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Your Company Info
RFQ Details
Vendor / Supplier
Items Requested
Item # Part Description Qty Material Tolerance
Requirements & Notes
RivCut
Precision. Integrity. Ownership.
We Build Better. Together.
33360 Dowe Ave, Union City, CA 94587
510.330.0066hello@rivcut.com
www.RivCut.com
REQUEST FOR QUOTE
RFQ #:
Date:
RFQ #
Due Date
Project
Contact
Email
hello@rivcut.com
To (Vendor / Supplier)
Item #Part DescriptionQtyMaterialTolerance
1CNC Milled Bracket1006061-T6 Al±0.005"

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What to Include in a CNC Machining RFQ

An RFQ (Request for Quote) is the document you send to a machine shop when you need pricing on a specific part or assembly. A clear, complete RFQ does two things: it gives the shop everything needed to quote accurately, and it signals that you are a serious, organized buyer. Vague RFQs get padded quotes — or no response at all. The following seven elements should appear in every CNC machining RFQ you send.

  1. Part name and quantity needed. State exactly what you are buying and how many. Include a revision level if applicable.
  2. Material specification (alloy, temper, grade). Write "6061-T6 aluminum" not just "aluminum." The temper and grade affect machinability, cost, and lead time. Ambiguous specs invite substitutions you may not want.
  3. Critical dimensions and tolerances. Call out your tightest tolerance explicitly. Do not assume the shop will find it on the drawing. If a bore must be held to ±0.0005", say so in the RFQ body.
  4. Surface finish requirement. Ra 63 (125 µin) is the CNC milling standard. Specify tighter values only where function requires it — every step tighter roughly doubles finishing cost.
  5. Quality certifications needed. List any required certifications: ISO 9001, AS9100, ITAR registration, NADCAP for special processes. If you need a Certificate of Conformance, material test reports, or first article inspection, state it here.
  6. Delivery requirements. Include your required ship date, delivery location, and any packaging or labeling requirements. Partial shipments acceptable? Say so.
  7. Drawings or CAD files. Attach a PDF 2D drawing with GD&T callouts and a STEP or IGES 3D file. Never send only a 3D model — tolerances are not implied by geometry alone.

Common RFQ mistakes to avoid: vague material specs ("any aluminum will do"), missing tolerance callouts, no drawings attached, and omitting quality requirements until after the quote is accepted. Each of these creates rework, delays, and disputes. A two-minute review of your RFQ against this list prevents most of them.

RFQ vs RFP — Which Do You Need?

An RFQ (Request for Quote) is for when your specifications are locked — you know exactly what you want and need a price. An RFP (Request for Proposal) is for when you need vendors to propose a solution: they define the approach, timeline, and price. For CNC machining, an RFQ is almost always correct. If you have a drawing and a material spec, use an RFQ. If you are still figuring out how to make the part, consider a DFM consultation before requesting quotes.

Common Questions

An RFQ (Request for Quote) is a document sent to vendors or suppliers asking them to provide pricing and terms for specific parts or services. It lists the items you need, quantities, materials, tolerances, and delivery requirements so suppliers can respond with accurate quotes.
An RFQ focuses on price. You know exactly what you need and want vendors to quote their best price. An RFP (Request for Proposal) is broader — you describe a problem or project and ask vendors to propose a solution, timeline, and price. Use an RFQ when specs are locked, and an RFP when you need creative input.
Click the "Download PDF" button below the form. A clean PDF file will save to your computer. The filename includes your company name and RFQ number. Works in Chrome, Edge, Safari, and Firefox.
Include your company details, a unique RFQ number, response due date, detailed part descriptions with quantities, material specs, tolerances, delivery requirements, and any quality certifications you require (e.g. ISO 9001). The more detail you provide, the more accurate the quotes you receive.
A good RFQ is 1-2 pages. Include all specs on the form but attach drawings separately. Brevity is fine as long as specs are complete.
3-5 vendors is ideal. Fewer gives limited comparison; more creates administrative burden. Always include at least one current vendor alongside new candidates.
Attach a PDF 2D drawing with GD&T callouts plus a STEP or IGES 3D CAD file. Avoid sending only a 3D model without a drawing — tolerances are not implied by the 3D geometry.
An RFQ gathers quotes before you commit to buy. A purchase order (PO) is used after you’ve chosen a vendor and agreed on price and terms. Always get a confirmed quote before issuing a PO.

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