Small Woodworking Shop Layout & Setup Guide | Selectora Hub
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Setting up a small woodworking shop that actually works

Most advice on shop layout assumes you have a two-car garage to spare. Here's how to plan a real workflow — saw, bench, storage, dust collection — in whatever corner you've actually got.

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A one-car garage set up as a compact woodworking shop, with a wall-mounted tool board, workbench, and mobile table saw
Table Saw Lumber Rack (wall-mounted) Mobile Workbench + Clamping Zone Dust Collector Tool Wall Car Clearance

One-car garage

The saw anchors one corner so sawdust throw stays away from storage. Everything on the tool wall is on French cleats — the whole shop breaks down in under ten minutes if the car needs to come back in.

Mobile base required~180 sq ft

What actually matters in a small shop

Not a checklist to complete — the handful of things that determine whether a small shop feels workable or cramped.

Mobility over square footage

A shop a third the size of a "real" one works fine if the saw, bench, and storage can roll out of the way. Locking casters do more for a small shop than an extra 50 square feet.

Dust control isn't optional

In a tight, enclosed space, dust builds up fast enough to matter for health and for tool wear. A shop vac with a cyclone separator handles most small-shop needs without the cost of a full collector.

One tool, multiple jobs

A track saw can rip, crosscut, and break down sheet goods — three machines' worth of work from one tool that stores on a wall hook. Small shops favor tools that cover more ground.

Planning the shop, in order

01

Measure the space before you buy anything

Width, depth, ceiling height, and where the door swings. This decides whether a stationary table saw is realistic or whether a track saw setup makes more sense.

02

Zone by task, not by tool

Cutting, assembly, and finishing each need their own patch of floor — even if that patch moves. Map the zones before deciding where anything sits permanently.

03

Buy mobile-first

Mobile bases, wall-mounted French cleats, and stackable storage let a small footprint serve multiple purposes across a weekend.

04

Find plans actually sized for your shop

A plan written for a full workshop often assumes tools and clearance a small shop doesn't have. It's worth finding a plan library built with small-space builders in mind.

A detailed woodworking plan sheet showing dimensioned drawings and joinery patterns for an Adirondack chair and table

Where we point small-shop builders

Featured resource

TedsWoodworking Plan Library

A large, searchable library of woodworking plans, built by a working woodworking instructor and tested in an actual shop before publishing. What stands out for small-shop builders specifically is the plan variety by tool requirement — a meaningful share of the library is written around basic tools (table saw, drill, clamps, sander) rather than a full cabinet shop.

  • Searchable by category, keyword, and difficulty level
  • Cut lists and materials lists included with each plan
  • One-time access — no recurring plan-by-plan purchases
See the Plan Library →
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TedsWoodworking product box, members area preview, and Reader's Choice Award badge
10
Categories
3
Skill levels
$67
One-time
A hand-marked plan revision sheet with alignment corrections, next to a coffee mug on a workbench Plans get corrected on paper like this before they're published.

Common questions

Do I need a full garage to get started?

No. As the layouts above show, a basement corner or a small shed can support real projects — the limiting factor is usually tool choice and mobility, not raw square footage.

What's the minimum tool list for a small shop?

A circular or track saw, a drill, a set of clamps, and a random orbital sander cover the large majority of beginner and intermediate projects. A dedicated table saw and dust collector are upgrades, not requirements, to start.

Can I sell what I build?

Generally yes, though it depends on the specific plan's terms and any trademarked designs. Most plan libraries, including the one featured above, explicitly allow builders to sell finished pieces.

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