
Picking the wrong sandpaper grit ruins more projects than any other sanding mistake. Too coarse leaves deep scratches you can't hide. Too fine wastes hours removing almost nothing.
This sandpaper grit guide explains what the numbers mean, which grit fits which job, and the sequence rules professionals follow. Ten minutes here saves hours at the bench.
The grit number rates the size of the abrasive particles bonded to the paper. The rule is simple to remember.
Lower numbers are coarser. Big particles bite deep and remove material fast — and leave visible scratches.
Higher numbers are finer. Small particles remove less but leave a smoother surface. That's why every sanding job moves from low numbers to high.
Two grading standards share the market:
The two scales line up closely in the middle ranges. At the extremes they drift apart — CAMI runs coarser than P grades at the coarse end and finer at the fine end. When a spec sheet matters, match the exact standard rather than the bare number.
Use this sandpaper grit chart to translate the numbers into real jobs:
| Grade | CAMI grit | FEPA grit | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coarse | 40–60 | P40–P50 | Fast material removal; stripping old paint or varnish |
| Medium | 80 | P60–P80 | Shaping bare wood; first pass on rough boards |
| Fine | 100–120 | P100–P120 | Preparing wood for finishing; removing water stains |
| Very fine | 150–220 | P150–P220 | Final pass on bare wood before stain or paint |
| Extra–super fine | 320–600 | P400–P1200 | Light scuffing between finish coats |
| Ultra fine | 800–1000 | P1500–P2500 | Polishing thick finishes; wet sanding |
Keep this page bookmarked. The chart answers most day-to-day grit questions at a glance.
Match the starting sandpaper grit to the surface in front of you.
Pick the starting sandpaper grit by how the boards feel:
Sand with the grain, never across it. Cross-grain scratches only show up after the stain goes on.
Coarse sandpaper grit does the heavy lifting here:
The coarse particles bite through the coating instead of sliding over it. Expect to change sheets often — old finish clogs paper fast.
Metal rewards a steady sandpaper grit progression:
Water carries away the dust during wet sanding and stops the paper clogging. It also leaves a finer, more even scratch pattern.
Scuff gently with 320–400 sandpaper grit. You're not removing the coat — just knocking down dust bumps so the next layer bonds.
Sand filler with 120–150 grit, then feather the edges with 220. Coarser paper tears the paper face.
Sandpaper grit size is half the choice. The abrasive material is the other half:
| Material | Character | Use it on |
|---|---|---|
| Aluminum oxide | Tough all-rounder, long life | Wood, metal, general work |
| Silicon carbide | Harder, sharper, friable | Wet sanding, metal, plastics, finishes |
| Ceramic | Very aggressive, self-sharpening | Fast stock removal on belts and discs |
| Garnet | Natural, gentle, wears fast | Fine hand-finishing on wood |
| Zirconia alumina | Durable under heat and pressure | Grinding metal, rough wood shaping |
Two practical picks cover most workshops:
Browse both across EYBY's sanding abrasives range. Stock two or three grits of each and most jobs are covered.
The same sandpaper grit behaves differently depending on what drives it:
Buffing wheels and compounds take over where sandpaper stops. For mirror finishes, move from ultra-fine grits into buffing and polishing supplies.
Good sanding is a sequence, not a single sheet. Four rules keep it efficient:
The sequence matters more than the brand. Cheap paper used in the right order beats premium paper used wrong.
Safety note: fine sanding dust is a respiratory hazard whatever the material. Use extraction or a mask, especially with power sanders.
It rates the size of the abrasive particles. Lower numbers mean coarser particles that cut fast; higher numbers mean finer particles that leave a smoother finish.
Start at 80–120 grit depending on roughness, then work up to 180–220. Finishing coarser than 180 shows scratches through paint; going far beyond 220 can burnish wood so finish struggles to grip.
Skip no more than one grade at a time. Each sandpaper grit exists to erase the scratches of the one before it — a big jump leaves deep scratches behind.
Both rate particle size, but on different scales. CAMI numbers stand alone (220); FEPA numbers carry a "P" (P220). They roughly match in mid ranges and drift apart at the extremes, so match the standard on critical work.
Choosing sandpaper grit comes down to a few dependable moves:
Master the sandpaper grit chart once, and every sanding job — wood, metal or finish — becomes a predictable sequence instead of guesswork. Explore the full abrasives range to stock the grades your work calls for.