Cut List Optimizer

How to Create an Efficient MDF Panel Cutting Plan: A Step-by-Step Tutorial

How to Create an Efficient MDF Panel Cutting Plan: A Step-by-Step Tutorial

Introduction

Building furniture from MDF panels is one of the most rewarding DIY and professional woodworking projects — but it can quickly turn into a costly mess without a proper MDF panel cutting plan. Wasted offcuts, incorrect dimensions, and unnecessary trips to the hardware store are all consequences of skipping this crucial step. Whether you’re crafting a TV unit for your living room or manufacturing cabinetry at scale, learning how to create an optimized cutting layout saves you both money and time. This step-by-step tutorial walks you through the entire process, from measuring your parts to interpreting the final cut diagram, using a concrete example any woodworker can follow.


Step 1 — Define Your Project and List Every Part

Every good cutting plan starts on paper (or a spreadsheet), not in the workshop. For this tutorial, we’ll build a simple wall-mounted TV unit with the following components:

  • 2 side panels: 600 × 400 mm
  • 1 top panel: 1200 × 400 mm
  • 1 bottom panel: 1200 × 400 mm
  • 3 internal shelves: 1160 × 380 mm
  • 1 back panel: 1200 × 600 mm
  • Before entering anything into software, list every piece with its exact dimensions (width × height). Be precise — even a 5 mm error compounds across a full sheet. Also note the quantity of each part if you’re making multiples.

    At this stage, decide on your stock panel size. Standard MDF sheets typically come in 2440 × 1220 mm (8×4 feet) or 2070 × 1200 mm for European markets. Choose the format available at your local supplier.


    Step 2 — Enter Your Stock Panels and Parts in Offcut

    Now open the free online cutting optimizer at app.offcut.tools. The interface is divided into two main sections: Stock Panels on the left and Parts to Cut on the right.

    In the Stock Panels section:
    Enter the dimensions of your MDF sheet — for example, 2440 mm wide × 1220 mm tall. If you have multiple sheets available, you can add them all. Offcut will use them in the most efficient order.

    In the Parts to Cut section:
    Add each piece from your list, one by one. For each part, enter the width, height, and quantity. For our TV unit, that means entering the two side panels as “400 × 600, qty: 2”, the top and bottom as “1200 × 400, qty: 2”, and so on.

    Don’t forget the kerf. The kerf is the width of material removed by the saw blade — typically 3 to 4 mm for a circular saw or track saw. Offcut lets you set this value in the settings panel. Skipping this step leads to parts that are systematically too short.

    Once everything is entered, click “Optimize”. The algorithm instantly calculates the most efficient arrangement of all your parts across the available sheets.


    Step 3 — Read and Understand the Generated Cutting Layout

    The result appears as a visual cutting diagram — a color-coded representation of your MDF sheet, showing exactly where each piece should be cut. Each rectangle is labeled with the part name and dimensions you entered.

    Here’s what to look at first:

  • Number of sheets used: Offcut tells you how many full MDF panels you need. For our TV unit, a single 2440 × 1220 mm sheet should be sufficient, depending on nesting efficiency.
  • Cut sequence: The diagram shows horizontal and vertical cut lines. In practice, always make your longest cuts first (ripping the sheet to width), then crosscut into individual pieces. This keeps the material stable and reduces handling errors.
  • Color coding: Each color corresponds to a different part. Offcut distinguishes parts visually so you can track them on the sheet before cutting.
  • Print the plan or export it as PDF, SVG, or DXF directly from the interface. Stick a printed copy on your workbench — it’s your roadmap for the next hour of work.


    Step 4 — Interpret the Waste Statistics

    One of the most underused features of any cut list software is the waste statistics panel. In Offcut, after optimization, you’ll see a summary showing:

    Metric Value (example)
    Total panel area used 2.97 m²
    Parts area 2.41 m²
    Waste (offcuts) 0.56 m²
    Efficiency rate 81.1%

    An efficiency rate above 80% is generally considered good for complex cuts. Below 70%, it’s worth reconsidering your part list — perhaps some pieces can be slightly resized, or a different stock panel format would yield better results.

    The offcut areas shown in grey on the diagram aren’t just waste — they’re potential future parts. Offcut’s interface lets you visualize which remnants are large enough to be stored and reused for another project, actively helping you reduce wood waste over time.


    Step 5 — Validate, Adjust, and Export Your Final Plan

    Before you pick up the saw, take one more pass through your plan. Check that every piece from your original list appears on the diagram. Verify that no two parts overlap. Confirm the blade kerf value matches your actual saw.

    If something looks off — a part is missing, or the waste rate seems unusually high — go back and adjust. You might try:

  • Rotating certain pieces (Offcut handles rotation automatically, but you can override it)
  • Splitting the cut list across two different sheet sizes
  • Combining this project’s parts with a future project to use a full sheet more efficiently
  • Once you’re satisfied, export the plan. Offcut supports PDF, DXF, SVG, and PNG exports, making it compatible with workshop printers, CNC machines, and design software alike. You can also export your parts list as a CSV for your records or for ordering materials from a supplier.

    This is the moment where thorough planning pays off — you step into the workshop with complete clarity, zero guesswork, and a measurable reduction in wasted material.


    Practical Tips for MDF-Specific Cutting

    MDF (Medium-Density Fibreboard) has no grain direction, which is a major advantage in cut planning — you can rotate parts freely without visual consequence. This increases nesting flexibility and typically yields better efficiency rates than plywood or solid wood.

    However, MDF is heavy and produces significant fine dust when cut. Always use a sharp blade with a high tooth count (60+ teeth for clean edges), cut with adequate dust extraction, and support large panels properly to avoid sagging mid-cut.

    MDF Thickness Common Use Notes
    9 mm Cabinet backs, light panels Flexible, lightweight
    16 mm Shelves, furniture carcasses Most common for furniture
    25 mm Worktops, heavy-duty shelving Heavy; use two-person handling

    For painted finishes, always prime MDF edges separately — they absorb paint differently than the face, and a sealed edge makes finishing far easier.


    Conclusion

    Creating a detailed MDF panel cutting plan is not an optional step reserved for professionals — it’s the single most effective thing any woodworker can do to save money, reduce waste, and work more confidently. The process is straightforward: list your parts, enter them into an optimizer, read the layout, check the waste statistics, and export. With a concrete project like the TV unit above, you can see exactly how each step connects.

    If you haven’t tried it yet, head over to Offcut and build your first cutting plan in under five minutes. The tool is free, requires no installation, and works directly in your browser — on desktop, tablet, or phone. Your saw and your wallet will both thank you.



    Offcut tools to go further

    Glossary

    Cutting plan / layout
    Optimisation diagram showing how to cut several parts from one or more standard panels while minimising waste.
    Kerf (saw blade width)
    Width of material removed by the saw blade. Typically 3 to 4 mm for a circular saw; must be subtracted from each part in the calculation.
    Cutting optimisation
    Algorithm (MaxRects, Guillotine, First-Fit…) that computes the optimal layout of parts to minimise material loss and panel count.
    Offcut
    Leftover panel piece after cutting. An offcut larger than 30 × 30 cm is usually reusable for another project.
    Grain / veneer direction
    Orientation of the wood fibres or surface pattern on a panel. Must be respected on visible parts (fronts, tops) for a consistent finish.

    Questions fréquentes

    What is a cutting plan for MDF panels?

    A cutting plan (also called a cut list or panel layout) is a diagram showing how to arrange and cut individual parts from a full sheet of material, such as MDF. It specifies the position, dimensions, and order of each cut, minimizing waste and avoiding errors. A good cutting plan is generated using optimization software that calculates the most efficient nesting of your parts across available stock panels.

    Can I use Offcut for free to optimize my MDF cuts?

    Yes. Offcut (app.offcut.tools) is a free online cut optimizer that requires no account or installation. Simply enter your stock panel dimensions and the list of parts you need, and the tool instantly generates an optimized cutting layout with waste statistics. Export options (PDF, DXF, SVG, PNG) are available directly from the interface.

    What blade kerf should I use when planning MDF cuts?

    For most circular saws and track saws, a kerf of 3 mm is standard. Table saws with thin-kerf blades may cut as little as 2.5 mm. Always measure your actual blade and enter the correct value in your cut optimizer — ignoring the kerf causes every piece to come out slightly short, which compounds across a full sheet.

    How do I reduce MDF waste when cutting panels?

    The most effective strategy is to use a cut optimization tool that automatically nests your parts as tightly as possible. Beyond that: group parts from different projects onto the same sheet, allow part rotation when grain direction doesn’t matter (MDF has none), and save large offcuts for future use. An efficiency rate above 80% is a realistic and achievable target.

    Is MDF better than plywood for furniture cutting plans?

    For cut plan optimization specifically, MDF offers an advantage: it has no grain direction, so parts can be freely rotated to achieve tighter nesting. Plywood may require grain alignment for aesthetics or structural reasons, which restricts rotation and typically results in more waste. For furniture carcasses, shelves, and painted pieces, MDF is often the more cost-efficient choice when using an optimizer.

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