Start with the exact material grade
A useful stainless steel request starts with the grade and standard. For example, a buyer may ask for 304 according to ASTM A240, or 316L according to EN 10088. If the final market has a required standard, include it in the first message.
Confirm dimensions and tolerance
For sheet and coil orders, include thickness, width, length or coil ID, and the acceptable tolerance. For pipe orders, include outside diameter, wall thickness, length, and whether the pipe is welded or seamless.
Include finish and protection
Surface finish affects both production route and packing. Common options include 2B, BA, No.4, hairline, brushed and mirror. If the material needs PVC film, laser film, paper interleaving or edge protection, include that in the RFQ.
Add quantity and destination
Quotations depend on quantity, packing and delivery route. Include metric tons, pieces, bundles or coils, plus destination port or delivery location. If you need FOB, CIF, CFR or another trade term, state it clearly.
Ask for documents early
If your project requires mill test certificates, PMI, third-party inspection, heat number marking or special packing photos, mention it before the quotation is prepared. This avoids later changes that can affect lead time and cost.

