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Makita Battery to DeWalt Tool Adapter: Does It Work?

Updated: June 15, 2026 | Garage Almanac

The Short Answer

Yes. A third-party adapter lets a Makita 18V LXT battery power a DeWalt 20V MAX tool. It drives the tool only — you cannot charge through it, and it is not advised for high-draw tools.

BatteryMakita 18V LXT
ToolDeWalt 20V MAX
Adapter available?Yes — third-party
Charging through adapter?No — tool use only
Typical price≈ $16
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Plenty of people build a tool collection around one battery system, then pick up a Makita for a specific job without wanting to start a second battery collection. If your packs are Makita 18V LXT and the tool you want to run is DeWalt 20V MAX, a small third-party adapter is the bridge. It clamps onto your Makita pack and presents a DeWalt-shaped mount to the tool, so the tool draws power from the Makita cells without any rewiring.

Why the voltage already lines up
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The two platforms are a clean electrical match, which is the part that makes this work at all. DeWalt markets its packs as “20V MAX,” but that 20 is the no-load peak reading. The nominal voltage, measured under load, is 18V, the same figure Makita uses for its 18V LXT line. Both packs are built on the same lithium-ion chemistry, a string of cells in standard packs. A DeWalt 20V MAX tool expects roughly 18V at its terminals and that is what a Makita pack delivers, so the motor and electronics see a supply they are designed for.

The only thing standing between the two is the physical foot. Makita 18V LXT uses a slide-style mount; DeWalt 20V MAX uses a rail-and-slide pack. They cannot click together directly because the shapes and the terminal positions differ. The adapter exists purely to translate one mechanical interface into the other and to route the positive, negative, and sense terminals across to the right contacts.

What the adapter does not do
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An adapter is a tool-use bridge and nothing more. You cannot charge a Makita battery through it. There is no path for a charger to talk to the pack’s battery-management system across the adapter, and forcing the issue risks the pack. The routine is simple: run the DeWalt tool from the Makita pack, then pull the pack off the adapter and charge it on its own Makita charger.

It also sits outside both manufacturers’ blessing. Neither Makita nor DeWalt endorses cross-brand adapters, and using one can void the warranty on the tool you put it on. That is a real consideration if the DeWalt tool is new and expensive. For an older tool or a cheap one, the warranty point matters less.

The bigger practical limit is heat. An adapter adds a set of contact junctions between the cells and the motor, and every junction has a little resistance. On a drill, an impact driver, a light, or a small saw, the current is low enough that this never becomes a problem. On a high-draw tool such as a large circular saw or a high-torque impact wrench, sustained current can warm the adapter contacts faster than they shed heat. Keep adapters off those tools and use a native DeWalt pack instead.

What it costs you in performance
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Even on a tool the adapter handles comfortably, expect a small tax. The extra contact resistance shaves a little off peak power and can trip the tool’s low-voltage cutout slightly earlier under heavy load than a native pack would. For most jobs you will not notice. If you are pushing a tool to its limit, you will feel the difference, which is another reason the adapter suits light and medium work rather than the heaviest cuts.

The adapter also changes the tool’s balance. It stacks the Makita pack in a position that differs from where a native DeWalt pack would normally sit, adding height and a bit of weight at the base. In a tight battery well or a recessed grip the combined height can foul, and the tool may not stand upright on its battery the way it used to. None of this is a dealbreaker for occasional use, but it is worth a test fit before you rely on the setup for a long session overhead or in a cramped space.

Choosing an adapter that fits
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The market for these is full of near-identical housings sold under different names, so the choice comes down to fit and contact quality rather than brand. The MT20DL adapter for Makita 18V LXT batteries to DeWalt tools is a representative example at around 16 dollars. When you compare listings, check three things: that the seller explicitly lists Makita 18V on the battery side and DeWalt 20V MAX on the tool side (direction matters, the reverse adapter is a different part), that the housing has a positive latch so the pack does not wobble loose under vibration, and that recent buyer photos show clean, solid terminal blades rather than thin stamped strips.

Skip any listing that claims you can charge through it or that markets itself for heavy saws and large impact wrenches. Those claims are either wrong or a sign the seller does not understand the product, and both are reasons to buy elsewhere.

When it is worth it, and when to just buy the pack
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For someone who already owns Makita 18V LXT batteries and wants to run a handful of DeWalt tools now and then, a 16-dollar adapter is a sensible way to avoid buying into a second battery system. It earns its keep on drills, drivers, lights, inflators, and similar low-to-medium-draw tools.

If you are leaning hard on a demanding DeWalt tool every day, or you depend on that tool for work, the runtime penalty, the warranty question, and the heat ceiling all point the other way. At that point the cost of a genuine DeWalt pack buys you full performance, charging support, and the manufacturer’s backing, which is the better trade for a tool you use constantly.

Third-party adapter

MT20DL Adapter for Makita 18V LXT Battery to DeWalt 18/20V Tools

Typically around $16. Prices and listings change — check current availability.

Check price on Amazon

As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. This does not change the price you pay.

Before you buy

Tool-use only; no charging.

Frequently asked questions

Does a Makita battery fit a DeWalt tool? +
Yes. A third-party adapter lets a Makita 18V LXT battery power a DeWalt 20V MAX tool. It drives the tool only — you cannot charge through it, and it is not advised for high-draw tools.
Can you charge a Makita battery through the adapter? +
No. A cross-brand adapter powers the tool only. Pull the pack and charge it on its own Makita charger.
Will using an adapter void my warranty? +
Possibly. No manufacturer endorses cross-brand adapters, so using one may void the tool’s warranty. Keep adapters off high-draw tools where current can overheat the contacts.
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