The short answer
Wood dust from sawing and sanding is linked to rare cancers of the nose and sinuses, especially with hardwoods. Furniture makers and carpenters are most exposed. Dust collection, ventilation, and masks reduce exposure.
Wood dust is classified as a known human carcinogen (IARC Group 1).
People are mainly exposed by breathing fine dust from sawing and sanding wood, especially hardwoods.
It is most strongly linked to cancers of the nasal cavity and sinuses.
A carcinogen classification describes hazard — whether something can cause cancer — not your personal risk at a given exposure.
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The full explanation.
The simple version
Fine wood dust created by cutting, sanding, and shaping wood can be breathed in. Over many years, especially with hardwoods, this raises the risk of rare cancers in the nose and sinuses. Woodworkers face the most exposure.
What wood dust is
Wood dust is made of tiny particles released during woodworking — sawing, sanding, routing, and shaping. Both hardwoods and softwoods create dust, but the strongest cancer link is with hardwood dust.
How people are exposed
Common ways people come into contact with it:
- Working in furniture and cabinet making, carpentry, sawmills, or joinery
- Home woodworking without dust control
- Breathing fine dust that lingers in enclosed workshops
The cancer connection
Wood dust is linked to cancers of the nasal cavity and paranasal sinuses, and to nasopharyngeal cancer. These cancers are rare, and the risk is highest with long-term, heavy hardwood dust exposure.
The International Agency for Research on Cancer (IARC), the cancer arm of the World Health Organization, places wood dust in Group 1, carcinogenic to humans — the strongest evidence category, meaning there is enough evidence that it can cause cancer in people. In the United States, the National Toxicology Program's Report on Carcinogens lists it as known to be a human carcinogen.
Hazard is not the same as risk
It helps to separate two ideas that are easy to mix up: hazard and risk. When an agency lists wood dust as a carcinogen, it is making a statement about hazard — whether the substance is capable of causing cancer under some conditions. It is not, by itself, a statement about your personal risk, which depends on how much you are exposed to, for how long, and other factors. Two substances in the same group can carry very different real-world risks. The label answers "can it cause cancer?" — not "how likely is it to cause cancer for me?"
How to lower your exposure
- Use tools with dust extraction and shop dust-collection systems
- Ventilate workshops and wear a fitted dust mask or respirator
- Clean up dust with vacuums rather than dry sweeping
- Follow workplace dust exposure limits
If you are looking at your overall cancer risk, small, steady steps add up. See our overview of cancer prevention and what raises cancer risk to put any single exposure in context.
The bottom line
Wood dust is a known human carcinogen (IARC Group 1). The most important thing you can do is understand where exposure comes from and take reasonable steps to reduce it, without losing sleep over a single label. Focus your energy on the biggest, most controllable risks in your own life.
Words to know
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Common questions
▸Does wood dust cause cancer?
Yes. Wood dust is classified as a known human carcinogen, which means there is strong evidence it can cause cancer in people. How much any one person's risk rises depends on how much they are exposed to and for how long.
▸How are people exposed to wood dust?
Most exposure happens by breathing fine dust from sawing and sanding wood, especially hardwoods.
▸Which cancers are linked to wood dust?
It is most strongly linked to cancers of the nasal cavity and sinuses.
▸How can I reduce my exposure to wood dust?
The main steps are dust collection, ventilation, and respiratory protection.
▸Does a carcinogen label mean I will get cancer?
No. A classification is about hazard — whether wood dust can cause cancer under some conditions — not a prediction that any one exposed person will develop cancer. Your actual risk depends on the amount and length of exposure and other factors.
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