Dust Extraction Hose Fitting Compatibility Guide

Dust Extraction Hose Fitting Compatibility Guide

Connecting a dust extractor to a router should be straightforward. In practice, it’s one of the most frustrating compatibility problems in woodworking. Router dust ports come in different diameters, extractor hoses come in different diameters, and the two rarely match without some kind of adaptor in between. This guide maps out every common combination so you can get the right hose, the right adaptor, and actually extract the dust instead of breathing it in.


Why Dust Extraction Matters for Routing

Routers produce an enormous amount of fine dust — far more than most other woodworking operations relative to the material removed. MDF routing is particularly nasty: the particles are extremely fine and the formaldehyde-based resins in MDF make the dust a genuine health hazard. Even with hardwoods, long-term exposure to wood dust is linked to nasal cancer and respiratory disease. The HSE workplace exposure limit for hardwood dust is 3 mg/m³ — you’ll blow past that in minutes without extraction.

Beyond health, dust extraction dramatically improves cut quality. A router bit cutting through a pile of its own chips produces a rougher finish than one with clear chip evacuation. And if you’re following a pencil line or template edge, being able to actually see what you’re doing makes a noticeable difference to accuracy.


Router Dust Port Sizes by Brand and Model

The dust port is the nozzle or spout on your router (or router’s dust extraction attachment) where the hose connects. These vary significantly between brands and even between models within the same brand.

Festool Routers

ModelDust Port SizeConnection TypeCompatible Hose
OF 1010 EBQ27mmBayonet click-fitFestool D 27 hose — connects directly
OF 1400 EBQ27mmBayonet click-fitFestool D 27 hose — connects directly
OF 2200 EB36mmBayonet click-fitFestool D 36 hose — connects directly

Festool’s system is the gold standard for dust extraction. Their routers connect directly to Festool CT/CTL/CTM extractors with no adaptors needed — just click the hose on. The catch? You’re locked into the Festool ecosystem, and their hoses and extractors aren’t cheap. If you’re connecting a Festool router to a non-Festool extractor, you’ll need a Festool-to-standard adaptor.

Makita Routers

ModelDust Port SizeConnection TypeAdaptor Needed
RT0702C (trim router)No built-in portN/A — needs dust extraction baseMakita 196861-4 dust extraction attachment
RP0900 (900W plunge)28mm approxPush-fit spout28mm to 32/35mm step adaptor
RP1801 (1,850W plunge)28mm approxPush-fit spout28mm to 32/35mm step adaptor
RP2301FC (2,100W plunge)28mm approxPush-fit spout28mm to 32/35mm step adaptor
DRT50Z (18V cordless)Integrated shroudPush-fitMakita dust extraction attachment 195558-3

Makita routers typically have a 28mm-ish dust port that doesn’t match standard 32mm or 35mm extractor hoses. You’ll need a stepped adaptor or a universal rubber reducer. The Makita-specific dust extraction accessories work well but add to the cost.

DeWalt Routers

ModelDust Port SizeConnection TypeAdaptor Needed
DWE6005 (laminate trimmer)No built-in portN/AAftermarket dust shoe or shroud
DW621 (1,100W plunge)35mmPush-fitFits most 35mm hoses directly
DW625EK (2,000W plunge)35mmPush-fitFits most 35mm hoses directly
DCW604 (18V cordless trim)35mm via attachmentAirLock compatibleDWV9000 AirLock adaptor for tool-free connection
D26204K (900W combo)35mmPush-fitFits most 35mm hoses directly

DeWalt has standardised on 35mm across most of their dust-producing tools, which is helpful. Their newer cordless range supports the AirLock system — a quick-connect fitting that lets you swap the hose between tools without faffing with push-fit connections. The DWV9000 adaptor adds AirLock to any tool with a 35mm port.

Bosch Routers

ModelDust Port SizeConnection TypeAdaptor Needed
GKF 12V-8 (12V trim)No built-in portN/AAftermarket dust shoe
GOF 1250 CE35mmPush-fitFits standard 35mm hoses
GOF 1600 CE35mmPush-fitFits standard 35mm hoses
GMF 1600 CE (multifunction)35mmPush-fitFits standard 35mm hoses

Trend Routers

ModelDust Port SizeConnection TypeAdaptor Needed
T4EK (850W)36mmPush-fitFits 36mm hoses or use 36mm→35mm adaptor
T5EB (1,000W)36mmPush-fitFits 36mm hoses or use 36mm→35mm adaptor
T7EK (1,500W)36mmPush-fitFits 36mm hoses or use 36mm→35mm adaptor
T10EK (2,000W)36mmPush-fitFits 36mm hoses or use 36mm→35mm adaptor
T12EK (2,300W)36mmPush-fitFits 36mm hoses or use 36mm→35mm adaptor

Trend routers use 36mm dust ports across the range. If your extractor uses 35mm hoses (common with Bosch GAS and Henry Numatic), you’ll find the 36mm port is just slightly too large for a snug fit. A wrap of electrical tape or a 36mm→35mm reducer ring sorts this out. Trend also sell their own dust extraction accessories that fit perfectly.


Extractor Hose Sizes — What You’re Connecting To

The other half of the equation is your dust extractor’s hose. Here are the standard sizes across the main extractor brands in the UK:

Extractor BrandHose Internal DiameterCompatible Router Ports
Festool CT/CTL/CTM27mm or 36mm (model dependent)Festool routers directly. Others need adaptor.
Bosch GAS 3535mmDeWalt, Bosch routers directly. Makita/Trend need adaptor.
DeWalt DWV902M35mmDeWalt routers directly (AirLock). Bosch fits. Others need adaptor.
Makita VC2012L / VC3012L28mm / 36mm (dual)Makita routers on 28mm. Trend on 36mm. Others need adaptor.
Henry / Hetty (Numatic)32mmNeeds adaptor for almost all routers.
Karcher WD series35mmDeWalt, Bosch fit. Others need adaptor.
Record Power36mm / 100mmTrend routers on 36mm hose. 100mm for larger workshop ducting.

Universal Adaptor Solutions

If your router port and extractor hose don’t match, here are the most common adaptor solutions:

Stepped Rubber Adaptors

The cheapest and most versatile option. These are cone-shaped rubber adaptors with multiple stepped rings that you cut to the size you need. They typically cover 25mm to 58mm in one adaptor. Widely available from Screwfix, Toolstation, and Amazon for under £5. The downsides: they’re not airtight (you lose some suction), they can slip off under vibration, and they look a bit agricultural. But for occasional use, they’re perfectly fine.

Buy Universal Stepped Adaptor on Amazon

Buy Makita Dust Nozzle on Amazon

Buy DeWalt DWV9000 AirLock on Amazon

Brand-Specific Adaptors

AdaptorConvertsUse CasePrice Range
DeWalt DWV9000 AirLock35mm port → AirLockQuick-connect any 35mm tool to DeWalt extractor£15-20
Festool D 27/D 36 adaptorFestool → standard hoseConnect Festool router to non-Festool extractor£10-25
Trend 35mm→36mm reducer35mm hose → 36mm portConnect Bosch/DeWalt extractor to Trend router£5-10
Universal stepped cone25mm-58mm rangeFits almost anything to anything£3-8

Router Table Dust Extraction

If you’re running a router table, dust extraction gets more complicated — and more important. You need extraction at two points: the fence (where most chips are thrown) and the router housing below the table (where fine dust collects). Most quality router tables have a 2-1/2″ (63mm) or 4″ (100mm) port on the fence and a smaller port below.

For proper table extraction, you really need a workshop extractor with larger bore hoses — the small M-class extractors designed for power tool extraction don’t have the airflow for a router table fence. A minimum of 100mm/4″ ducting to the fence, connected to an extractor doing at least 1,000 m³/hr airflow, is what you’re after.

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