Milwaukee FUEL Cordless Hammer Drill Sustained Power
The brushless motor in a Milwaukee FUEL cordless hammer drill holds a brushless motor that maintains consistent torque under load, so you're not losing momentum when you hit dense aggregate or structural block mid-hole. And because the motor pushes through under load, the Milwaukee M18 hammer drills are the high-demand pick here, built for that kind of sustained structural drilling across a full shift.
When the job is lighter, or the space is tighter, M12™ drill options bring the same cordless freedom in a more compact build, useful when you're moving between anchor points in a confined bay. That cordless advantage carries across the full cordless drill lineup, so your battery works harder across the platform.
Milwaukee Hammer Drill SDS and Rotary Setups
SDS, or Slotted Drive System, is the shank design that sets a rotary hammer apart from a standard drill. The bit locks in and moves under impact instead of just spinning, so it holds drive through concrete and block without slipping. SDS-Plus covers most shop work, like anchor holes and conduit paths, while SDS-Max is the best for larger diameter holes and heavier breaking. And our Milwaukee hammer drills collection carries both, so you're matched to the material from the start.
The 1/2-inch chuck is what gives your rotary hammer the range to move between concrete and other materials in the same run. It takes standard bits alongside SDS-specific ones, so your rotary drilling isn't locked to masonry only. When fastening follows the drilling, a impact drill picks up where the 1/2-inch rotary hammer leaves off without a full tool swap. If you're building around one battery system, the entire Milwaukee lineup is worth checking first so your setup stays consistent across the board.