
There are new PRO tool deals of the week at Home Depot, featuring Dewalt, Ryobi, and Husky products.
The deals mainly feature cordless power tool bundles and starter sets, plus a selection of workbenches, tool cabinets, and the like. I feel it’s worth checking out, and there are some red team tool deals mixed in as well.
Following are some of the tools that especially caught my attention.
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M12 Fuel Surge Impact Driver with Battery and Charger – $99
This is a fantastic deal. Home Depot doesn’t seem to have a lot of inventory it shows 201 available at the time of this posting, and so you might want to avoid dawdling.

Ryobu 18V 10-Tool Cordless Power Tool Combo Kit – $379
As with other Ryobi 18V tool kits, this one looks to give you a lot of value for the money. It comes with a drill, impact driver, flashlight, circular saw, reciprocating saw, brad nailer, angle grinder, oscillating multi-tool, jig saw, charger, 3x batteries (2x 4Ah, 1x 1.5Ah), and 2 tool bags.
You get a lot of functionality at price that seems very reasonable.

Dewalt 20V Cordless Angle Grinder with PowerStack Battery and Charger – $194
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While this isn’t the best pairing, I think you get a much better tool than what’s possible with Dewalt’s $199 free tool promo right now.

Dewalt 20V Cordless Framing Nailer Kit with Extended Nail Holder – $469
This one surprised me, before I did a price-check and saw that the Dewalt cordless nailer kit is $549 by itself. Even if you don’t need the extended nail holder, who’s going to say no to $80 in savings?

Dewalt FlexVolt 9Ah Battery 2-Pack – $249
A couple of readers asked me to be on the lookout for Dewalt FlexVolt battery deals, and I was excited to finally find one. A single battery is priced at $249, so is this like buying one and getting another for free?

Dewalt Woodworking Planer Package with Stand – $679
This bundle gives you the Dewalt DW735X planer with extra blades and infeed and outfeed tables, plus the stand. At this time, the planer package is a deal at $649 at several retailers. For $30 more, you get the stand which is priced at $179 to $199 separately.
It feels a little sneaky that Home Depot didn’t include this deal in their Black Friday sale, but a Cyber Monday week discount is still good, right?

Husky 46-inch Adjustable Height Workbench with 2 Drawers in White – $249
I am so glad to see these finally on sale for the holidays! While the discount isn’t huge, every little bit helps.

Husky 62-inch Adjustable Height Workbench with 2 Drawers in Black – $349
Other Husky workbench sizes and styles are also included in this sale.

Husky 9-Drawer 46-inch Mobile Workbench Tool Cabinet in Glossy Blue – $399
If you’re not a fan of the color, Home Depot has this cabinet in a rainbow of colors, although with mixed availability.

Ryobi 18V Cordless Inflator Kit PCL001K1 – $60
Ryobi says this compact inflator can be used to fill car and bike tires, smaller tires, and sports balls. It seems conveniently sized and attractively priced.
These deals end at 3am ET 12/8/25 unless supplies sell out sooner.
Home Depot also has some Cyber Monday tool deals of the day – link just above – that you might want to check out.
There are a lot more tool deals for Cyber Monday, here’s our coverage so far:
Cyber Monday Tool Coupon Deals are Here
Lowe’s went Big for Cyber Monday – Deals on Dewalt, Kobalt, More
Epic Milwaukee Tool Deals at Home Depot for Cyber Monday
Also be sure to check out the Amazon Cyber Monday tool deals and sales before more of them sell or time out.
Nate
The PCL001 inflator is excellent. I’ve had a slow leak in one of my summer tires all summer, and dutifully top it off with that compressor every Monday and every Friday before my commute.
It boots up with a 35psi default, and remembers your last setting, so for most tasks, you just push the power button, then push the start button, then walk away. It shuts off when it reaches the setpoint, and it’s always been within 1psi of my most-trusted gauge, which is pretty impressive.
For $20 for the bare tool, if you’re already on the Ryobi system, it’s a no-brainer. The kit for $60 is still pretty good.
Alexk
I bought this inflator 6 months ago for my girlfriend’s autistic son to fill up his golf cart tire. It makes him feel good that he can do it in his own. If they’re $20, I’ll get one for my truck. I have the old style Ryobi in my car. It’s not a set and forget one.
Jerry
I have one too, and at this price I’m going to get one for both of my kids to keep in their cars. For $20, it’s a no-brainer since I’ve already got Ryobi batteies and chargers.
Works very well, just set the pressure, hit start and it shuts off when it hits the pressure you set. I also have one of the old ones that has a high volume low pressure inflator for things like air mattresses. I have found I use it 10 times or more as an air compressor than as an inflator, so these little stand alone inflators are great for me as they take up much less space. Had the old one for 4-5 years, and topped off many a tire with it and it’s still going strong. Fills a car tire from 30-40 PSI in just a couple minutes.
scott taylor
I have both the old one and new one. I used the old one to fill 3 three of the tires while the new one filled the fourth tire. The new one was really really slow. Has anyone else experienced it. Tried it with old 9ah batteries and several different types of new batteries. I had the old one with the analog gauge that I bought at HD. It died after about 2 years and 11 months and Ryobi sent me a new one, it had digital gauge. Got the new one to put in oldest car when she left Atlanta for Houston to go to rice for grad school.
Alexk
I have had two m12 fuel impact drivers for as long as they’ve been out, and even though I don’t like the noise, found it hard to justify getting the Surge. I’ve worked them hard and they still work fine.
At $99 for the Surge plus a charger (not needed) and battery….. that’s the magic number. I just ordered it and can’t wait to try it. Maybe I can get by without hearing protection when using it. Will give one impact driver, charger and battery to a friend.
Oarman
The ‘adjustable height workbench’ tables are pretty nice but the drawers are both enormous in the xy and too shallow to hold much of anything, especially if you want any kind of organization system in there to make use of the space. I wish they’d made them half width and at least twice as deep.
scott taylor
great place to keep all of the paperwork for tools and receipts. Lots of brown envelopes in mine, with big letter on the outside so I can figure out what is in what.
Adam
This is what I’ve found to be true with my 52″ version. It makes a great workbench for my leatherworking hobby (shallow drawers are great for knives and marking tools) but there’s a really awkward jostling left and right as you move the drawers in and out due to how far apart the slides are. I actually replaced the included slides with self closers since I didn’t like how much force was needed to “lock” them closed and pull them out, but that didn’t do anything to help the excess lateral movement. It was also a pain since the included slides are held in by a combination of hooks/tabs and rivets…
Also, to add, the metal parts are all pretty thin and due to the height mechanism, pretty much any interaction with the workbench causes loud clanging sounds. I remedied this almost entirely by strategically placing car audio sound deadening (butyl foil).
All that said, for the $280 I paid for it, I still think it’s a really nice workbench.