By the Templateez Team · Licensed Attorney · June 2026

Metalwork and Fabrication Intake Forms: What to Document Before the First Weld

A metalwork shop that starts fabricating without a clear specification document is a shop that eats revision time, argues over scope, and occasionally builds the wrong thing entirely. Metal is not forgiving. A framing carpenter can rip out a miscut stud and grab another one. A welder who burns through the wrong stock or fabricates a railing to the wrong dimension is looking at scrap costs, rebooking the welding table, and explaining to a client why the delivery date slipped.

Most fabrication shops collect a client name, a rough description, and a budget range. That is enough to write a ballpark quote. It is not enough to build from. A real metalwork intake form captures the project type, the material specification, the process, the finish, the dimensions, the installation requirements, and the regulatory constraints that determine whether the job is profitable and whether the finished piece actually fits where the client intends to put it. Here is what that form should cover, and why each section matters.

Project type: structural, ornamental, or custom fabrication

Metalwork covers an enormous range of work, and the first thing your intake needs to do is establish which category the project falls into. The category determines your process, your materials, your finishing options, and often whether any engineering or code compliance is involved:

Material specification: the choice that drives cost, process, and longevity

"Metal" is not a specification. Different metals have different costs, different weldability, different corrosion behavior, and different finishing requirements. Capturing the material at intake prevents the situation where a client expects stainless and you quote mild steel:

Welding process: matching the process to the job

Most clients do not care which welding process you use, and most of the time that is fine because you will make the process decision based on the material and application. But your intake form should capture enough information that the estimator can flag any process-specific cost or lead time implications before the quote goes out:

Dimensions and drawings: the specification that everything else depends on

This is where more quotes fall apart than anywhere else. A client who says "a railing for my stairs" is giving you a category, not a specification. Before you price anything, your intake needs to establish the dimensional scope of the project and whether fabrication drawings exist:

Load-bearing requirements and code compliance

Not all metalwork is structural, but when it is, the code requirements are not optional. Your intake needs to surface the load-bearing and regulatory context early so you can price the right scope and avoid building something that fails inspection:

Finish specification: the decision that determines longevity and appearance

The finish is what the client will see and touch every day. It is also what determines how long the piece lasts, particularly for exterior work. Getting the finish specification wrong is expensive because finishing is often the last step — and reworking a finished piece adds cost at the worst possible moment:

Site conditions and installation method

A piece that is fabricated correctly but installed incorrectly is still a problem. Your intake should capture the installation context so you can design the right connection details and price the installation scope accurately:

Pricing: shop time, materials, finishing, and installation

Metalwork pricing is more complex than most home service trades because the material and process costs vary significantly by project type, material, and finish. Your intake needs enough information to produce a real quote, not a rough guess:

Lead time and scheduling expectations

Custom metal fabrication is not a same-week service for most shops. Your intake should establish the timeline early, before the client assumes they can get a custom gate in two weeks:

Standard lead times for custom ornamental work run four to eight weeks in most market conditions: one to two weeks for shop drawing and client approval, one to two weeks for material procurement (particularly for stainless and aluminum, which may require mill orders for specific sizes), two to three weeks of shop fabrication time, and one to two weeks for finishing and installation scheduling. Projects that involve engineer review, building permit submission, or third-party inspection add time on both ends.

Capture the client's desired completion date at intake. If it is not achievable, say so at intake — not after you have collected a deposit. A client who needs a railing installed before their open house in three weeks may be able to expedite by paying for a rush slot, by accepting a more standard design that requires less fabrication time, or by acknowledging that the target date is not feasible and adjusting their timeline. All three of those conversations are better had at intake than after the shop schedule is set.

From intake to fabrication: the documentation that prevents rework

Metalwork combines significant material cost, skilled labor, and irreversible process steps in a way that makes ambiguity genuinely expensive. A welder who builds to the wrong dimension, in the wrong material, with the wrong finish, has produced scrap — not a job that can be adjusted with a small callback. The intake form is the document that translates a client conversation into a buildable specification.

When a client fills out a form that asks about the material grade, the finish color with a RAL number, the base plate size, the anchor substrate, and the applicable code requirements, two things happen: the estimator can write an accurate quote, and the welder can build the right piece the first time. That combination is what separates a profitable fabrication shop from one that chronically runs over on custom work.

Related reading: if the project involves perimeter fencing or ornamental iron fence panels, the fencing contractor intake form guide covers fence-specific scope items including property lines, HOA approvals, underground utilities, and gate hardware. If the metalwork is part of a larger construction scope, see the general contractor intake form guide for how to document work across multiple trades in a single project.

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