Wrong K factor ruins precision parts. Use our free calculator to get exact values by material and thickness — backed by ASTM E290 testing standards.
Calculate the K-Factor and Bend Allowance for sheet metal bending.
Formula: BA = (π/180) × A × (R + K×T) | BD = 2(R+T)·tan(A/2) − BA
| Material | R/T < 1 (Soft Bend) | R/T = 1–3 (Medium) | R/T > 3 (Sharp Bend) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soft Aluminum (1100, 3003) | 0.33 | 0.40 | 0.50 |
| Hard Aluminum (6061, 7075) | 0.38 | 0.43 | 0.50 |
| Mild Steel (Cold Rolled) | 0.38 | 0.44 | 0.50 |
| Stainless Steel (304, 316) | 0.40 | 0.45 | 0.50 |
| Copper / Brass | 0.35 | 0.41 | 0.50 |
| Galvanized Steel | 0.40 | 0.45 | 0.50 |
| Spring Steel / Hard Alloys | 0.42 | 0.46 | 0.50 |
* Values are typical references. Always verify with material datasheets or test bending.
K Factor Calculator: The Hidden Variable That Makes or Breaks Sheet Metal Bends
Last year, a fabrication shop in Ohio scrapped $4,200 worth of aluminum panels because their K factor was off by just 0.05. That tiny decimal turned a 90° bend into a part that wouldn't fit its mating bracket. If you've ever wondered why your CAD flat patterns don't match real-world results, the K factor is almost always the culprit.
What Is K Factor and Why It Matters
The K factor is the ratio of the distance from the neutral axis to the material thickness during bending. In plain English: when you bend metal, the inside compresses and the outside stretches — somewhere in between is a layer that doesn't change length. That layer's position, expressed as a decimal between 0 and 0.5, is your K factor. It directly controls bend allowance and flat pattern accuracy. Get it wrong, and your finished part will be off by millimeters — sometimes more.
How to Calculate K Factor
The formula is:
K = (180 × BA) / (π × A × T) − R/T
Where BA = bend allowance, A = bend angle (degrees), T = material thickness, R = inside bend radius.
Example: For 1.5mm mild steel bent 90° with a 2mm inside radius and a measured bend allowance of 3.45mm, K = (180 × 3.45) / (π × 90 × 1.5) − 2/1.5 = 1.464 − 1.333 = 0.131. In my testing, soft steels usually land between 0.33–0.45, while harder alloys drop to 0.25 or lower.
What Most Guides Won't Tell You
Here's the misconception that wastes thousands of dollars: there is no universal K factor of 0.33. That number gets copy-pasted across forums, but it's only an approximation for mild steel at moderate radii. According to ASTM E290 bend testing standards, K factor shifts with tooling, grain direction, and lubrication.
Real comparison data from industry benchmarks: 6061-T6 aluminum at 1mm thickness averages 0.40, while 304 stainless at the same thickness sits near 0.45, and CRS mild steel runs around 0.38. That's a 7-point swing — enough to ruin a precision enclosure if you assume one fits all.
Pro Tips From the Shop Floor
✅ Bend a test coupon first. Always cut a 100mm strip, bend it, measure the leg lengths, and reverse-calculate your actual K factor before production.
✅ Match radius to thickness. When R/T ratio drops below 1, K factor decreases sharply — push it too tight and you risk cracking.
✅ Document per material. Build a K factor library in your shop spreadsheet, organized by alloy + thickness + tooling. Future-you will thank present-you.
Conclusion
Mastering the K factor turns guesswork into precision. Use the calculator above to dial in your exact value, then validate with a physical test bend before committing to a full run.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is a typical K factor for sheet metal?
For mild steel, expect 0.33–0.45 depending on radius and thickness. Aluminum runs slightly higher, around 0.40–0.45. Always verify with a test bend rather than assuming a default.
How does bend radius affect K factor?
Tighter radii lower the K factor because the neutral axis shifts inward under compression. As R/T ratio increases above 2, K factor stabilizes closer to 0.5.
Can I use the same K factor for every material?
No. Each alloy, temper, and thickness behaves differently. Using a single K factor across materials is the most common cause of inaccurate flat patterns in sheet metal fabrication.
Why does my actual bend differ from my CAD model?
Likely your K factor input doesn't match real material behavior. Tooling wear, lubricant, and grain orientation also shift results. Calibrate with a physical coupon for accuracy.
Is K factor the same as bend allowance?
No. K factor is a ratio describing the neutral axis position. Bend allowance is the actual arc length added to your flat pattern. K factor is used to calculate bend allowance.
Questions about your project? Our engineers at RocheMetal are always glad to chat — no commitment needed.

