Author: Kevin Publish Time: 2026-04-03 Origin: Jinan Jinshengxing Machinery Manufacture Co., Ltd.
When buyers search for a wood CNC router, one of the most common questions is whether they should choose a 6090 CNC router or a 1325 CNC router. Both are widely used in woodworking, signage, engraving, and custom fabrication, but they are designed for very different production needs.
In simple terms, a 6090 CNC router is better for small workpieces, sample making, customized crafts, educational use, and workshops with limited space, while a 1325 CNC router is better for full-sheet processing, cabinet making, furniture production, wooden doors, acrylic signs, and higher-volume manufacturing.
The right choice depends on your materials, product size, budget, workshop space, and production goals. In this article, we compare 6090 and 1325 CNC routers in detail to help you choose the right machine for your business.
You can also browse our full Wood CNC Router product category to compare available models and configurations.
The numbers in CNC router model names usually refer to the machine’s working area.
6090 CNC router generally means a working size of about 600 mm x 900 mm
1325 CNC router generally means a working size of about 1300 mm x 2500 mm
This difference in table size is the main reason these two machines serve different business types.
A 6090 machine is compact and space-saving, while a 1325 machine is the standard full-size option for many woodworking factories and panel-processing workshops.
If your business regularly processes full boards, the machine size alone may already make the decision easier. But for many buyers, there are several other factors to compare before placing an order.
The first and most obvious difference between a 6090 and a 1325 CNC router is the working area.
Suitable for:
Small wood pieces
Crafts
Sample development
Small decorative panels
Small acrylic signs
School or training use
Boutique workshops
Because of its compact size, the 6090 is practical when the products are relatively small and do not require full-sheet processing.
Suitable for:
Full MDF sheets
Plywood sheets
Cabinet panels
Furniture boards
Wooden doors
Wall panels
Acrylic boards
Advertising signage
A 1325 machine is generally considered the standard 4 x 8 CNC router for industrial woodworking and sign production. It allows operators to load large boards directly without pre-cutting them into smaller pieces.
For factories that process standard sheet materials, a 1325 wood CNC router usually offers much higher production efficiency.
The best machine depends on what you actually produce every day.
Small carvings
Wooden crafts
Customized gift items
Sample parts
Small signs
Engraved decorative products
Teaching or demonstration projects
A 6090 wood CNC router is often enough for businesses that do not need to process large boards.
Cabinets
Wardrobes
Furniture panels
Wooden doors
Decorative panels
Acrylic letters
Advertising boards
Large custom wood parts
A 1325 CNC router is a far better choice if your products depend on large panels, repeated batch production, or standard board sizes.
In most industrial woodworking applications, especially cabinets and furniture, the 1325 model is more common because it matches standard material dimensions and improves workflow efficiency.
Although both are wood CNC routers, their roles in production are quite different.
The 6090 is often chosen by:
Small workshops
Start-up businesses
Model makers
Schools
Craftsmen doing light production
Users with limited workshop space
Its biggest strengths are:
Lower initial investment
Small footprint
Easy placement
Suitable for detailed small-part work
However, it is not the ideal machine for large furniture panels or full board production.
The 1325 is often chosen by:
Cabinet manufacturers
Furniture factories
Wooden door workshops
Interior decoration businesses
Sign shops
Fabrication studios with larger workloads
Its biggest strengths are:
Handles standard 4 x 8 sheets
Better for mass production
Higher material utilization
Better for medium to large parts
More industrial production capability
This is why many buyers start by exploring our Wood CNC Router machines and then narrow their choice based on real application needs.
Productivity is one of the most important differences between these two machines.
A 6090 machine works well when:
Part sizes are small
Production volume is limited
Jobs are customized
Sample making is important
Material sheets are already pre-cut
For low-volume and flexible production, a 6090 can be a smart and economical solution.
A 1325 machine works better when:
Production volume is higher
Materials come in standard sheets
Parts are nested from full boards
Repetition and speed matter
Labor reduction is a priority
For cabinet shops and furniture factories, the 1325 machine can save significant time because operators do not need to cut large boards manually before machining.
If your business is moving toward batch production, a 1325 vacuum table CNC router is usually a more efficient long-term investment than a smaller model.
The machine you choose should fit the way your workshop already works—or the way you want it to work in the future.
A 6090 CNC router is more suitable if:
You mainly work with small materials
You create custom products one by one
Your materials are easy to load by hand
Workshop space is limited
You do not need full-sheet optimization
A 1325 CNC router is more suitable if:
You regularly purchase MDF or plywood in full sheets
You want to reduce manual board cutting
You need better nesting efficiency
You want more output per day
Your team already works on larger woodworking projects
For many businesses, workflow is more important than machine price alone. A lower-cost machine can still become expensive if it slows production or creates extra labor steps.
Workshop space is another practical factor that buyers must consider.
Advantages:
Compact structure
Easier to install in small shops
Better for limited floor space
More convenient for small workshops and training rooms
Considerations:
Requires more installation space
Better suited for industrial workshops
Needs enough room for sheet loading and unloading
Usually requires more production planning around material movement
If your workshop is small, the 6090 may be the only practical option at the moment. But if you have enough space and expect production growth, a 1325 machine may help avoid an early upgrade.
Before ordering, it is always wise to discuss workshop layout, power supply, material size, and loading method with your supplier. A professional wood CNC router manufacturer should be able to recommend a configuration that fits both your production needs and your workshop conditions.
Many buyers assume the smaller machine is automatically the better investment because the price is lower. That is not always true.
A 6090 usually has:
Lower machine price
Lower shipping cost
Lower space requirement
Lower entry barrier for small businesses
This makes it attractive for:
Start-ups
Educational institutions
Hobby-to-business transitions
Small custom workshops
A 1325 usually has:
Higher initial investment
Higher shipping cost
Larger workshop requirement
Greater long-term production value
This makes it attractive for:
Cabinet factories
Furniture manufacturers
Door processing shops
Sign businesses
Buyers planning to scale production
The right way to compare cost is not only to ask, “Which machine is cheaper?” but also, “Which machine creates more value for my production model?”
A smaller machine may cost less upfront, but if it cannot process your standard materials efficiently, it may cost more in labor and lost capacity over time.
Both 6090 and 1325 CNC routers can be suitable for beginners, but for different reasons.
Smaller and less intimidating
Lower investment risk
Easier to place in a small workshop
Good for learning machine operation and toolpath basics
If the actual business is cabinet making or furniture production
If the standard materials are full-sized panels
If future output is already expected to be higher
If buying twice would be more expensive than buying the right machine once
So the best beginner machine is not always the smallest one. It is the one that best matches the real business plan.
If a buyer is just experimenting with CNC production, a 6090 CNC router can be a smart starting point. If the buyer already knows the business will process full sheets of MDF and plywood, a 1325 woodworking CNC router is usually the more practical first purchase.
Here is a simple comparison by industry.
A 6090 is often more suitable because it is compact, easier to manage, and appropriate for demonstration and learning environments.
A 6090 may be the better choice if products are small and highly customized.
A 1325 is usually the better option because cabinet production commonly depends on full-sheet board processing.
A 1325 is generally more suitable due to larger material size and higher production demand.
A 1325 is usually the better choice because larger panel size is essential.
The answer depends on product size:
Small signs and craft letters: 6090 may be enough
Full acrylic sheets and larger boards: 1325 is usually better
It depends on part size and workflow. Some small studios can start with 6090, while others doing larger custom panels should choose 1325 or even a customized wood CNC router.
In most cases, no.
A 6090 CNC router cannot fully replace a 1325 machine if your business needs to process large panels regularly. It may still perform the cutting or engraving technically, but only after materials are manually cut down into smaller sizes. This adds labor, reduces efficiency, and increases handling time.
On the other hand, a 1325 CNC router can often do many of the jobs a 6090 can do, provided the machine is configured properly and the workshop has the space to use it efficiently.
This is why businesses planning for production growth often choose a 1325 from the beginning, especially if they already work with panel-based products.
Yes, for some buyers it can.
A 1325 machine may be unnecessarily large if:
You only process very small workpieces
Your production volume is low
Your workshop space is limited
Your budget is tight
Your business focuses on samples or education instead of factory production
In such cases, buying a 1325 may increase cost without creating enough extra value. This is why it is important to choose based on real needs, not only on the idea that bigger is always better.
If you need a quick decision guide, here is a simple summary.
You process small workpieces
You have limited workshop space
You are starting with a lower budget
You focus on crafts, samples, education, or small custom jobs
You do not need full-sheet processing
You process MDF, plywood, or acrylic in full sheets
You make cabinets, furniture, wooden doors, or large signs
You want better production efficiency
You need a machine for real factory use
You want room for future business growth
If your application is more complex, it may be worth discussing a customized CNC router solution with the supplier.
Before choosing between 6090 and 1325, ask yourself:
What size are my materials?
What size are my finished products?
Do I buy full sheets or small pieces?
Do I need batch production or only customized work?
How much workshop space do I have?
What is my budget now?
Will I likely need a larger machine within one or two years?
Am I buying for learning, for small business use, or for industrial production?
These questions usually make the answer much clearer.
So, which one should you buy: a 6090 CNC router or a 1325 CNC router?
If your business focuses on small parts, limited-space workshops, sample making, or lower-volume custom work, a 6090 CNC router is often the better choice.
If your business focuses on cabinets, furniture, wooden doors, acrylic sheets, sign panels, and full-board processing, a 1325 CNC router is usually the better choice.
The most important thing is to match the machine to your actual workflow. A smaller machine is not always more economical, and a larger machine is not always more practical. The best choice is the one that fits your materials, products, production goals, and growth plan.
If you are still comparing models, you can browse our Wood CNC Router category page or contact us for a recommendation based on your material size, application, and budget.
Not sure whether a 6090 or 1325 CNC router is right for your business?
Send us your material size, product type, and daily production needs, and we will recommend a suitable model.
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