Hole Punch Accessories

Find essential accessories for your 3-hole punches and binding machines at MyBinding.com, including replacement punching heads, disks, and parts designed to keep your equipment running smoothly. Whether you're maintaining Swingline punches or other trusted brands, these accessories ensure precise, clean holes for professional-quality documents. Ideal for offices, schools, and print shops, these components help extend the life of your punching tools and improve efficiency during high-volume projects. Our selection also includes parts for paper drills and specialized punching equipment, catering to a variety of binding and document preparation needs. Shop with confidence at MyBinding.com, where we offer reliable products, competitive prices, and expert customer service ready to assist you in finding the exact accessory you need to keep your workflow uninterrupted.

Hole Punch Accessories

Find essential accessories for your 3-hole punches and binding machines at MyBinding.com, including replacement punching heads, disks, and parts designed to keep your equipment running smoothly. Whether you're maintaining Swingline punches or other trusted brands,...

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Master

Item#: MY1025B

$52.30

features

  • Enhances productivity with precise and efficient paper punching.
  • Compatible with various paper types and thicknesses for versatile use.
  • Quick and easy installation minimizes interruptions during projects.
  • Reliable performance backed by durable construction for long-term use.
$52.30
Master

Item#: MY1035B

$52.36

features

  • Achieve professional-quality results with every punch, ensuring your documents are neatly organized.
  • Designed for easy installation, allowing for quick replacements and minimal disruption to your workflow.
  • Constructed from high-quality materials for enhanced durability and long-term reliability in any office setting.
  • Perfectly sized at 11/32" to fit standard three-ring binders, making it ideal for a variety of document types.
$52.36

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Frequently Asked Questions

Punch heads are model-specific, built to match the exact spacing, hole diameter, and mounting mechanism of a particular punch. A head sized for one machine generally won't seat or align correctly in a different model, even from the same brand, so swapping across unrelated punches isn't reliable. Before ordering, confirm your exact punch model number rather than assuming compatibility based on hole size alone, since two punches with the same 9/32" diameter can still use differently shaped mounting hardware. If you're maintaining several punches, checking the hole punches lineup for your exact model helps confirm which replacement head matches before you buy.

If holes come out ragged, torn, or off-center even after clearing chad buildup and wiping down the pins, the head itself is likely worn rather than dirty. A head with dull or bent pins will keep producing poor results no matter how well the surrounding mechanism is maintained. Regular cleaning extends head life, but once the cutting edges degrade, replacement is the only fix. Inspect punched sheets individually rather than as a stack, since damage on inner sheets can be masked by cleaner top and bottom sheets in a quick visual check.

No, paper drill bits and 3-hole punch heads are different mechanisms and are not interchangeable. Paper drills use rotating bits to cut through thick stacks, while standard hole punches use a stamping or shearing action with a fixed head. If you're maintaining both a desktop punch and a paper drill in the same office, you'll need separate replacement parts for each, matched to their respective mechanisms. Checking the paper drills category separately ensures you're ordering the correct bit style rather than assuming punch head parts will work.

Installation is designed to be straightforward, typically involving removing a retaining screw or pin to release the worn head and securing the new one in its place. Most replacement heads are built for quick installation without specialized tools, minimizing downtime in busy offices. That said, always confirm alignment before resuming regular use, since a head that isn't fully seated can produce inconsistent hole placement even if the part itself is correct.

Yes, heavier-duty punches built for higher sheet counts generally use reinforced heads designed to withstand more frequent, high-force use without dulling as quickly. A replacement head intended for a light-duty desktop punch may not hold up if installed on a machine rated for much larger stacks, and forcing a mismatched head into heavier use can shorten its lifespan significantly. If your office runs a heavy duty punch for daily high-volume work, confirm the replacement head is rated for that same duty level rather than assuming any compatible-sized head will hold up equally well.