SS 410 vs SS 416 vs SS 420 vs SS 440C — Which Martensitic Grade Is Right for You?

1. Why SS 410 and Other Martensitic Grades Cause Confusion

SS 410 is the most widely used martensitic stainless steel — but walk into any procurement meeting and the same question comes up: should you go with SS 410, SS416, SS420, or SS440C? All four are iron-chromium alloys that derive their strength from heat treatment rather than nickel additions. They share a common ancestor in Grade 410 but diverge sharply in hardness, corrosion resistance, machinability, and cost. Picking the wrong grade means leaving performance on the table — or overpaying for properties you’ll never use.
This guide breaks down every meaningful difference, with data tables and a plain-English verdict for each use case.

2. SS 410 at a Glance — And How It Compares to 416, 420 & 440C

SS 410 – The Workhorse

Moderate hardness, good corrosion resistance, low cost. The default martensitic choice for general-purpose structural parts.

SS 416 – Free-Machining

410 with added sulphur for dramatically better chip-breaking. Preferred when high-volume CNC machining matters more than corrosion performance.

SS 420 – Higher Hardness

Elevated carbon gives a harder edge — the go-to for cutlery, surgical blades, and mould steels where surface hardness is paramount.

SS 440C – Maximum Hardness

Highest carbon of the group. Achieves the hardest heat-treated condition of any standard stainless steel — bearings, precision tools, high-wear components.

3. SS 410 Chemical Composition vs SS 416, SS 420 & SS 440C

Every performance difference between these four grades ultimately traces back to two levers: carbon content (controls achievable hardness) and chromium content (governs corrosion resistance). Sulphur is the wild card in Grade 416.

Element SS 410 SS 416 SS 420 SS 440C
Carbon (%) ≤ 0.15 ≤ 0.15 ≥ 0.15 0.95–1.20
Chromium (%) 11.5–13.5 12–14 12–14 16–18
Manganese (%) ≤ 1.0 ≤ 1.25 ≤ 1.0 ≤ 1.0
Silicon (%) ≤ 1.0 ≤ 1.0 ≤ 1.0 ≤ 1.0
Sulphur (%) ≤ 0.03 ≥ 0.15 ≤ 0.03 ≤ 0.03
Molybdenum (%) ≤ 0.60 0.75
Nickel (%) ≤ 0.75
UNS No. S41000 S41600 S42000 S44004
Key Insight: Grade 410 uses the lowest carbon of the group, which limits peak hardness but preserves good weldability and ductility. As you move to 420 and then 440C, carbon climbs sharply, unlocking dramatically higher hardness — but at the cost of weld-cracking risk and reduced ductility.

4. Mechanical Properties Head-to-Head

All martensitic grades must be heat treated to realise their strength potential. The table below compares hardened + tempered properties, which represent each grade’s practical service condition.

Property (Hardened) SS 410 SS 416 SS 420 SS 440C
Tensile Strength (psi) 205,000 180,000 230,000 285,000
Yield Strength (psi) 185,000 160,000 195,000 275,000
Elongation (% in 2″) 8 10 8 2
Max Hardness (HRC) ~40 ~38 ~50 ~60
Density (g/cm³) 7.65 7.70 7.74 7.67
Modulus of Elasticity (GPa) 200 200 200 200
Melting Point 1495°C ~1480°C ~1455°C ~1370°C
“Grade 410 offers the best balance of strength, weldability, and cost. Upgrade to 420 for more edge hardness, and to 440C only when you truly need extreme wear resistance.”

5. SS 410 Corrosion Resistance vs Other Martensitic Grades

Corrosion resistance in martensitic steels is governed primarily by chromium content and surface finish. Higher hardening temperatures and incomplete tempering can create sensitisation zones that accelerate pitting.

Environment SS 410 SS 416 SS 420 SS 440C
Atmospheric (rural/urban) Good Good Good Best
Fresh water / steam Good Moderate Good Best
Mild acids (dilute acetic) Good Moderate Good Best
Seawater / chlorides Poor Poor Poor Fair
Food-grade environments Good Moderate Good Good
High-temp oxidation (≤650°C) Good Good Moderate Moderate

Why 416 scores lower despite similar chromium: The high sulphur content in 416 creates manganese sulphide inclusions, which act as initiation sites for pitting corrosion in aqueous environments. In any wet or corrosive setting, 416 should be avoided unless machinability absolutely takes priority.

Why 440C leads despite high carbon: Its higher chromium band (16–18%) compensates for carbon’s chromium-depleting effect in the matrix, delivering the best corrosion resistance in the group when properly heat treated and polished.

6. Machinability & Weldability

Factor SS 410 SS 416 SS 420 SS 440C
Machinability Rating Moderate Excellent Moderate Difficult
Relative Machinability (%) ~55% ~85% ~50% ~35%
Weldability Good Fair Fair Not recommended
Pre-heat required? 150–260°C 150–260°C 150–260°C Not advised
Post-weld anneal? Yes Yes Strongly advised Not practical

Machining Notes for Grade 410

Grade 410 machines best in the highly tempered or annealed condition. Once hardened above 30 HRC, tool life degrades rapidly — at that point, 416 becomes the smarter substitute for high-volume machining. Post-machining passivation is recommended for 410 to restore the passive chromium oxide layer disrupted during cutting.

Welding Grade 410

Among the four grades, 410 is the most weldable martensitic steel. The recommended procedure: preheat to 150–260°C, weld using matching 410 rods or 309 rods (for enhanced joint ductility as per AS 1554.6), then follow with a full anneal to prevent hydrogen cracking. Skipping the post-weld anneal is the most common source of field failures with this grade.

7. SS 410 Applications — Which Grade Fits Your Use Case?

Use the table below to quickly identify which grade best fits a given application category.

Application SS 410 SS 416 SS 420 SS 440C
Pump shafts & valve components ✅ Primary ⚡ If CNC heavy
Gas & steam turbine parts ✅ Primary
Surgical & dental instruments ✅ Suitable ✅ Primary
Cutlery & kitchen blades ✅ Primary ✅ Premium
Ball & roller bearings ✅ Primary
High-volume CNC screw parts ✅ Primary
Automobile components ✅ Suitable ✅ Suitable
Petroleum refinery equipment ✅ Primary
Gate valves & press plates ✅ Primary
Mould & die components ✅ Suitable ✅ Primary
Food processing equipment ✅ Suitable ❌ Avoid ✅ Suitable ✅ Suitable

8. Should You Choose SS 410, SS 416, SS 420, or SS 440C?

The Plain-English Verdict

SS 410Your best starting point for most structural and industrial applications. Excellent weldability, moderate machinability, good corrosion resistance at the lowest cost. Ideal for turbine parts, pump shafts, valves, and general engineering components.

SS 416Only if machinability is the dominant criterion and corrosion resistance can be compromised. High-volume CNC screw machining, nuts, bolts, and threaded parts in non-corrosive environments.

SS 420When you need more hardness than 410 delivers — surgical blades, cutlery, plastic injection moulds. Harder to weld; plan for post-weld heat treatment.

Stainless Steel 440CThe last resort for maximum hardness and wear resistance — precision bearings, nozzles, high-wear tooling. Welding is practically impossible; factor machining complexity and cost into procurement decisions.

9. Frequently Asked Questions

Is Stainless Steel 410 magnetic?

Yes. Grade 410 is magnetic in both the annealed and hardened condition because its martensitic crystal structure is ferromagnetic. This distinguishes it clearly from austenitic grades like 304 and 316, which are non-magnetic in the annealed state.

Can SS 410 be used in food processing?

Yes, with caveats. Grade 410 offers good corrosion resistance to food acids, mild chemicals, and steam — common in sugar, dairy, and oil processing. However, it is not the optimal choice for high-chloride or acidic cleaning environments where 316L would be preferred.

What are the best alternatives to Stainless Steel 410?

As stated on our SS 410 grade page, the closest alternatives are 416 (for machinability), 420 (for higher hardness), and 440C (for maximum wear resistance). For better corrosion resistance, consider moving to ferritic 430 or austenitic 304.

Does Stainless Steel 410 require passivation after machining?

Yes, passivation is strongly recommended after machining Grade 410. Cutting operations can disrupt the chromium oxide passive film and embed free iron particles from tooling. A nitric acid or citric acid passivation treatment restores full corrosion performance.

At what temperature does Stainless Steel 410 lose its mechanical strength?

The mechanical properties of Grade 410 begin to decline noticeably in the temperature range of 400°C to 580°C — the same range used for tempering. Continuous service above 580°C is not recommended. Good scaling resistance can be maintained up to 650°C for intermittent exposure.

Is 440C harder than 420 stainless steel?

Significantly so. Grade 420 achieves a maximum hardness of approximately HRC 50, while 440C in the fully hardened condition can reach HRC 60 — the highest hardness achievable in any standard stainless steel grade. This comes at the cost of reduced toughness, weldability, and corrosion resistance in the matrix prior to complete heat treatment.

Need Grade 410 Bars, Wires, or Custom Profiles?

Ambica Steels Limited manufactures and supplies SS 410 in bright round bars, hex bars,and square bars.

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