FABRICATION AND WELDING GUIDE
Metal Fabrication vs. Welding: What Is the Difference?
By Luft Machine | Updated July 15, 2026
Quick Answer
Welding is a joining process used to connect metal parts. Metal fabrication is the broader process of creating or repairing a metal component or assembly. Fabrication can include design review, measuring, cutting, bending, machining, fitting, welding, fastening, finishing, and inspection. A simple repair may primarily need welding, while a custom part or assembly may require several fabrication steps.
What This Guide Covers
- What welding does
- What fabrication includes
- When a job may need one or both
- Questions that help a shop choose the right path
Welding Focuses on Joining
Welding uses heat, pressure, or a combination of methods to join materials in a controlled way. The correct process depends on the base metal, thickness, joint design, working conditions, and service requirements. Common shop methods include MIG, TIG, and stick welding, but the process name alone does not define the entire job.
A cracked bracket, separated joint, or damaged steel component may appear to be a welding job. The shop still needs to understand why the failure occurred, whether the surrounding material is sound, and whether the piece needs additional preparation or reinforcement.
Fabrication Covers the Whole Build or Repair
Fabrication begins with the finished need. The work might require a new piece of material, a machined feature, a formed bend, several fitted components, or a recreated part. Welding may join those pieces, but measuring, cutting, fitting, and checking the result are also part of the fabrication work.
| Question | Welding | Fabrication |
|---|---|---|
| Primary purpose | Join or repair metal at a joint | Create, modify, or rebuild a part or assembly |
| Typical steps | Preparation, joining, cleanup, review | Layout, cutting, forming, machining, fitting, joining, finishing |
| Common starting point | Crack, separated joint, or connection problem | Part, sketch, drawing, photo, material, or complete equipment problem |
| Best fit | The surrounding part is usable and the joint is the main issue | The job needs several operations or a new custom piece |
Many Real Jobs Need Both
A trailer repair may need damaged steel removed, new material cut and fitted, and the replacement section welded in place. A worn shaft problem may require machining before a fabricated bracket or mount is assembled. A plant or ag-equipment repair may start with welding but reveal a missing part or alignment problem that calls for additional shop work.
What to Tell the Shop
- What broke, moved, cracked, wore out, or no longer fits.
- Where the part is used and what loads or motion it sees.
- The material, if known.
- Photos, measurements, drawings, or the original part.
- Whether the equipment can come to the shop or may need field review.
Related: Welding | Fabrication | How the Fabrication Process Works
Sources
American Welding Society: Welder Fabricator Overview
OSHA: Welding, Cutting, and Brazing
Not Sure Whether the Job Needs Welding or Fabrication?
Call Luft Machine at 970.522.9215 or send a photo and project details through the contact page.