Bolt test certificates are often requested only after a project buyer, customs broker, or site engineer asks for them. That is where problems begin.
A certificate is not just a formality. It proves whether the supplied bolts match the ordered grade, material, mechanical properties, and batch traceability. For structural steel, machinery, oil and gas, mining, marine, and EPC projects, this document can decide whether the shipment is accepted or delayed.
Why Bolt Test Certificates Matter
Certificates Connect the Goods to the Specification
A bolt may look correct, but appearance cannot confirm material grade, heat treatment, tensile strength, hardness, or proof load.
A proper test certificate helps buyers check:
- Product standard
- Size and thread
- Material grade
- Mechanical property class
- Heat number
- Batch number
- Test results
- Inspection approval
For project or load-bearing orders, buyers should review high-strength fasteners and confirm certificate requirements before production starts.
Key Information Buyers Should Check
Product Identity and Grade
The certificate must match the purchase order. If the order is for M20 × 100 class 10.9 hex bolts, the document should not only say “steel fasteners.”
| Certificate Item | What to Check | Risk if Missing |
|---|---|---|
| Product name | Bolt, stud, screw, anchor bolt | Wrong item acceptance |
| Standard | DIN, ISO, ASTM, EN, or drawing | Dimensional mismatch |
| Size | Diameter, length, pitch | Assembly problem |
| Grade | 8.8, 10.9, 12.9, B7, etc. | Wrong strength item acceptance |
| Standard | DIN, ISO, ASTM, EN, or drawing | Dimensional mismatch |
| Size | Diameter, length, pitch | Assembly problem level |
| Finish | Plain, zinc, HDG, black, zinc flake | Coating dispute |
| Quantity / batch | Matches packing list | Traceability failure |
For common catalog products, buyers can start from standard fasteners and define the required certificate type in the RFQ.
Material Data
Chemical Composition
Chemical data confirms whether the steel chemistry matches the required material. For carbon steel and alloy steel bolts, buyers often check carbon, manganese, chromium, molybdenum, sulfur, and phosphorus.
For stainless bolts, chromium, nickel, molybdenum, and carbon content are important. Buyers sourcing corrosion-resistant parts should review stainless steel fasteners and confirm the exact stainless grade.
Material names such as “steel” or “stainless” are not enough for certified projects.
Mechanical Test Data
Strength Must Be Proven by Results
A bolt test certificate should show actual mechanical values when required by the order or standard.
Key data may include:
| Test Item | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Tensile strength | Confirms breaking strength level |
| Yield or proof strength | Confirms resistance to permanent deformation |
| Hardness | Shows heat treatment consistency |
| Elongation | Indicates ductility |
| Wedge tensile test | Checks head-to-shank integrity |
| Proof load | Confirms service-load performance |
For coating-related fasteners, a separate coating report may be needed. Zinc plating, hot-dip galvanizing, zinc flake, black oxide, and PTFE coatings may affect thread fit and corrosion performance. Buyers can compare various coated fasteners before confirming documents.
Traceability Requirements
Heat Number and Batch Number
Traceability is the part many buyers overlook. The certificate must link the tested material to the packed goods.
A good traceability chain should connect:
- Raw material heat number
- Production batch number
- Heat treatment batch
- Inspection report
- Packing label
- Invoice and packing list
If carton labels and certificates cannot be matched, the document has limited practical value.
For special bolts, anchors, studs, and drawing-based parts, use custom non-standard fasteners and define traceability requirements before production.
Common Certificate Problems
Avoid these issues:
- Certificate grade does not match head marking.
- Heat number is missing.
- Test values are copied from unrelated batches.
- Coating report is not provided.
- Packing labels do not show batch number.
- Certificate describes material only, not finished bolts.
- Inspection report does not match the shipped quantity.
For broad sourcing, buyers can review the full fastener products range and separate certificate needs by product type.
Final Advice
Bolt test certificates should be requested before production, not after shipment. A reliable certificate must show grade, material, mechanical results, heat number, batch traceability, and inspection approval.
For serious industrial prchasing, do not accept a certificate as decoration. Read it against the PO, drawing, standard, packing label, and shipment documents.