Anyone shopping for a Martin dreadnought almost always lands on two names: the D-18 and the HD-28. Both have been a benchmark for the classic, powerful steel-string guitar for decades. Both carry a Sitka spruce top. The decisive difference sits in the body tonewood, and that is exactly where tone, looks and price part ways.
This comparison makes the difference between the Martin D18 and HD28 easy to hear and understand, without marketing fluff, and ends with a clear answer on which guitar suits which player best.

Mahogany body: dry, focused, direct
Ideal for: Bluegrass, powerful strumming, flatpicking and anyone who wants a clear, woody tone with fast response.
See all Westerngitarren - 6-Saitig →
Rosewood body with herringbone: full, complex, rich in overtones
Ideal for: Fingerstyle, singer-songwriters and anyone after maximum bass, shimmering highs and a versatile tonal palette.
See all Westerngitarren - 6-Saitig →01The tonewood decides: mahogany versus rosewood
Same top, different back and sides: that is the heart of the comparison. Both models have a solid Sitka spruce top, which delivers volume, dynamics and a direct response.
The D-18 has back and sides made of mahogany. Mahogany sounds focused, dry and woody, with pronounced mids and a fast, clear tone. Chords sit cleanly side by side and single notes cut through well.
The HD-28 relies on rosewood. Rosewood produces more bass, longer sustain and a shimmering overtone richness in the highs. The sound is fuller and more complex, but less dry and direct than the mahogany body.
02Tone in practice: focused or full
The D-18 is a punch machine. In bluegrass, flatpicking and powerful strumming it stays present even within a band, because its dry, mid-focused tone never turns muddy. Anyone who wants clarity and definition feels at home here.
The HD-28 unfolds its strength where space and tone colour matter. In fingerstyle and singer-songwriter settings the rosewood body delivers deep bass, long sustain and a wide carpet of overtones. That makes it the more versatile stage and studio guitar, but it asks for a slightly more controlled touch so the full sound does not overload.


03Looks: understated elegance versus herringbone
The eye plays its part too. The D-18 is deliberately understated, with discreet binding and a clean, traditional look. It feels reserved and built to work.
The HD-28 carries the distinctive herringbone binding in a chevron pattern, a detail with pre-war heritage that many players seek out on purpose. Add to that the finer rosewood grain on the back and sides. Visually, the HD-28 is the more festive, decorative of the two.
04Price and positioning
Both guitars play in the premium league of solid all-wood dreadnoughts. The rosewood body of the HD-28 and its more elaborate herringbone trim generally sit above the plainer mahogany D-18, but both stay in the same upper class. Prices are shown on each product page.
Our range carries the D-18 along with matching rosewood dreadnoughts from the Martin line. Anyone after the mahogany voice of the D-18 in a slimmer price class will find it in the all-mahogany build of the D-15M.


| Feature | Martin D-18 | Martin HD-28 |
|---|---|---|
| Body tonewood | Mahogany | Rosewood |
| Top | Solid Sitka spruce | Solid Sitka spruce |
| Tonal character | focused, dry, woody | full, complex, rich in overtones |
| Bass / sustain | tight, fast | deep, long |
| Looks | plain, traditional | herringbone, decorative |
| Ideal for | Bluegrass, strumming, flatpicking | Fingerstyle, singer-songwriters |
| Price class | Premium | Premium, usually higher |
In short: the D-18 is the guitar for a clear, cutting tone, ideal for strumming, bluegrass and flatpicking. The HD-28 is the more versatile, fuller voice with more bass and overtones, ideal for fingerstyle and singer-songwriters. Both are classics without weakness; the choice comes down purely to your tonal ideal and your playing style.
Frequently asked questions
What is the main difference between the Martin D-18 and HD-28?
Which Martin dreadnought is better for bluegrass?
Which one is better for fingerstyle?
Why is the HD-28 often more expensive than the D-18?
Is there a more affordable alternative with a mahogany tone?
Ready for your Martin dreadnought?
Compare the solid all-wood steel-string guitars from Martin and find the tonewood that fits your style.
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