Why this matters
A fitting without a clean mark is a fitting without traceability. MSS SP-25, "Standard Marking System for Valves, Fittings, Flanges, and Unions," is the de-facto global standard referenced by ASME B16.9, B16.5, B16.11 and most project specifications. Its current edition is ANSI/MSS SP-25-2018. Buyers who reject material at inspection because of a missing or wrong mark always have the standard on their side. This guide explains the marking standards MSS SP-25 expects, what to verify, and what to write into the PO.
Referencing the marking standards MSS SP-25 puts every party on the same page about what each character on the fitting means.
Field-by-field marking content
MSS SP-25 specifies five core marking fields for fittings and flanges. Optional fields are required when called out by the product standard.
1. Manufacturer's identification. Name, registered trademark, or facility identifier. The mark must trace back to the manufacturing site, not just a brand owner.
2. Material designation. ASTM grade and any UNS number (e.g., "A234 WPB", "A105", "A182 F316L / S31603"). Some grades require additional condition (e.g., "WPHY 65" for line-pipe fittings).
3. Pressure class / rating. For flanges: "150", "300", "600", etc. For fittings: schedule or wall thickness as applicable.
4. Size designation. Nominal pipe size (e.g., "6"") or DN (e.g., "DN 150").
5. Heat / lot identification. A heat number that traces to the MTC. This is the single most important traceability field.
Optional but commonly required:
- Country of origin (often "MADE IN CHINA" or ISO country code)
- Service mark for sour service ("NACE" or "MR0175")
- PED Notified Body number when CE marking
- Customer PO / tag number
Marking methods
MSS SP-25 allows several methods, chosen based on the product:
- Casting / forging of the mark into the body — durable, used on flanges and large fittings.
- Stamping with low-stress dies — required for high-strength alloys to avoid creating crack initiation sites; "low-stress" or "round-bottom" stamps are mandated on austenitic stainless.
- Etching (electrochemical) — preferred on thin-walled or critical alloy fittings.
- Engraving — for retroactive ID after machining.
- Paint / ink stenciling — accepted as supplementary marking, not primary.
The mark must be legible after final processing (heat treatment, pickling, painting) and located where it remains visible after installation when practical.
Common buyer mistakes
- Accepting paint-only marks on small bore fittings — paint chips off in handling.
- Allowing high-stress steel stamps on austenitic stainless, creating cold-work zones that crack in service.
- Not requiring the heat number; without it, MTC matching is impossible.
- Skipping country-of-origin marks when the importer's customs requires them.
- Inconsistent placement that leaves marks on the inside of installed elbows, hidden from inspection.
Buyer checklist
- [ ] Manufacturer ID present and matches MTC
- [ ] Material grade and UNS where applicable
- [ ] Pressure class / rating shown
- [ ] Size designation shown
- [ ] Heat number traceable to MTC
- [ ] Low-stress stamps used on stainless
- [ ] Country of origin marked
- [ ] Marks legible after pickling/painting
- [ ] Marks placed for visibility post-installation
- [ ] Sample marking photos archived with PO file
Sample PO clause
"All fittings and flanges shall be marked per ANSI/MSS SP-25-2018, including manufacturer trademark, material designation, pressure class or schedule, size, and heat number. Low-stress stamping required on austenitic stainless and high-strength alloy material. Country of origin shall be marked. Provide marking photographs covering 100% of pieces with the pre-shipment package."
Our seamless butt-welding pipe fittings and forged flanges and non-standard forgings carry full MSS SP-25 marking, including PED, NACE and customer-tag options on request. Send your marking-photo requirement through our inquiry page or see prior marking samples on the certificates page.
Sources
- ANSI MSS SP-25-2018 standard listing: https://webstore.ansi.org/standards/MSS/ansimsssp252018
- ANSI Blog — MSS SP-25-2018 explainer: https://blog.ansi.org/ansi/ansi-mss-sp-25-2018-marking-valves-fittings/
- MSS SP-25 preview pages: https://webstore.ansi.org/preview-pages/MSS/preview_ANSI+MSS+SP-25-2018.pdf
- Wermac flange/fitting marking summary: https://www.wermac.org/flanges/marking_requirements_flanges_fittings_pipes_valves_fasteners.html
- MSS SP-25 reference PDF: https://www.oepipe.com/Content/upload/pdf/2020161977/MSS-SP-25.pdf
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