Publish Time: 2026-04-30 Origin: Site
Cutting polystyrene skirting board can feel a little dramatic at first, right? The board is sitting there, the saw is waiting, and suddenly every corner in the room looks like it has a secret agenda. But the good news is this: PS skirting is light, friendly, and much easier to work with than it looks.
In this guide, we’ll walk through the whole cutting process without turning it into a dusty engineering lecture. You’ll learn what polystyrene skirting board is, which tools actually make life easier, and how to measure properly before making that first brave cut.
Then we’ll get into the cuts that matter most: straight cuts, internal corners, external corners, long wall joints, and those little finishing touches that make the edge look clean instead of chewed by a tiny furniture goblin.
Polystyrene skirting board, or PS skirting board if we’re keeping things tidy, is that neat strip sitting between your wall and floor. It covers the awkward little gap, protects the wall from kicks, mops, and daily life, and makes the room look like someone finally gave it a proper haircut.
But it’s not just a wall-bodyguard. PS skirting also adds style. Choose the right colour and shape, and suddenly the room feels sharper, cleaner, and a little more grown-up. Tiny trim, big personality.
People choose polystyrene skirting board because it is refreshingly easy to live with. It is lighter than wood or metal, so you can carry it around without feeling like you accidentally joined a weightlifting club. And when is it time to cut it? Much less drama. PS skirting is the kind of material that says, “Relax, we can handle this.”
It is also a smart pick for busy modern spaces. Moisture does not scare it easily, and it fits neatly into apartments, hotels, offices, shops, and homes that want a clean finish without the heavy-lifting headache. In short, it looks tidy, installs kindly, and does not make the job feel like a wrestling match with the walls.
Yes, you can absolutely cut polystyrene skirting board yourself. Most homeowners and installers can handle it without summoning a professional with a van full of mysterious tools.
PS skirting is light, friendly, and much easier to cut than many traditional trims. As long as you measure carefully, use the right saw, and do not rush in as the board owes you money, you are already halfway there.
PS skirting is DIY-friendly because it does not arrive with a villain soundtrack. It is light, easy to hold, and far less stubborn than hardwood. You are not wrestling a tree branch into submission here. You are working with a trim that mostly behaves, sits nicely on the bench, and lets you get on with the job.
The best part? You do not need a wizard’s toolbox. A fine-tooth handsaw, mitre box, or coping saw can usually handle it.
Some recycled polystyrene mouldings are even said to cut and cope much like wood, only without the grumbling, splintering, and “why did I start this?” energy. PS skirting is basically the friendly neighbour of trim materials.
Tool | Main Use |
Tape measure | Measures wall length and board size accurately |
Pencil | Marks cutting lines clearly |
Speed square or ruler | Helps draw straight, accurate lines |
Mitre box | Guides 45° and 90° cuts by hand |
Fine-tooth hand saw | Cuts PS skirting cleanly with less chipping |
Mitre saw / compound mitre saw | Makes faster, cleaner angle cuts |
Clamps | Holds the board steady while cutting |
Utility knife | Trims small edges or light surface details |
220-grit sandpaper | Smooths rough cut edges |
Safety goggles | Protects eyes from dust and small chips |
Dust mask | Helps avoid breathing in fine cutting dust |
Workbench / stable surface | Keeps the board supported and safe to cut |
Caulking gun | Applies caulk or adhesive neatly |
Acrylic latex caulk/sealant | Fills small gaps and joints after fitting |
Construction adhesive | Fixes the skirting board to the wall |
Here’s your beginner-friendly saw guide, distilled into a table that reads more like a chat over coffee than a dry manual.
Tool | What it’s great for | Why beginners like it | When to reach for it |
Fine-tooth hand saw + mitre box | Clean, straight cuts at neat angles | Feels steady and forgiving. The mitre box literally “holds your hand” so your cuts don’t wander off course | Small DIY jobs, skirting boards, when you want control over speed |
Electric mitre saw | Fast, sharp, repeatable cuts | Press a button, get identical cuts every time. It’s the “copy-paste” of woodworking | Bigger projects, lots of cuts, or when you value speed + consistency |
Coping saw | Curves, profiles, tricky inside corners | Looks simple, cuts like a scalpel. Perfect for detailed shaping once you get the hang of it | Internal corners, moulding profiles, fine trimming work |
Utility knife | Light trimming only | Quick and handy… but don’t expect miracles. It’s more of a touch-up artist than a main cutter | Shaving edges, tiny adjustments, not full skirting cuts |
Blade choice? It’s not just a detail, it’s where things either go smooth… or go a bit gooey.
Polystyrene heats up fast, so the wrong blade can leave you with rough, melty edges. Not fun.
I usually say: go for 60+ teeth and keep your cuts quick, not sluggish.
Got long pieces? A mitre saw with a 96-tooth, 12-inch blade keeps everything clean and nicely lined up.
4.1 Acclimate the skirting
Before you rush in, let the boards settle in a bit. Bring them into the room and leave them there for about 24 hours, along with your adhesive. It helps them get used to the temperature so they don’t expand or shrink later.
Lay them flat, keep them supported, and let them relax. Think of it as letting the material “get comfortable” before work begins.
4.2 Prepare the wall
A clean cut won’t save you if the wall’s a mess. This is the other half of the job.
Before you fix anything, make sure the surface is dry, dust-free, and not greasy.
Quick wipe, quick check, done.
You want the adhesive to grab properly, not slide around like it’s on a greasy pan.
4.3 Set up a safe cutting area
Give yourself a proper setup, not a balancing act. Use a stable bench, support both ends of long boards, and keep the decorative face where you can see it.
Don’t cut mid-air, that’s asking for trouble.
Goggles on, mask up, and keep your fingers well clear of the blade.
A tidy setup makes cleaner cuts and keeps all ten fingers in the story.
4.4 Inspect the skirting before cutting
Before the saw comes out, give each board a quick once-over. Is it straight? Any scratches on the face? Profile running the right way?
Then think ahead, left and right corners sorted? Enough extra length for a slip-up?
A 30-second check now saves that “well… that didn’t fit” moment later
How to measure polystyrene skirting board correctly?
5.1 Measure the wall, not the old skirting
It’s tempting to copy the old skirting, but that’s a shortcut with a trap. Those pieces might be warped, swollen, or cut a bit off in the first place.
Go straight to the wall instead. Fresh measurement, clean slate.
Trust the surface you’re fitting to, not the history you’re replacing
5.2 Measure twice, cut once
This is that tiny ritual that quietly saves the day. Measure once, and you’re basically guessing. Measure twice, and suddenly you look like you’ve done this for years.
It takes a few extra seconds, but it beats fixing a too-short piece later. A little patience here, a lot less regret after.
5.3 Add extra material for cutting loss
Always grab a little more than you think you need. Cuts, offcuts, and those “almost right” corners add up faster than you expect.
A good rule? Add about 5% to 10% on top of your measurements. That extra bit gives you breathing room for practice cuts and the odd mistake.
It’s a small cushion, but it saves you from that mid-project “I’m one piece short” headache.
5.4 Mark clearly
Don’t rely on memory; it has a habit of wandering off mid-project.
Grab a sharp pencil and make clean, confident marks. I like to mark the back and the top edge so there’s no confusion when the board flips around.
Add arrows for cut direction, and label each piece like “left wall” or “door return.”
It feels a bit extra, but when everything lines up perfectly, you’ll be glad you did.
6.1 When straight cuts are used
Straight cuts are your everyday bread and butter. You’ll use them at the end of a wall, up against a door frame, or when meeting plinth blocks.
They’re also perfect for simple butt joints and just trimming a board down to size.
Nothing fancy here, just clean, honest cuts that quietly keep everything lining up the way it should.
6.2 Step-by-step straight cut method
Start with your measurement, then mark it cleanly with a pencil. Use a square so the line stays honest, no guessing angles here.
Lay the board flat, give it a gentle clamp, and make your cut with a fine-tooth or mitre saw. Keep the blade steady, let it do the work.
Quick sand on the edge, then dry-fit. If it drops in nicely, you’re good to go.
Tip:
Easy on the pressure. You’re not wrestling the board, you’re guiding it.
Let the saw do the quiet nibbling. Push too hard, and the edge can crush, and suddenly that clean cut looks like it’s had a long, rough day.
Slow, steady, and a light touch wins every time.
An internal corner is just that quiet little meeting point where two walls turn inward, like the corners inside your room.
Nothing dramatic, just two surfaces coming together and asking your skirting to fit neatly between them.
Get this part right, and the whole room starts to look sharp without trying too hard.
7.1 The standard 90° internal corner method
In a nice, well-behaved room, internal corners are pretty straightforward. You cut one board at 45°, then the matching piece at the opposite 45°, and bring them together to form that tidy 90° corner.
Simple on paper… but here’s the catch: real walls don’t always read the manual.
Corners can be slightly off, so even a perfect 45° + 45° might need a tiny tweak. Always dry-fit first and trust what you see, not just the angle.
7.2 Start operation
Start by measuring both walls, not just one. Mark each piece clearly, then decide which is your left-hand and right-hand cut. This saves a lot of head-scratching later.
Set the skirting board into your mitre box or saw, keeping the wall-facing side in the right position (easy to flip by accident). Cut both ends at 45°, nice and steady.
Bring the two pieces together and test the fit. If it’s not perfect, a bit of sanding or a light touch with a coping saw usually sorts it out.
Only reach for the adhesive once the joint looks clean and snug.
7.3 Mistakes you might make
Problem | Likely Cause | Fix |
Gap at the front of the corner | Angle too open | Recut slightly tighter |
Gap at the back of the corner | Wall not square | Sand or cope the profile |
One board sits proud | Wall uneven | Trim back the edge or use caulk |
Edge looks rough | Wrong blade or too much pressure | Sand lightly and cut more slowly or cleaner next time |
An external corner is the kind that sticks out into the room instead of hiding in it. Think of the edge of a column, the side of a cabinet, or that little wall return that always seems to catch your elbow at least once. This is where your skirting has to wrap around and stay neat on the outside, so the cut needs to be just a bit more careful and a touch more precise.
8.1 Standard external corner method
For a 90° external corner, think of it like guiding two pieces to meet at the spotlight of the room. Each one gets a 45° cut, then they come together around the outside edge, trying to look like they were always meant to be there.
Before you glue anything, pause and do a dry fit. Hold them in place, squint a little, maybe tilt your head like a curious cat. If the join looks clean, great. If it feels a bit off, give it a tiny adjustment now; future you will be very grateful.
8.2 Let's get started
Start by measuring right up to the corner, then mark your board like you mean it. First piece gets a 45° cut. The second one? Mirror it, so the two can actually get along when they meet.
Now hold them up and see how they behave. If the corner looks clean, you are winning. If it looks a bit awkward, nudge it, shave a little, try again. Once it clicks, add glue if needed, then smooth things over with a touch of caulk or filler so it all looks like it came together effortlessly.
8.3 Add warning
Do not trust a wall just because it looks confident. Corners love pretending they are perfect 90°, then quietly ruining your cut. If something feels even slightly off, check it with an angle finder or protractor. A quick check now saves you from a very visible “why does this look weird” later.
Most rooms have at least one wall that refuses to fit neatly into a single skirting length. So sooner or later, two boards have to meet somewhere along that stretch.
That joint is what we call a long wall joint. It sounds simple, but this is where a tidy room can either look seamless or quietly give away the join, so it is worth doing it with a bit of care.
9.1 Best joint type: scarf joint
When two long skirting boards need to meet, a scarf joint is usually the smarter move. Instead of pushing two flat ends together and hoping they behave, you cut both ends at a 45° angle so one gently overlaps the other. It is a much cleaner, more forgiving join.
Most manufacturers actually recommend this method for polystyrene skirting, because the angled overlap helps hide the seam and keeps the joint looking smooth instead of shouting, “Hey, I’m right here!”
9.2 Let's get started
Pick a spot for the joint where it won’t steal the spotlight, somewhere low-key and away from doorways if you can. Cut the first board at 45°, then cut the second one in the opposite direction so they overlap nicely instead of butting heads.
Do a quick dry fit and see how they sit together. If it looks smooth, add a bit of adhesive, press them flush, and wipe off any extra glue before it sets.
Once everything dries, run a little caulk over the seam and give it a light sand so the join blends in like it was never there.
Sooner or later, your skirting run will meet something that refuses to move. Door casings, cabinet sides, pipes, uneven floors, wall vents, stair edges, even old trims still clinging on, they all like to interrupt the nice straight line you had planned.
None of these is a deal-breaker, but they do ask for a bit more patience and a slightly smarter cut. Think of them as little detours, not roadblocks.
10.1 Cutting against door frames
When your skirting bumps into a door frame, just pause and pick your move. If it ends neatly, a straight cut is perfectly fine, clean, simple, and done.
If that cut edge is left out in the open and looks a bit… abrupt, add a tiny return piece to soften it. And if the frame has its own personality, a scribed cut lets you trace its shape so the skirting hugs it nicely instead of sitting there looking slightly offended.
10.2 Cutting around pipes
Pipes always show up like uninvited guests right where you wanted a clean run. Start by measuring their position carefully, then mark the centre point on your skirting so you know exactly where the interruption lives.
From there, drill or cut a neat notch; take it slow, no heroic rush needed. If the cut needs splitting to fit around the pipe, keep it tidy. Once everything is in place, hide the gap with a bit of caulk or a pipe collar, and suddenly that “problem” looks like it was planned all along.
10.3 Cutting around uneven floors
Uneven floors love to test your patience, but the trick is simple: keep the top line of your skirting looking straight and calm, even if the floor below is doing its own thing.
Small gaps at the bottom? A bit of caulk will smooth them out nicely. Bigger gaps, though, need a smarter move. That’s where scribing comes in, letting you shape the skirting so it follows the floor instead of arguing with it.
11.1 Sand the cut edge lightly
Once you’ve made the cut, don’t just walk away like the job’s done. Grab some 220-grit sandpaper and give the edge a quick, gentle once-over, just enough to smooth out any rough bits without overdoing it.
If you’ve used caulk, let it dry first, then give it a light sand before painting. It’s one of those small finishing moves that quietly turns “good enough” into “that actually looks really clean.”
11.2 Remove dust before glueing
Before you reach for the glue, take a second to clear off the dust. It might look harmless, but it acts like a tiny barrier that stops the adhesive from gripping properly.
A quick wipe now makes sure the board sticks the way it should, instead of slowly plotting its escape later.
11.3 Fill tiny gaps
Tiny gaps will show up no matter how careful you are; they’re part of the game. The trick is not to fight them, just smooth them out. A bit of acrylic caulk, paintable sealant, or filler works wonders. Some joints might like a tiny dab of instant glue, too. Just follow what your product suggests.
Once you’ve filled things in, grab a damp cloth and wipe away the extra before it dries. Done right, those gaps quietly disappear like they were never invited.
12.1 Dry-fit everything first
Before you bring out the adhesive, do yourself a favour and dry-fit everything first. Just place the pieces where they’re supposed to go and see how they behave.
It’s like a quick rehearsal before the real performance. You’ll catch awkward gaps, slightly off cuts, or pieces that need a tiny tweak, all before anything becomes permanent and a lot harder to fix.
12.2 Apply adhesive correctly
When you bring out the adhesive, think steady, not messy. Run it along the back in a smooth line or a lazy wave, whatever suits the board. No need to pile it on the top edge; that just creates extra cleanup you didn’t ask for.
Press the skirting firmly against the wall and let it settle into place. If any glue squeezes out, wipe it off right away. Trust me, fresh glue is cooperative, dried glue has opinions.
12.3 Use tape or pins if needed
Sometimes the skirting needs a little help staying put while the adhesive does its thing. That’s where tape or a few pins come in handy.
Depending on the system, you might also see double-sided tape, nails, clips, or brackets. Think of them as temporary assistants, just there to hold everything steady until the bond settles in.
12.4 Seal the top and joints
Once everything’s in place, it’s time for the quiet finishing touch. Run a line of caulk along the top edge and into any corner gaps, nothing fancy, just enough to tidy things up.
Then smooth it out with a damp finger or tool, and wipe away the extra before it dries. Done right, it blends everything so the joins stop drawing attention and the whole run looks clean and settled.
Mistake | What Happens | Quick Fix |
Cutting without checking the corner angle | The pieces meet… and immediately disagree | Check the angle first. Walls love pretending they’re 90° |
Using the wrong blade | Edges look chewed or slightly melted | Use a fine-tooth blade and keep cuts smooth |
Pressing too hard | Board dents or crushes like it’s offended | Let the saw do the work, ease up a bit |
Forgetting left vs right cuts | Two perfect cuts that refuse to fit together | Label pieces before cutting, save yourself the confusion |
Skipping dry fit | Glue goes on, regret arrives right after | Always test fit first; it’s your safety net |
Not buying extra material | One mistake turns into a supply crisis | Get a little extra, call it your “oops fund.” |
This one’s simple, don’t skip it. Those tiny chips and bits of dust have a talent for flying straight where you don’t want them.
Pop on a pair of goggles before you start cutting. It’s a small step, but it keeps your eyes out of the danger zone and lets you focus on getting a clean cut.
Doesn’t look like much at first, but once you start cutting, there’s this fine dust just floating around like it owns the place.
Not something you want settling in your lungs.
So yeah, grab a simple dust mask and keep it on while you work.
It’s one of those small habits that quietly looks after you.
Polystyrene doesn’t like heat; it goes soft and messy fast.
If you force the blade or linger in one spot, you’ll feel it straight away.
Keep things moving, light pressure, steady pace. Let the blade glide through instead of digging in.
Do that, and your cuts stay clean instead of turning into a sticky situation.
If you’re cutting a few boards, no big deal. But once you’re doing a whole room, the air can get a bit… crowded.
Crack a window, get some airflow going. It keeps the dust and any fumes from hanging around too long.
Fresh air in, stale stuff out. Simple habit, much nicer working space.
Quick heads-up before you start sticking things down: not all adhesives get along with polystyrene. Some of them… really don’t.
Best move? Go with what your skirting supplier recommends. No guesswork, no surprises.
Takes a minute to check, saves you from boards that refuse to stay put later.
Honestly, cutting polystyrene skirting isn’t some mysterious craft. It’s more like putting together a decent sandwich.
Get your measurements sorted, use the right tool, keep your edges clean, and when a corner acts up… just nudge it into place, no drama.
Once your cuts start landing nicely, the whole room tightens up. Feels cleaner, sharper… like it quietly got its act together.
If you’re on the hunt for solid PS skirting, CREATEKING is one of those names worth keeping in your back pocket. They make a wide range of baseboards, and the colour options are pretty generous too.
Planning a renovation? Just drop your details on their consultation page. Their team usually gets back to you quickly and helps you figure out what actually works.
Q1: What is the best tool to cut polystyrene skirting board?
A1: A fine-tooth hand saw with a mitre box is the easy starter. Want faster, cleaner repeats? Go with a mitre saw.
Q2: Can I cut polystyrene skirting board with a hand saw?
A2: Yes, and it works surprisingly well. Just keep it light and steady, no rushing.
Q3: Can I use a mitre saw on polystyrene skirting?
A3: Absolutely. It’s quick, neat, and great for multiple cuts. Just don’t force it.
Q4: What blade should I use?
A4: Go for 60+ teeth. For mitre saws, a 96-tooth blade gives you those crisp edges.
Q5: Do I need to sand the cut edge?
A5: A quick, light sand helps. Think “tidy up,” not “reshape the whole thing.”
Q6: How do I cut corners on polystyrene skirting board?
A6: Usually 45° + 45° for a 90° corner. Then tweak a bit if the wall isn’t perfectly square.
Q7: Can polystyrene skirting board melt when cut?
A7: It can, if things get too hot. Keep the blade moving and don’t press too hard.
Q8: Should I glue or nail polystyrene skirting board?
A8: Adhesive is the usual choice. Clean, simple, and no wall damage.
Q9: Is polystyrene skirting board waterproof?
A9: Yes, it handles moisture well, so it’s fine for kitchens or bathrooms.
Q10: Is polystyrene skirting board durable?
A10: It’s lightweight but tough enough for everyday use. Treat it well; it holds up nicely.
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