2021 test11 productsHand Tools

Which Tape Measure Brand Wins?

We compared 11 tape measure options head to head. DeWalt came out on top. See the measured results, the runner-up, the budget pick, and a link to the full test video.

The verdict
Winner

DeWalt

Price shown in test: $33

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Runner-up

Craftsman

Price shown in test: $25

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Budget pick

Kobalt

Price shown in test: $15

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The measured results

Every number below is read straight from the test. Scroll sideways to see all measurements. Products are listed in the order they finished.

ProductStand-out/reach testAbrasion resistance (60 passes, 800 grit)Retraction speed before/after 5 min in sand/sawdust/screwsMagnet strengthBelt clip lifting forceBelt clip design ratingBlade lock strengthImpact/drop resistance (12 ft drop with 1 lb PVC pipe attached)
1DeWalt$33claims 13 ft (156 in) stand out, measured 154.5 in (1.5 in short), 2nd place in the top-5 recapno fading, looks as good as new; rated a perfect 5 out of 5 (tied with Klein Tools, Stanley, Craftsman)1.16 seconds both times before, unchanged at 1.16 seconds after exposure; best performer in this test, maintained its retraction speeddoes not have a magnetic end hook, not tested14.6 lb to remove from belt, 3rd place in the top-5 recapdescribed as having the best belt clip design of all brands tested12.4 lb, 1st placeheld up really well, only a few scratches, works just fine
2Craftsman$25claims 156 in stand out (192 in reach), measured 154 in (2 in short of rating), 3rd place in the top-5 recapmoved across the sandpaper as freely as Stanley and Klein Tools, no visible fading; rated a perfect 5 out of 51.6 seconds both times before (same as Stanley), slowed to 1.97 seconds afterone magnet, held the full 25 ft extension, pull force of 4.8 lb, the strongest magnet of any brand tested8.2 lb to remove from belt, 5th place in the top-5 recap4 out of 57.8 lb, 3rd placestill functions properly, but the hook has been bent
3Stanley FatMax$23claims 132 in stand out (168 in / 14 ft reach), measured 127.5 in (came up short), 5th place in the top-5 recapheld up very well, looks as good as new; rated a perfect 5 out of 51.6 seconds both times before, slowed slightly to 1.76 seconds after (about 9 percent loss per the narrator's recap)one magnet, held the full 25 ft extension, pull force of 4 lb, 2nd place6 lb to remove from belt, not in the top-5 recap4 out of 5not given a specific figure in the blade lock strength recap (only DeWalt, Milwaukee, Craftsman, Kobalt, Komelon and Klein Tools were given explicit values)not explicitly named in this section of the transcript; an unattributed sentence ('just a few scratches on the outside of the tape measure') appears between the Klein Tools and Craftsman results and likely describes Stanley's outcome with the brand name dropped by the caption process, but this is not certain
4Kobalt$1592 in, not in the named top-5 recap (would rank roughly 7th among all 11 brands by raw value)numbers slightly faded but still very easy to read; rated 4 out of 5, the only brand besides the four perfect-5 brands to get an explicit rating0.85 seconds both times before, slowed only slightly to 0.9 seconds after; tied for 2nd place with Lufkin, losing about 6 percent of original speedjust one large magnet in the center, held the full 25 ft extension, pull force of 3 lb, 4th place21.8 lb to remove from belt, the strongest hold of any brand tested, 1st place4 out of 54.2 lb, 4th placecase broken and hook bent from the impact
5Klein Tools$23claims 156 in stand out (13 ft), measured 167.5 in, better than advertised and the best of all 11 brands, 1st placeslid across the sandpaper effortlessly with no apparent fading; rated a perfect 5 out of 51 second both times before, slowed noticeably to 1.87 seconds afterone magnet, held the full 25 ft extension, pull force of 3.8 lb, 3rd place5.8 lb to remove from belt, not in the top-5 recap4 out of 53.6 lb, tied for 5th/6th place with Komelonheld up fairly well, but the hook became bent
6Milwaukee$28claims only 108 in stand out, measured 121 in, better than advertised, not in the named top-5 recapdid not hold up very well, quite a bit of fading, some numbers very difficult to read; described among the more expensive brands that underperformed on this test1.2 seconds average before, slightly faster than Lufkin; sand and dust got in through the finger-stop hole and 'really hurt' the Milwaukee, though no specific after-exposure number was spokenone magnet, held the full 25 ft extension, but pull force was only 2 lb despite being a one-magnet design, weakest of the one-magnet brands8 lb to remove from belt, not in the top-5 recap4 out of 59.8 lb, 2nd placeheld up really well, only a few abrasions, no damage
7Lufkin$25claims 144 in stand out (180 in reach), measured 132 in (12 in short), 4th place in the top-5 recapquite a bit of damage, wore right through the paint in several areas; the coating is described as not as good as some of the other brands1.4 seconds before, a little faster than Craftsman and Stanley, only slightly slowed to 1.5 seconds after; tied for 2nd place with Kobalt, losing about 6 percent of original speedheld the full 25 ft extension (one of the brands with magnets that held), not given a specific pull-force figure in the recap11.4 lb to remove from belt, 4th place in the top-5 recap4 out of 5not given a specific figure in the blade lock strength recapheld up fairly well, but the hook is bent
8Kutir$16claims 84 in stand out, measured 90.5 in, better than advertised, not in the named top-5 recapa lot of resistance/damage moving across the sandpaper, but not as bad as Ming Haobaseline value ambiguous (transcript reads 'The The brand averaged 1.18 seconds' immediately after the Komelon paragraph, likely a caption garble that belongs to Kutir rather than Komelon); after exposure, sand and dirt caused significant problems and the tape stopped around 5 ft short of fully retracting both times, one of the brands that failed to fully retracttwo magnets, held the full 25 ft extension (sometimes requiring more than one attempt), pull force of 2.6 lb, 5th place4.8 lb to remove from belt, not in the top-5 recapnot given a specific rating; described as having a poorly designed belt clip with not enough gap between the leading edge and the tape measure bodynot given a specific figure in the blade lock strength recapblade lock button badly damaged, hook bent
9Komelon$1582.5 in, the lowest of all 11 brands, not in the named top-5 recapdid better than Ming Hao, but not as good as Bauer1.16 seconds both times before, slowed to 1.36 seconds after; recap states a 15 percent loss (raw figures given imply closer to 17 percent, kept both as stated rather than reconciled)two magnets, held the full 25 ft extension, maxed out at 1.6 lb pull force, one of the weaker magnets tested3.6 lb to remove from belt, the weakest hold of any brand testednot given a specific rating in this section3.6 lb, tied for 5th/6th place with Klein Toolsheld up just fine, only a few scratches on the outside
10Ming Hao$1089 in, took the lead from Bauer at that point in the video, not in the named top-5 recapnumbers completely worn off after only 10 passes; a lot of damage compared to Bauer, did not hold up well at all, the worst performer of the 11averaged 1.05 seconds before, took nearly twice as long after exposure and stopped almost 8 in short of fully retracting, one of the brands that failed to fully retracttwo-magnet setup, only able to hold for 17 ft 3 in of the full 25 ft extension (failed to hold the full length); did not have enough strength to move the pull-force scale off zero6.2 lb to remove from beltnot given a specific rating in this sectionnot given a specific figure in the blade lock strength recapblade lock button broken
11Bauer$784 in (about 7 ft), thinnest blade of all brands tested at 0.15 mm, not in the named top-5 recapstill in great shape after 10 passes; after all 60 passes, did fairly well with only a couple of worn-through areas, numbers still very readable0.85 seconds both times before, slowed to 1.1 seconds afterno magnet mentioned or tested (like DeWalt)14.8 lb to remove from belt, 2nd place in the top-5 recapnot given a specific numeric rating; described as having a small bump-out design that keeps the tape measure secure unless pulled outwardnot given a specific figure in the blade lock strength recapno visible surface damage, but the blade lock no longer works after the drop

How it was tested

  • stand-out/reach: blade extended at a fixed 16.5 degree angle with a 10in bearing applying downward pressure, maximum extension before buckling measured
  • abrasion resistance: 60 passes across 800 grit wet sandpaper wrapped on a 1in PVC pipe under 10 lb of pressure, rated on a subjective 1-5 scale
  • retraction speed: 12 ft recoil time measured before and after 5 minutes tumbling inside an ammo can with sawdust, sand, and drywall screws
  • magnet strength: ability to hold the extended blade to half inch by 3in mild steel across the full 25ft, plus measured pull force in lb before detaching
  • accuracy: hook slide distance checked against the expected first-inch measurement
  • belt clip: subjective 1-5 design rating plus lifting force in lb required to remove the tape measure from an inch-and-a-half belt
  • blade lock strength: force in lb required to break the blade lock
  • impact/drop resistance: dropped from 12 ft with a 1 lb PVC pipe attached to direct impact to the most vulnerable part of the tape measure

The DeWalt really surprised me with just how good it is, easily dominating the showdown.

From the test video verdict.
Data notes and caveats

11 brands tested: Bauer, Ming Hao (transcript spells it 'Ming Hou' throughout), Kobalt, Komelon, Kutir (transcript spells it 'Kuter' throughout), Klein Tools, Stanley FatMax, Craftsman, Lufkin, Milwaukee, and DeWalt; all resolved against the video description's product list. Closing verdict names four distinct picks rather than a single strict ranking: DeWalt as the overall winner (most expensive, no magnet), Craftsman as the best pick if a magnet is required, Stanley FatMax as a great all-around choice, and Kobalt as the best value/budget pick; winner/runnerUp/budgetPick fields capture the first, second, and fourth of these, with Stanley's 'great all-around' callout preserved here since the schema has no fourth slot. Two brands (Bauer, DeWalt) have no magnet and were excluded from the magnet strength test. The impact/drop resistance section of the transcript never names Stanley FatMax directly; an orphaned sentence ('just a few scratches on the outside of the tape measure') sits between the Klein Tools and Craftsman results and most likely describes Stanley's outcome with the brand name dropped by the caption process, but this is flagged rather than treated as certain. A likely caption garble ('The The brand averaged 1.18 seconds') appears between the Komelon and Kutir retraction-speed results and is tentatively attributed to Kutir's pre-test baseline. Komelon's retraction-speed loss is recapped as 15 percent, but the raw before/after figures given (1.16 to 1.36 seconds) work out closer to 17 percent; both numbers kept as stated rather than reconciled. Only the top five results are explicitly named in several test recaps (stand-out, retraction speed, belt clip force, blade lock strength), so several brands lack an explicit final-rank position even though their raw measurements are recorded above.

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