Brand Trust Guide
Short answer, yes. Makita is absolutely worth it if you care about how tools actually perform in a real shop.
I've used chop saws from over ten different brands over the years. Makita has consistently stood out as number one.
That same feeling carried straight over to their track saw. It was one of those tools that instantly leveled up my workshop.

Some tools feel impressive for the first few cuts. Makita tools tend to feel impressive every time you use them.
The biggest difference is confidence. Cuts feel controlled, repeatable, and clean. You stop fighting the tool and start trusting it.
When a saw feels this predictable, your whole workflow speeds up without you even realizing it.
I've run chop saws from just about every major brand. Some are powerful, some are flashy, some are cheap.Makita is the one that feels the most dialed in.
The cuts feel clean and intentional. The saw tracks where you expect it to. There is very little second guessing.
That exact same feeling carries over to Makita's track saw. The first time using it, the shop just felt more capable. Straight cuts became easier. Accuracy stopped being stressful.
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Most people are perfectly fine living in the 18V LXT system. It covers nearly everything you would realistically need. I have also bought off-brand batteries for Makita tools and they have worked just as good right away without issue.
XGT exists for heavier tools, but unless you already know you need it, LXT is the smarter and simpler choice.

Straight up, it's for anybody wanting a slightly more pro feel, and I would strongly recommend everything I've tried thus far.
Yes. Makita tools feel like professional tools the moment you use them. The chop saws and track saws in particular stand out as some of the best I’ve worked with.
If your tools are holding your work back, Makita is one of the fastest ways to level up a shop.
Even for the slightly increased price tag on some tools, it's worth it for the items you'll use on a daily basis.