CNC Machining Materials: The Ultimate Guide

Choosing the right material for CNC machining can make or break your project. The wrong choice leads to higher costs, poor performance, or even part failure.

With dozens of options—from lightweight aluminum to high-performance PEEK—this guide breaks down the most common CNC materials, their properties, advantages, applications, and when to use them. Based on insights from leading manufacturers like Fictiv, Protolabs, Xometry, Hubs, and RapidDirect.

Let’s get into it.

Why Material Selection Matters in CNC Machining

Material choice affects:

  • Machinability: How easily and quickly the part can be produced (impacts cost and lead time)
  • Mechanical properties: Strength, hardness, toughness
  • Environmental resistance: Corrosion, heat, chemicals
  • Weight and cost: Critical for aerospace or prototyping
  • Finish and aesthetics: Surface quality, anodizing potential

Metals generally offer superior strength and heat resistance, while plastics excel in weight reduction, insulation, and cost for prototypes.

Common Metals for CNC Machining

Metals dominate precision parts in aerospace, automotive, medical, and industrial applications.

Aluminum

The most popular CNC material—excellent machinability, lightweight, and affordable.

Popular Grades: 6061 (versatile, good strength/corrosion balance), 7075 (high strength for aerospace), 5083 (marine/welding).

Key Properties:

  • Strength-to-weight ratio: Excellent
  • Corrosion resistance: Good (natural oxide layer)
  • Machinability: ★★★★★
  • Cost: Low

Advantages: Fast machining, anodizes well for color/durability. Applications: Prototypes, housings, automotive parts, aircraft components, fixtures.

Stainless Steel

Durable and corrosion-resistant—ideal for harsh environments.

Popular Grades: 304 (general purpose), 316/316L (marine/medical, molybdenum for better corrosion), 17-4 PH (high strength, heat-treatable), 303 (free-machining).

Key Properties:

  • Corrosion resistance: High to excellent
  • Strength: High
  • Machinability: ★ to ★★★
  • Cost: Medium

Advantages: Hygienic, weldable, polishable. Applications: Medical devices, food processing, marine fittings, surgical tools, kitchenware.

Mild Steel / Carbon Steel

Affordable strength for structural parts.

Popular Grades: 1018 (ductile, weldable), 1045 (higher strength, impact-resistant), A36 (structural).

Key Properties:

  • Strength: Medium to high
  • Machinability: ★★★
  • Corrosion resistance: Low (needs coating)
  • Cost: Very low

Advantages: Cheap, good weldability. Applications: Machinery parts, fixtures, shafts, construction.

Alloy Steel

Enhanced properties over mild steel.

Popular Grades: 4140 (tough, wear-resistant), 4340 (heat-treatable, high fatigue strength).

Applications: Gears, tooling, aircraft landing gear.

Tool Steel

Extreme hardness for tools and dies.

Popular Grades: D2 (wear-resistant), A2 (tough), O1 (oil-hardening).

Applications: Cutting tools, molds, stamps.

Brass

Beautiful finish with great machinability.

Popular Grade: C36000 (free-machining).

Key Properties:

  • Machinability: ★★★★★
  • Corrosion resistance: Good
  • Conductivity: High

Applications: Valves, fittings, decorative parts, plumbing.

Titanium

Premium performance—lightweight and ultra-strong.

Popular Grades: Grade 2 (pure, biocompatible), Grade 5 (Ti-6Al-4V, alloyed for strength).

Key Properties:

  • Strength-to-weight: Outstanding
  • Corrosion resistance: Excellent
  • Machinability: Low (hard on tools)
  • Cost: High

Advantages: Biocompatible, heat-resistant. Applications: Aerospace structures, medical implants, high-performance parts.

Quick Metal Comparison Table

 
 
MaterialMachinabilityStrengthCorrosion ResistanceCostBest For
Aluminum★★★★★MediumGoodLowPrototypes, aerospace
Stainless Steel★★HighExcellentMedMedical, marine
Mild Steel★★★HighLowLowStructural, machinery
Brass★★★★★MediumGoodMedFittings, aesthetics
TitaniumVery HighExcellentHighImplants, high-performance
 

Common Plastics for CNC Machining

Plastics are lighter, cheaper, and often used for prototypes or non-load-bearing parts.

ABS

Tough and impact-resistant—great for prototypes.

Key Properties:

  • Impact strength: High
  • Heat resistance: Medium (up to ~80°C)
  • Machinability: Good

Applications: Enclosures, consumer products, automotive dashboards.

POM (Delrin/Acetal)

Highest machinability among plastics—precise and stable.

Key Properties:

  • Dimensional stability: Excellent
  • Low friction/moisture absorption

Applications: Gears, bushings, precision components.

Polycarbonate (PC)

Super tough and transparent.

Applications: Lenses, guards, enclosures.

Nylon (PA)

Wear-resistant and flexible.

Applications: Bearings, fasteners (note: absorbs moisture).

PEEK

Metal replacement—high-performance plastic.

Key Properties:

  • Heat/chemical resistance: Excellent (up to 260°C)
  • Strength: High
  • Cost: High

Applications: Medical, aerospace, valves.

PTFE (Teflon)

Lowest friction, extreme chemical resistance.

Applications: Seals, insulators.

HDPE/PE

Lightweight, chemical-resistant.

Applications: Containers, piping.

How to Choose the Right CNC Material

  1. Define requirements: Strength? Weight? Corrosion? Temperature? Budget?
  2. Prototyping: Start with aluminum, ABS, or POM for cost/speed.
  3. Production: Switch to stainless, titanium, or PEEK for performance.
  4. Consult early: Talk to your machining partner—grades and finishes vary.

Pro Tip: For most projects, Aluminum 6061 or ABS are safe starting points.

Final Thoughts

The best CNC material balances performance, machinability, and cost for your specific application.

Aluminum rules for versatility and speed. Stainless steel for durability. Plastics for lightweight prototypes.

Need help selecting for your next project? Share your requirements in the comments—I’m here to help!

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