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Adjustable Wrench vs Pliers: What's the Difference?

June 16, 2026

The Short Answer

Use an adjustable wrench on hex-shaped nuts and bolts. Use pliers on round, irregular, or soft objects that a wrench can’t grip. I used to grab pliers for everything when I first started DIY work. Then I rounded off a brass nut on a new faucet and learned the hard way — use the right tool or pay for the replacement part.

Key Differences at a Glance

Feature Adjustable Wrench Pliers
Grips what? Hex nuts and bolt heads (parallel sides) Round, oval, flat, or irregular objects
Jaw type Flat, smooth jaws Toothed, angled jaws
How it holds Clamps two parallel sides Digs in from multiple angles
Risk to fastener Low — won’t damage hex nuts when snug High — can gouge, scratch, or round off soft metal
Swing clearance Needs room equal to handle length Works in tight spots with minimal movement
Torque High — designed for tightening and loosening Moderate — grip depends on hand strength
Common types Crescent wrench, adjustable spanner Slip-joint, tongue-and-groove (Channellock), needle-nose

When to Use an Adjustable Wrench

An adjustable wrench is built for hex fasteners. Use it when:

Adjust the jaw width so it fits snugly around the nut. Pull toward the fixed jaw side — that’s the side that bears the load. Pulling the wrong way puts pressure on the adjustment mechanism and makes the jaw slip open. I learned this rule after a slip sent my knuckles into a sharp edge. Pull toward the fixed jaw, every time.

When to Use Pliers

Pliers grip things that a wrench can’t. Use them when:

Tongue-and-groove pliers (often called Channellocks) are the go-to for plumbing work. They adjust to different jaw widths and lock onto pipes with serious grip. Slip-joint pliers handle lighter work like gripping small fasteners or bending wire.

Common Mistake: Using Pliers on Finished Hardware

Pliers have toothed jaws that bite into whatever they grip. On soft metals like brass, chrome, or copper, those teeth leave permanent marks. If you’re working on visible plumbing fixtures or finished hardware, wrap the object with a layer of electrical tape before gripping, or use pliers with smooth jaw inserts. Better yet, switch to the adjustable wrench if the fastener is hex-shaped.

Pro Tips

Tip: Keep both tools in your toolbox. For plumbing work under a sink, you’ll often switch between them — wrench for the compression nuts, pliers for the slip nuts on the P-trap. Having both within reach saves trips back to the toolbox.

Caution: Pliers with sharp jaw teeth can strip the coating off pipes and scratch chrome-plated fixtures. If you’re working on finished plumbing, wrap the object with electrical tape or use pliers with smooth jaw inserts to avoid visible damage.


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