Casting vs Forging: Which Manufacturing Process Is Right for Your Part?

When specifying metal components, one of the most consequential decisions is whether to cast or forge. Both processes produce strong, accurate metal parts, but they suit very different applications, volumes, and budgets. The wrong choice at the design stage is expensive to undo once tooling is committed. This guide explains the practical differences so you can make the right call before work starts.

casting verses forging comparison

What Is Investment Casting?

Investment casting, also called lost wax casting, produces parts by creating a wax pattern of the finished component, coating it in layers of ceramic slurry to form a shell, burning out the wax, and pouring molten metal into the cavity left behind. The ceramic shell is then broken away to reveal the casting. The result is a near-net-shape part, meaning it closely matches the final geometry and requires minimal material removal to reach specification. Investment casting handles complex three-dimensional geometry, internal passages, thin walls, and undercuts that most other processes struggle with. Surface finish as-cast is typically Ra 1.6 to 6.3 micrometres, which is often good enough for non-critical surfaces without any further finishing. Typical as-cast tolerances are plus or minus 0.1 to 0.25mm, tightening to plus or minus 0.01 to 0.05mm after secondary CNC machining on critical features. Common materials include stainless steel grades 304, 316L, and 2205 duplex, carbon steel, nickel-based alloys, aluminium, and brass.

What Is Forging?

Forging shapes metal by applying compressive force to a heated billet between dies. The metal is not melted. It is deformed in the solid or semi-solid state. This is a critical distinction. Because the grain structure of the metal is never disrupted by melting and re-solidification, forging produces parts with a continuous, aligned grain flow that follows the contours of the part geometry. This grain alignment is what gives forged parts their characteristic advantage in tensile strength, fatigue resistance, and impact toughness compared to cast equivalents in the same material. Hot forging heats the billet above its recrystallisation temperature before pressing, allowing large deformations without cracking. Cold forging works at or near room temperature and produces tighter dimensional accuracy but is limited to simpler shapes and more ductile materials. Typical tolerances for hot forging are plus or minus 0.5 to 2mm, improving significantly with secondary machining. Common materials are carbon steel, alloy steel, aluminium, and titanium.

How the Processes Compare

FactorInvestment CastingForging
Shape complexityExcellent. Internal cavities, thin walls, undercuts all achievableLimited. Shape must allow die separation, no internal cavities
Surface finish as-producedVery good (Ra 1.6-6.3um)Rough. Requires significant machining
Dimensional accuracyGood to excellentModerate. More machining required
Material strengthGoodSuperior. Continuous grain structure
Fatigue resistanceGoodExcellent
Impact toughnessGoodExcellent
Tooling costLow to mediumMedium to high
Unit cost at low volumeLowerHigher
Unit cost at very high volumeCompetitiveLower per piece
Typical lead time4 to 8 weeks6 to 12 weeks
Minimum viable quantityLow. Prototypes feasibleHigher. Tooling cost requires volume to justify
Alloy rangeVery wide. Most alloys including nickel superalloys and duplex steelNarrower. Mainly steel, aluminium, titanium

The Strength Question

Forged parts are stronger than cast parts in the same alloy. This is a reliable generalisation and it is worth understanding why, because it affects how much it matters for your application. When metal solidifies from a melt, the grain structure forms randomly as crystals nucleate and grow. The result is an isotropic structure with similar properties in all directions but no preferential alignment. Depending on how well the casting is controlled, there may also be micro-shrinkage, porosity, or segregation that reduce mechanical properties below the theoretical maximum for the alloy. Forging never melts the metal. The grains are deformed and elongated in the direction of material flow, which aligns them with the primary stress paths in the finished part. There is no porosity, no shrinkage, and no segregation. The result is a part with higher tensile strength, better fatigue life under cyclic loading, and superior resistance to crack propagation. For most industrial components such as valve bodies, pump housings, brackets, fittings, and food machinery parts, cast properties are more than adequate. The strength difference becomes critical in high-cycle fatigue applications such as aircraft structural components, crankshafts, connecting rods, and suspension parts, where the grain structure of a forging provides a meaningful safety margin that a casting cannot match. If your component will see high cyclic loading, shock loads, or must meet aerospace or safety-critical structural standards, forging is the right answer regardless of complexity or cost. For most other industrial applications, investment casting delivers sufficient mechanical properties.

The Complexity Question

This is where investment casting has a clear and decisive advantage. Forging requires that the die can be separated from the part after forming. This means every feature must have draft angles and there can be no undercuts, internal passages, or geometry that would lock the part in the die. Investment casting has none of these restrictions. Because the ceramic shell is broken away after casting rather than separated as a die, the process can produce almost any geometry that can be described in a CAD model, including curved internal channels, hollow sections, thin walls, complex external profiles, and multiple features that would otherwise require assembly of separate components. The practical implication is that a part which requires five separate forged and machined components bolted together can often be consolidated into a single investment casting. This reduces assembly cost, eliminates potential failure points at joints and fasteners, and simplifies quality inspection.

The Cost Question

Tooling cost comparison is more nuanced than it first appears. Investment casting tooling is typically lower cost than forging dies because the wax injection tool operates at much lower pressures than a forging die. However, forging dies once made have very long service lives and can produce hundreds of thousands of parts, which amortises the tooling cost to a negligible per-part figure at very high volumes. At low to medium volumes, up to a few thousand parts, investment casting is almost always more cost-effective per part when complexity is factored in. The lower tooling cost and reduced machining requirement for complex geometries significantly reduce total production cost compared to forging the same part and then machining it extensively to achieve the required geometry. At very high volumes of a simple, solid design in a forgeable alloy, forging’s lower per-piece production cost can outweigh the higher tooling investment. But this scenario applies to a narrow range of parts: high-volume, simple geometry, standard alloy.

When Casting and Machining Is Better Than Either Alone

For many components, the best and most cost-effective approach is not a choice between casting and forging but a combination of investment casting and secondary CNC machining. The casting provides the complex near-net shape, often including features that would be impossible to forge, and CNC machining is applied selectively to the surfaces that need tight tolerances or specific surface quality. This approach avoids the material waste and high machining time that comes from starting with a solid forged billet and removing large volumes of metal to achieve the final shape. For complex parts, starting from a near-net-shape casting can reduce total machining time substantially compared to machining from billet.

How to Decide

Start with the mechanical requirements. If ultimate fatigue strength, impact toughness, or aerospace structural certification is required, forging is the correct process. If the application is industrial, commercial, or consumer-grade and does not involve high cyclic loading, investment casting properties are adequate. Then consider geometry. If your part has internal passages, thin walls, undercuts, or complex external geometry, investment casting is likely the only practical option. If the part is solid and simple, both processes are viable. Then consider volume and cost. For prototypes and low volumes, investment casting’s lower tooling cost and ability to produce near-net-shape parts is a strong advantage. For very high volumes of a simple solid part in steel or aluminium, forging’s economics improve. Finally consider the alloy. Nickel superalloys, duplex stainless steel, cobalt chrome, and other high-performance alloys are routinely investment cast. Forging these materials is possible but significantly more challenging and expensive, and for some alloys is not practical at all. If you are unsure which process suits your component, send us a drawing and we will give you an honest assessment.

Frequently Asked Questions

In the same alloy, a forged part will generally have higher tensile strength, better fatigue resistance, and superior impact toughness than a cast equivalent. This is because forging aligns the grain structure with the stress paths in the part and eliminates the porosity and micro-shrinkage that can occur in castings. However, for most industrial applications the mechanical properties of a well-made investment casting are more than sufficient. The strength advantage of forging becomes critical in high-cycle fatigue applications, aerospace structural components, and parts subject to severe impact loading.
Yes. Investment casting can produce internal cavities, passages, and hollow sections that forging cannot achieve. This is one of the process’s primary advantages. Ceramic cores can be used to create internal geometry that would be impossible to forge or impractical to machine. Valve bodies, pump casings, and hollow structural components are all examples where internal geometry makes investment casting the practical choice.
Investment casting tooling is typically lower cost than forging dies. A wax injection tool for investment casting operates at low pressure and can be made from aluminium or steel at relatively modest cost. Forging dies must withstand extreme compressive forces and are made from hardened tool steel, making them significantly more expensive to produce. The trade-off is that forging dies have very long service lives, so at very high volumes the per-part tooling cost for forging can become lower than for casting.
Nickel-based superalloys such as Inconel, cobalt-chrome alloys, duplex stainless steels such as 2205, and many high-alloy steels are routinely investment cast but are difficult or impractical to forge. These materials work-harden rapidly, require very high forging temperatures, and can crack during deformation. Investment casting handles them well because the metal is poured in the liquid state, with the alloy’s composition determining the casting properties rather than its room-temperature ductility.
Near-net-shape means the part comes out of the casting process already close to its final dimensions and geometry, requiring minimal material removal to reach specification. This matters for two reasons. First, it reduces machining time and cost, particularly for complex shapes where machining from a solid billet would require removing large volumes of material. Second, it reduces material waste, which matters for expensive alloys. A near-net-shape investment casting of a complex valve body might require only a few minutes of CNC time to finish critical surfaces, whereas machining the same part from forged billet could take hours.
Investment casting can be economical from a single prototype part upward, particularly when 3D printed patterns are used to avoid wax injection tooling costs entirely. For production with wax injection tooling, the tooling cost is spread across the production run, so the minimum economic quantity depends on part complexity, alloy, and tooling cost. Simple parts can be economical from around 50 pieces. More complex parts with higher tooling costs need higher volumes to reach competitive unit costs. Unlike forging, investment casting rarely requires very high minimum quantities to justify the tooling investment.

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