $499
Home Depot Bundle Deal – $599
Lowe’s Bundle Deal – $649
The DWS780 is Dewalt’s best miter saw, with their highest cutting capacity and a shadow cutline feature.

Metabo HPT 12″ Sliding Miter Saw with Xact Cut Shadow Line – $389 at Amazon
Acme Tools has it at the same price but charges a “handling” fee, and Lowe’s has it for $100 more.
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Delta Cruzer 12″ Gliding Miter Saw – $509.15 at Amazon
This saw has a gliding mechanism instead of sliding rails.

Bosch 18V 12″ Gliding Miter Saw (Tool-Only) – $474 at Amazon (you’ll need a battery and charger)
This is one of the best cordless miter saws I have ever tested. If you need a starter kit, Lowe’s has a promo that you might be interested in.

Metabo HPT 10″ Miter Saw with LED Shadow Line – $119 at Amazon
This is the best deal I’ve seen so far for beginners or users who don’t need enormous cutting capacity.
Here are a couple more deals:
Skil 7-1/4″ Sliding Miter Saw – $159 at Amazon
Wen 10″ Sliding Miter Saw – $204 at Amazon
Wen 12″ Sliding Miter Saw – $292 at Amazon
Bosch Rolling Miter Saw Stand – $319 at Amazon
Dewalt 12″ Compound Miter Saw – $279 at Home Depot
Dewalt 12″ Compound Miter Saw with Folding Stand – $329 at Home Depot
Ryobi 18V Cordless Miter Saw Kit with Battery and Charger – $159 at Home Depot
Dewalt 12″ Sliding Miter Saw – $449 at Lowe’s
Kobalt 7-1/4″ Sliding Miter Saw – $219 at Lowe’s
Kobalt 10″ Sliding Miter Saw – $299 at Lowe’s
Bosch 12″ Axial Glide Miter Saw – $669 at Acme Tools (but at this price you might be better off with the cordless deal)
Bosch 12″ Axial Glide Miter Saw – $649 at Amazon
Evolution Convertible Miter Saw – $275 at Acme Tools
We’ve got plenty more Black Friday tool deal coverage:
Holiday 2025 Deal Guides
These links will take you to other ToolGuyd posts.
Cyber Monday Tool Deals – What to Expect
BEST Holiday Tool Deals – Sorted by Type
Milwaukee Tool Deals
Dewalt Tool Deals
Kobalt Tool Deals
Ryobi Tool Deals
Amazon Tool Deals
Home Depot Tool Deals
Harbor Freight Tool Deals
Lowe’s Tool Deals
Miter Saw Deals
Table Saw Deals
Packout Tool Storage Deals
Cool Tools, Deals, Gift Guide
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Robert
Interesting that the Bosch GCM18V-12GDCN miter saw is about $200 less than the Dewalt cordless mitersaw, the DCS785B, when a lot of folks feel the Bosch is more refined and need the smaller foot print.
Pete
The BOSCH GCM12SD is $649.00 on Amazon. Just bought one about 2-3 weeks ago from them. Acme tools had a good deal about a month ago but since it has passed…
Stuart
Thanks! I added it in. Sometimes holiday coupon savings also apply, but I haven’t seen any this season. Discounts on the axial glide saws tend to be very brief.
fred
Home Depot bundles it with the Bosch Gravity Rise rolling stand for $988 – and calls that a Special Buy – but they and Amazon sell the stand for $319 – so you save by buying them separately. I’ve had that combo since 2013 and could not handle the saw’s “battleship weight” without the rolling stand. BTW – I paid about $587 for the saw alone back in 2013 – so today’s price isn’t too bad considering 12 years of inflation
Brad
I’m a little confused as to why the corded version of the Bosch is so much more expensive than the profactor cordless version. I realize the latter lacks the battery, but it still defies convention.
I picked up the Bosch T4B miter saw stand for $287 (no tax) via the military exchange’s Home Depot storefront. I’d been watching its price since missing out on that unicorn deal ($199) a few years back, and I think this is the best it’s been.
Stuart
They could be trying to boost interest and sales for the 18V cordless platform whereas the corded saw doesn’t need help appealing to customers.
TomD
I got the C10FCGS in 2020 for $89 and it’s been all I need for what I do. The shadow one seems a pure upgrade and given the times and inflation the price is basically similar. Highly recommended.
Angelo Nigiannis
Ok question for you guys. Which saw would you go with the 18v 12 inch bosch or the dws780. I finally decided to spend the money on the 780 this year. I have the jig saw and sanders on the 18v platform so I have batteries.
TomD
I don’t really like cordless “big saws” – I have a few and all would have been better served being corded regular – bigger blades, better performance, and I don’t move them anyway.
Angelo Nigiannis
Thank you for your input.
fred
You could compare specs on the Dewalt and Bosch sites to see if anything jumps out at you for your use case. Both saws are not lightweights – but the Bosch is 3.3lbs heavier at 59.3 pounds without the battery attached. The axial glide system will provide an advantage of allowing the saw to sit closer to a wall (if that matters to you). Then you have to think about how much advantage cordless provides you versus runtime on the batteries that you own (the saw might also benefit from larger Ah batteries than those you own.)
Stuart
I think it comes down to corded vs cordless. If it’s going to sit in a workshop setting, does the battery make sense?
fred
For many benchtop or semi-stationary tools I’ve never felt that I had a need for cordless alternatives. But they sell and seem to be a focus for many tool manufacturers. So, just because I don’t get it, there must be a raison d’etre. With a miter saw our crews always were out on the customer’s lawn – perhaps under canopy – or on a driveway with extension cords feeding the tools. At a larger jobsite we always seemed to have at least temporary AC power. I guess that if we or I worked a lot at remote sites or in homes with limited circuitry – a cordless miter saw, table saw etc. might have an appeal. In my workshop, I long ago ran conduit providing enough 110 and 230V outlets so extension cords are rarely if ever needed. All of my regularly used machines have their own dedicated circuit and outlet or hard wiring and I have outlets distributed about the shop so I can roll up and plug in the lesser-used tools. But, maybe for some workshops with limited circuitry – cordless tools might look better than a tangle of extension cords