Few topics trigger guitar-building arguments faster than CNC.
Some people treat CNC like cheating. Others treat hand tools like nostalgia theater.
Reality is less dramatic: CNC is a tool, not a philosophy.
The real question isn’t “CNC or handwork?”
It’s: Who is making the decisions, controlling the process, and owning the outcome?
Short Answer
Yes, CNC can absolutely be considered luthiery.
If a builder designs the instrument, chooses materials, controls tolerances, and does the critical finishing/voicing/setup work, that is still luthiery—whether cuts are made by hand, machine, or both.
What Luthiery Actually Is
Luthiery is not defined by suffering level or tool age.
At its core, it’s the craft of building playable, musical instruments through:
- design choices
- structural judgment
- material knowledge
- precision execution
- tonal/playability outcomes
CNC can support that. It doesn’t replace it.
What CNC Is Good At
CNC excels at repeatable precision:
- neck pocket consistency
- fret slot positioning
- cavity routing accuracy
- body/neck geometry repeatability
That consistency can raise baseline quality and reduce avoidable human error.
For production shops, CNC often means fewer alignment mistakes and better interchangeability.
What CNC Does Not Automatically Solve
A CNC machine cannot guarantee:
- good fretwork
- clean nut slots
- smart neck carve feel
- excellent setup
- musical decision-making
- aesthetic taste
- final instrument “personality”
Bad design cut perfectly is still bad design.
“But Hand-Built Is More Authentic”
Handwork can absolutely add value—especially in:
- carving nuance
- voicing decisions
- finish artistry
- custom fit/feel refinement
But handwork alone does not guarantee quality either.
Plenty of hand-built instruments are inconsistent.
Plenty of CNC-assisted instruments are fantastic.
Authenticity is in standards and intent, not mythology.
A Better Framework: Process Ownership
Ask these questions instead:
- Who designed the geometry and specs?
- Who selected and evaluated materials?
- Who set tolerances and QC standards?
- Who did fretwork, nut, finish, and setup?
- Does the final instrument play/sound right?
If those answers point to skilled, accountable craft, it’s luthiery.
Common False Binary
False choice:
“CNC = factory junk, hand tools = true craft.”
More accurate:
Most high-quality modern building is hybrid:
- CNC for repeatable structural precision
- handwork for refinement, feel, and final optimization
That combination is often the best of both worlds.
For Buyers: What Actually Matters
When evaluating a builder, ask about:
- fretwork quality
- nut and setup standards
- neck geometry consistency
- QC process
- after-sale support
Not just whether they touched a chisel before lunch.
A perfectly set up CNC-assisted guitar will beat a poorly executed all-hand build every day of the week.
Bottom Line
CNC use does not disqualify luthiery.
Craftsmanship is measured by judgment, execution, and results—not by how aggressively someone avoids modern tools.
If the builder controls the process and delivers a great instrument, it’s luthiery. Full stop.
