Diamond Burs vs Tungsten Carbide Burs: Which Dental Bur Should You Use?
One of the biggest sources of confusion for newly qualified dentists is deciding whether to use a diamond bur or a tungsten carbide bur.
Although both are designed to remove tooth structure and restorative materials, they cut in completely different ways.
How Diamond Burs Work
Diamond burs remove material through abrasion.
Thousands of diamond particles are bonded to the surface of the bur.
As the bur rotates, the diamonds grind away enamel, dentine or restorative material.
Advantages:
- Excellent enamel cutting
- Ideal for crown preparation
- Efficient ceramic reduction
- Long lifespan
- Predictable preparation geometry
Best used for:
- Crown preparations
- Veneer preparations
- Ceramic adjustments
- Zirconia cutting
How Carbide Burs Work
Carbide burs cut using blades.
Rather than grinding material away, they slice through it.
Advantages:
- Faster dentine cutting
- Less heat generation
- Excellent caries removal
- Smooth composite finishing
- Efficient amalgam removal
Best used for:
- Cavity preparation
- Composite finishing
- Crown removal
- Endodontic access
- Surgical procedures
Which Produces a Better Surface Finish?
For crown preparations:
Diamond burs produce superior preparation geometry.
For composite restorations:
Carbide finishers generally produce smoother surfaces.
A 30-blade carbide finishing bur can produce a surface finish approaching 0.3 microns, significantly smoother than most finishing diamonds.
The Ideal Combination
Most experienced restorative dentists use both:
Diamond burs for preparation.
Carbide burs for finishing.
This provides the best balance between cutting efficiency and restoration quality.
Understanding when to use each bur is one of the fastest ways to improve restorative outcomes.



