Yield Strength Chart

ENGINEERING

Yield strength chart

Typical yield and ultimate tensile strength for common engineering metals and alloys, in ksi and MPa. Use it to compare materials or to set an allowable stress with a factor of safety.

Material Yield (ksi) Yield (MPa) Tensile (ksi) Tensile (MPa)
Aluminum 6061-T6 40 276 45 310
Aluminum 7075-T6 73 503 83 572
Mild steel (A36) 36 250 58 400
Steel 4140 (Q&T) 95 655 110 758
Stainless 304 31 215 73 505
Stainless 316 30 205 75 515
Titanium Ti-6Al-4V 128 880 138 950
Copper (annealed) 10 70 32 220
Brass (C360) 45 310 58 400
Cast iron (gray) 30 207
Magnesium AZ31B 22 150 37 255
Nickel 200 21 148 67 462

Values are representative for common tempers and conditions; heat treatment, cold work, and grade shift real properties significantly. Always design to the certified minimums for your actual material, not to a chart.

Setting an allowable stress?

Divide yield by a factor of safety to get a working stress, or use the Factor of Safety Calculator and the Stress Calculator to check a design against these values.

Yield vs tensile strength

Yield strength is the stress at which a metal starts to deform permanently; ultimate tensile is the stress at which it finally breaks. Most designs keep working stress below yield, using tensile only to understand the margin before fracture.

Reading the table for design

Stronger is not always better: 7075 aluminum beats mild steel on yield at a third the weight, but it is less weldable and more notch-sensitive. Use the numbers alongside weight, cost, and fabrication needs, not in isolation.

FAQ

What is the yield strength of mild steel?

A36 structural steel yields at about 36 ksi (250 MPa) and pulls apart near 58 ksi (400 MPa).

Which is stronger, 6061 or 7075 aluminum?

7075-T6 is far stronger, about 73 ksi yield versus 40 ksi for 6061-T6, but it is harder to weld and less corrosion-resistant.

How do I use yield strength in design?

Divide it by a factor of safety to set the maximum working stress. For a yield of 250 MPa and a factor of 2, design to 125 MPa.

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The calculators and tools on Formula Factory are provided for general guidance and informational purposes only. Results are estimates based on standard formulas and the values you enter — they do not constitute professional engineering, electrical, or architectural advice. Always verify calculations with a qualified professional before making decisions for any safety-critical, code-compliance, or commercial application. Formula Factory makes no representations or warranties as to the accuracy or completeness of any result, and accepts no liability for errors, omissions, or any outcomes arising from reliance on this information.