What do IT grades mean? How does GD&T improve part quality? A practical guide for buyers and engineers.
Tolerances determine how much variation is acceptable in a machined part. Understanding tolerances helps you get parts that fit and function correctly — without paying for unnecessary precision.
Why Tolerances Matter
Tight tolerances require:
- More precise machines
- More setup time
- More inspection effort
- Higher skill operators
All of these increase cost. That is why specifying the correct tolerance for each feature is one of the most important decisions in part design.
IT Grades: ISO 286 Standard
IT (International Tolerance) grades define standard tolerance ranges for different nominal sizes. Common IT grades in CNC machining:
| Grade | Tolerance | Typical Use |
|---|---|---|
| IT5 | ±0.005mm | Precision fitting, bearings |
| IT6 | ±0.01mm | General precision |
| IT7 | ±0.02mm | Standard fits |
| IT8 | ±0.03mm | General machining |
| IT9 | ±0.05mm | Commercial accuracy |
| IT10 | ±0.1mm | Rough fit, non-critical |
General Tolerances (ISO 2768)
Instead of specifying every dimension, many buyers use general tolerances:
- m (medium): ±0.1mm for letters, ±0.02mm for numbers
- f (fine): ±0.05mm for letters, ±0.01mm for numbers
- c (coarse): ±0.2mm for letters, ±0.05mm for numbers
ISO 2768-m is the most common standard for CNC machined parts.
GD&T: Geometric Dimensioning and Tolerancing
GD&T is a more precise system that defines not only size tolerance but also geometric relationships between features. It uses symbols to specify:
- Flatness: Surface must be within a specified plane
- Straightness: Axis or surface must be straight
- Circularity: Cross-section must be round
- Perpendicularity: Surface must be 90° to reference
- Parallelism: Surface must be parallel to reference
- Position: Feature position relative to datum
- Profile: Profile of a surface must be within bounds
Common Tolerance Mistakes
- Specifying tighter tolerances than needed: Costs more without benefit
- Ignoring accumulated tolerance: When multiple parts stack, tolerances add up
- No datum reference: Without datums, tolerances are ambiguous
- Treating GD&T as optional: Use it consistently for complex parts
How to Specify Tolerances on Your Drawings
- Identify critical dimensions — features that affect fit, function, or assembly
- Apply tight tolerances only to critical dimensions (±0.01–±0.02mm)
- Use general tolerances for non-critical features (±0.1mm)
- Consider GD&T for complex geometries and multiple feature relationships
- Clearly state datum references
Need Help with Tolerances?
If you are unsure what tolerances your part needs, we can review your drawings and suggest appropriate specifications.
📩 Send us your drawings and we will advise on the right tolerances for your application.
Need Pricing or a Quick Sourcing Check?
Send your drawing, sample reference, or part requirements and our sourcing team will review the likely process, material fit, and next step. Drawing or sketch + quantity + material idea is enough to start.
Popular Service Pages
Materials & Quality
Buyer Guides
Turn This CNC Guide Into a Supplier RFQ
If this guide matches your part decision, the next step is to prepare a focused RFQ so China CNC suppliers can quote with fewer assumptions.
- Prepare CAD files and drawings for CNC RFQ
- Request a CNC drawing review
- Use a China CNC sourcing partner
- Send drawings for quote support
FAQ
Why might Google not index a CNC guide immediately? New or similar-topic pages often need stronger internal links, clearer intent, and time for Google to re-crawl them.
How does this help buyers? It connects the guide to practical RFQ actions: drawing review, supplier matching, tolerance discussion, and quote comparison.