The global guitar market reached USD 10.30 billion in 2022 and is projected to hit USD 18.44 billion by 2030, growing at a 7.7% CAGR. Electric guitars now command approximately 60% of the overall guitar market share, with the electric guitar segment projected to reach $5.04 billion in 2025. CNC machining has become the tool of choice for guitar builders who need intricate detail, unsurpassed accuracy, and repeatability in parts production.
TwoTrees CNC router machines like the TTC450 PRO make professional guitar building accessible to home luthiers without requiring industrial workshop space or $10,000+ equipment investments.
What is Guitar Making?
Guitar making (luthiery) is the craft of building musical instruments, involving precision carving of guitar bodies, necks, and fingerboards. Modern luthiers use CNC routers to achieve micron-level accuracy that hand tools alone cannot consistently deliver.
The Pain Points Every DIY Luthier Faces
1. Traditional woodworking demands expensive master-level skills
Carving a guitar body by hand requires years of apprenticeship with a master luthier. Even experienced woodworkers struggle with the complex curves, perfect symmetry, and precise thickness variations that define professional-quality instruments. A single mistake in neck angle or body contour can render months of work unusable.
2. Industrial CNC machines cost $8,000–$12,000+ and need industrial space
When DIY builders research CNC options, they discover that tabletop machines under $8,000 "will give you more headaches and most likely taking more time and effort than a hand router and some jigs". Professional-grade CNC routers require 400V power, massive footprints (60+ sq ft), and dust collection systems that overwhelm home workshops.
3. Custom guitar designs are nearly impossible without digital tools
Traditional luthiery locks builders into established templates. Want a 27-inch scale neck instead of 25.5"? A split-color body with intricate inlays? A sculpted top that defies standard contours? Hand tools make these modifications exponentially difficult. Most hobby luthiers abandon custom ideas because the risk outweighs the reward.
4. Mass production of identical parts is impractical for small workshops
Even successful custom builders struggle to produce consistent necks or bodies when demand grows. Hand-carved parts vary subtly, making setup adjustments inconsistent across instruments. This unpredictability limits how many guitars a single luthier can sell while maintaining quality.
"CNC machining has become the tool of choice for guitar builders and luthiers to take advantage of parts production where intricate detail, unsurpassed accuracy and repeatability are required."
TwoTrees CNC vs. Traditional Guitar Making Methods
Core Capabilities That Transform Guitar Building
Precision Body Carving with Multi-Axis Accuracy
The TTC450 PRO's 4th axis module enables true 3D contouring for sculpted guitar tops, f-holes, and ergonomic arm rests. TwoTrees CNC Router Laser Combos feature swappable laser modules for total material flexibility, engraving wood, leather, and stainless steel with the Diode laser while the Infrared laser cuts all metals.
Neck and Fingerboard Precision at Micron Level
Guitar necks require exact thickness gradients, perfect fret slot alignment, and precise neck-angle geometry. CNC routers carve necks with "micron-level precision, turning each pattern into an epic work of art on wood". The TTC3018 Pro is "the best CNC router machine for beginners," ideal for entry-level neck carving.
Inlay Work and Branding Without Specialized Tools
Laser engraving modules enable intricate fretboard inlays, custom logo branding, and decorative body patterns. The TTS-55 Pro diode laser engraver delivers "fast and simple high-precision laser engraving" for detailed work. Infrared laser capabilities cut through stainless steel for metallic inlay materials impossible with traditional methods.
Real Projects: What Luthiers Are Creating
"I made this in honor of my wife. I would like to show my love and respect for her..." — István Herbák, using TwoTrees CNC for custom guitar body
"CNC TTC 6050 de la marca TwoTrees, funciona bastante bien, sencilla de operar y tr..." — woodchoice.mx testing guitar components
"When you don't have CNC, then TTS-20 pro became CNC. For 5 hours of engraving at a..." — Todor Ivanov on laser engraving guitar parts
Expand Your Workshop: TwoTrees Products for Complete Guitar Building
Beyond body and neck carving, building a guitar requires multiple precision operations. TwoTrees offers a complete ecosystem:
The TTC6050 CNC Router Machine handles large workpieces like full guitar bodies with 800W spindle power and 4th axis capability for professional-grade results. For fretboard inlays and custom branding, the TS2-20W Laser Engraver provides "best deal for professional laser engraver" precision.
Complete packages like the TTC450 PRO + TC20 Laser Module + 500W Motor + 4th Axis Module + Vacuum Cleaner + End Mills give you everything needed for multi-material guitar building in one investment. The vacuum cleaner M1 maintains clean working conditions during wood carving, while end mills provide specialized cutting tools for different guitar materials.
For wood slab flattening before body carving, the RS-200 Router Sled delivers "precision wood slab flattening system for large workpieces". The 1000W air-cooled spindle motor provides "24000RPM speed - air-cooled reliability" for sustained carving sessions.
How to Make Your First Guitar Body with TwoTrees CNC (6 Steps)
Step 1: Design Your Guitar in CAD Software
Use free software like Fusion 360, SketchUp, or Essential Guitar Building templates from guitarbuilding.org to create your body design. Export as STL or SVG files compatible with TwoTrees CNC controllers. Include 3D contours for arm rests, belly cuts, and sculpted tops.
Step 2: Prepare Your Wood and Machine
Select solid wood (mahogany, ash, alder) or MDF for practice. Mount your material securely to the CNC bed using clamps or adhesive tape. Install the appropriate end mill (typically 1/4" compression bit for wood). Connect the vacuum cleaner M1 for dust extraction.
Step 3: Load Design and Set Cutting Parameters
Import your CAD file into TwoTrees CNC control software. Set cutting depth (usually 0.5–1mm per pass for wood), feed rate (800–1200mm/min), and spindle speed (12000–18000 RPM for wood). Run a test carve on scrap material first.
Step 4: Execute the Body Carve
Start the CNC program and monitor the first few minutes. The TTC450 PRO's industrial-grade stability ensures "powerful motor for efficient processing" during lengthy carving sessions. Typical guitar body carving takes 2–4 hours depending on contour complexity.
Step 5: Post-Processing and Sanding
Remove the carved body from the CNC bed. Sand surfaces to 220-grit smoothness, fill any imperfections with wood filler, and round edges manually. The CNC provides 95% of the work; hand sanding adds the final 5% of refinement.
Step 6: Engrave Inlays and Branding
Switch to the laser module (TC20 or TTS-55 Pro) for fretboard inlays, backplate branding, or decorative body patterns. Diode laser engraves wood and stainless steel; infrared laser cuts metals for metallic inlays.
Use Scenarios: Where TwoTrees CNC Outperforms Alternatives
Scenario 1: Custom Electric Guitar for Personal Style
Traditional approach: Buy a pre-made kit guitar with limited color/shape options. Custom orders from boutique builders cost $3,000–$8,000 and take 6–12 months.
With TwoTrees CNC: Design a 27" scale, split-color body with custom inlays in 3 days. Carve from $200 wood stock. Total cost: $800–$1,200 including hardware. You control every detail from scale length to contour depth.
Scenario 2: Teaching Guitar Building in Schools
Traditional approach: Hand-tool kits require 40+ hours per student with inconsistent results. Safety concerns limit younger students' participation.
With TwoTrees CNC: The LuthierMax Series (used by Fender® Guitars engineers) was designed "to make this machine student friendly and robust with fixtures built into the table to make it easy to make your own guitar necks and bodies". The TTC3018 is "perfect for entry-level hobbyist CNC" in educational settings. Students produce professional-quality instruments in 8–12 hours with minimal safety risks.
Scenario 3: Small-Batch Production for Local Music Stores
Traditional approach: Hand-carving 10 identical guitars takes 400+ hours with noticeable variations between instruments. Setup adjustments differ per guitar.
With TwoTrees CNC: Program one perfect neck/body design, then produce 10 identical copies in 40 hours total. Every guitar has identical geometry, requiring consistent setup. The TTC450 Ultra is the "best value choice for a reliable workhorse" for small production runs.
FAQ: Guitar Making with CNC Machines
What CNC machine size is best for guitar making?
A 450mm × 450mm work area (like the TTC450 PRO) handles standard electric guitar bodies (approx. 400mm × 300mm) comfortably. For larger acoustic bodies or multiple parts, the TTC6050 (600mm × 500mm) provides extra space.
Can I make both electric and acoustic guitar bodies with the same CNC?
Yes. CNC routers carve solid wood for electric bodies and laminate tops for acoustics. The dual-laser system transforms your machine into "the ultimate CNC router and laser engraver hybrid for professional workshops" handling wood, metal, and acrylic.
What spindle power do I need for guitar wood carving?
750W–1000W is ideal. The 1000W air-cooled spindle delivers "24000RPM speed - air-cooled reliability" for sustained carving without overheating. Lower power (500W) works for MDF practice but may struggle with hardwoods.
How accurate are TwoTrees CNC machines for fret slot placement?
TwoTrees CNC achieves ±0.01mm precision, far exceeding the ±0.5mm tolerance of hand-drilled fret slots. This "micron-level precision" ensures perfect fret alignment for optimal playability.
Do I need the 4th axis for guitar neck carving?
The 4th axis enables true 3D contouring for sculpted neck backs and ergonomic curves. For basic straightbacks, you can carve without it. However, the TTC450 PRO + 4th Axis package is "an excellent choice for CNC users with multiple needs" including professional neck shaping.
Can beginners make playable guitars with entry-level CNC machines?
Yes. The TTC3018 Pro is "the best CNC router machine for beginners" and produces playable instruments with proper design and setup. Start with simple slab-body electric designs before attempting complex contours.
Conclusion
Guitar making has evolved from exclusive master-luthier craftsmanship to accessible DIY fabrication. CNC routers eliminate the 5-year skill barrier while delivering precision that hand tools cannot match. TwoTrees machines bridge the gap between $500 hand-tool kits and $10,000 industrial CNCs, offering professional results at home-workshop prices.
Start Building Your First Guitar Today
TwoTrees has championed a "fully free design lifestyle" since 2017, bringing safe CNC and laser technology to every creator. Choose the TTC450 PRO for your guitar building journey and unleash creativity that was previously impossible.
Sources
Precedence Research — CNC Woodworking Machines Market 2025
Guitar-Muse — Electric Guitar Market Boom 2025
Business Research Insights — Guitar Market 2026-2035
Grand View Research — Guitar Market Size 2030
Industrial CNC — CNC Routers for Guitar Building
Forest Scientific — Guitar Making CNC LuthierMax
Style CNC — CNC Router for Guitar Making
TwoTrees — About Us Brand History