Enjoy 10% off your first order with code FIRST10 — max $500 discount.Start an Instant Quotehello@rivcut.com
Material Guide

Titanium Grades for CNC Machining

Compare 10 titanium grades side by side. See strength, hardness, machinability ratings, and common uses. Find the right alloy for your next project.

Grade ▲▼ Type ▲▼ Tensile (ksi) ▲▼ Yield (ksi) ▲▼ Hardness (HRC) ▲▼ Machinability ▲▼ Weldability ▲▼ Corrosion Res. ▲▼
Grade 1 (CP-1)CP3525--GoodExcellentExcellent
Grade 2 (CP-2)CP5040--GoodExcellentExcellent
Grade 3 (CP-3)CP6555--FairExcellentExcellent
Grade 4 (CP-4)CP8070--FairGoodExcellent
Grade 5 (Ti-6Al-4V)Alpha-Beta13012036FairGoodExcellent
Grade 5 ELI (Ti-6Al-4V ELI)Alpha-Beta12511535FairGoodExcellent
Grade 9 (Ti-3Al-2.5V)Near-Alpha9070--GoodExcellentExcellent
Grade 12 (Ti-0.3Mo-0.8Ni)Alpha7050--GoodExcellentExcellent
Grade 23 (Ti-6Al-4V ELI)Alpha-Beta12011034FairGoodExcellent
Ti-5553Beta17516544PoorFairGood

Titanium Grade Details

Grade 1
CP
  • Tensile Strength 35 ksi
  • Yield Strength 25 ksi
MachinabilityWeldabilityCorrosion
Best for: Chemical processing, marine hardware, medical devices. Softest grade with the best formability.
Grade 2
CP
  • Tensile Strength 50 ksi
  • Yield Strength 40 ksi
MachinabilityWeldabilityCorrosion
Best for: The workhorse CP grade. Marine, chemical, desalination, and architectural applications.
Grade 3
CP
  • Tensile Strength 65 ksi
  • Yield Strength 55 ksi
MachinabilityWeldabilityCorrosion
Best for: Stronger CP option for chemical tanks, heat exchangers, and pressure vessels.
Grade 4
CP
  • Tensile Strength 80 ksi
  • Yield Strength 70 ksi
MachinabilityWeldabilityCorrosion
Best for: Strongest CP grade. Airframe skin, marine components, and surgical hardware.
Grade 5 (Ti-6Al-4V)
Alpha-Beta
  • Tensile Strength 130 ksi
  • Yield Strength 120 ksi
  • Hardness 36 HRC
MachinabilityWeldabilityCorrosion
Best for: The most popular titanium alloy. Aerospace structures, engine parts, medical implants, and racing components.
Grade 5 ELI
Alpha-Beta
  • Tensile Strength 125 ksi
  • Yield Strength 115 ksi
  • Hardness 35 HRC
MachinabilityWeldabilityCorrosion
Best for: Extra Low Interstitial version of Grade 5. Better fracture toughness. Preferred for surgical implants and cryogenic use.
Grade 9
Near-Alpha
  • Tensile Strength 90 ksi
  • Yield Strength 70 ksi
MachinabilityWeldabilityCorrosion
Best for: Tubing, hydraulic lines, bicycle frames. Half the strength of Grade 5 but easier to form and weld.
Grade 12
Alpha
  • Tensile Strength 70 ksi
  • Yield Strength 50 ksi
MachinabilityWeldabilityCorrosion
Best for: Chemical processing and desalination. Better crevice corrosion resistance than CP grades.
Grade 23
Alpha-Beta
  • Tensile Strength 120 ksi
  • Yield Strength 110 ksi
  • Hardness 34 HRC
MachinabilityWeldabilityCorrosion
Best for: Medical implants per ASTM F136. Biocompatible. Used for hip and knee replacements, bone screws, and dental implants.
Ti-5553
Beta
  • Tensile Strength 175 ksi
  • Yield Strength 165 ksi
  • Hardness 44 HRC
MachinabilityWeldabilityCorrosion
Best for: The strongest grade listed. Aerospace landing gear, structural forgings, and high-load fasteners.

How to Choose a Titanium Grade

Start by asking what matters most for your part: strength, corrosion resistance, biocompatibility, or cost. Each titanium grade trades off these properties differently.

Need corrosion resistance without high strength? Use Grade 2. It is the most common commercially pure grade. It handles seawater, chemicals, and chlorides well. It costs less than alloy grades and is easier to machine.

Need high strength for aerospace? Use Grade 5 (Ti-6Al-4V). It is the industry standard. About half of all titanium sold worldwide is Grade 5. It works well up to 750 degrees F and has a strong fatigue life.

Need a medical implant? Use Grade 23 (Ti-6Al-4V ELI). The Extra Low Interstitial composition gives better fracture toughness and biocompatibility. It meets ASTM F136 for surgical implants.

Need lightweight tubing? Use Grade 9 (Ti-3Al-2.5V). It has half the strength of Grade 5 but is much easier to cold work into tubes. Common in hydraulic lines and bicycle frames.

Need extreme strength? Use Ti-5553. This beta alloy reaches 175 ksi tensile. It is the hardest to machine but the strongest option for landing gear and structural forgings.

Machining Titanium: Key Tips

Titanium cuts differently than steel or aluminum. It has low thermal conductivity, which means heat stays in the cutting zone. This wears tools fast and can cause work hardening. Follow these rules:

  • Use sharp tools. Dull edges cause heat and chatter. Replace inserts often.
  • Keep speeds low. Run at about 30-60% of the speed you use for steel.
  • Use high feed rates. Stay in the cut. Do not let the tool rub.
  • Flood with coolant. High-pressure coolant helps clear chips and reduce heat.
  • Use rigid setups. Titanium is springy. Minimize tool overhang and use short tools.
  • Climb mill when possible. Climb milling reduces tool rub and gives a better finish.

Need titanium parts machined?

Upload your CAD file for an instant quote. Free DFM review included with every order.

Upload CAD for Instant Quote

Common Questions

Ti-6Al-4V (Grade 5) is the most common titanium alloy for CNC machining. It offers high strength, good corrosion resistance, and a proven track record in aerospace and medical applications. It makes up about 50% of all titanium used worldwide.
Yes. Titanium is harder to machine than aluminum or steel. It generates a lot of heat, sticks to cutting tools, and work hardens. You need sharp tools, low speeds, high feed rates, and plenty of coolant. Experienced shops handle it without problems.
Grade 2 is commercially pure titanium. It has lower strength (50 ksi) but excellent corrosion resistance and formability. Grade 5 (Ti-6Al-4V) is an alloy with much higher strength (130 ksi). Choose Grade 2 for chemical and marine use. Choose Grade 5 when you need strength.
Yes, but you must shield the weld area with argon gas to prevent contamination. Titanium reacts with oxygen and nitrogen at high temperatures. TIG welding is the most common method. The weld zone must stay under argon until it cools below 500 degrees F.
Titanium costs more because it is hard to extract from ore and difficult to process. The Kroll process used to refine titanium is energy-intensive. Machining takes longer and wears tools faster. These factors add up, making titanium parts 5 to 10 times more expensive than steel parts.

Get Your Titanium Parts Made

Upload your CAD file and get instant AI pricing. We machine all titanium grades listed above.

No minimums · NDA ready · Ships anywhere in the US

Ready to machine your part?

Upload CAD for Instant Quote