Why This Comparison Matters
Two alloys dominate the conversation when engineers need corrosion-resistant nickel materials: Inconel 625 and Hastelloy C-276. Both offer excellent performance in harsh environments, but the differences between them determine whether your project runs smoothly—or faces unexpected failures and cost overruns.
After 30 years of supplying specialty alloys to projects in offshore wind, petrochemical, and water treatment, I've seen both alloys chosen correctly and misapplied. This guide gives you a practical framework for making the right call.
Quick take: Choose Inconel 625 for high-temperature strength, oxidizing environments, and budget-conscious projects. Choose Hastelloy C-276 for the most aggressive reducing environments, complex welds, and where maximum corrosion margin is non-negotiable.
1. Chemical Composition
The performance gap starts at the molecular level. Here's how their key elements compare:
| Element | Inconel 625 | Hastelloy C-276 |
|---|---|---|
| Nickel (Ni) | ≥58% | ≥57% |
| Chromium (Cr) | 20–23% | 14.5–16.5% |
| Molybdenum (Mo) | 8–10% | 15–17% |
| Niobium (Nb) | 3.15–4.15% | — |
| Iron (Fe) | ≤5% | 4–7% |
| Tungsten (W) | — | 3–4.5% |
Key insight: Inconel 625's niobium content gives it superior precipitation hardening and high-temperature strength. C-276's higher molybdenum and tungsten content give it the edge in reducing-acid corrosion.
2. Corrosion Resistance: Head-to-Head
Reducing Environments (Hydrochloric Acid, Sulfuric Acid)
Hastelloy C-276 is the clear winner here. Its higher molybdenum content provides exceptional resistance to reducing acids even at elevated temperatures. Inconel 625 performs adequately but shows measurably higher corrosion rates in concentrated HCl.
C-276 Preferred
Oxidizing Environments (Nitric Acid, Seawater, Aerated Solutions)
Inconel 625 pulls ahead. The higher chromium content (20–23% vs 14.5–16.5%) forms a more stable passive oxide layer in oxidizing conditions. C-276's chromium level is intentionally lower to avoid precipitation-sensitivity issues, but this makes it more vulnerable in oxidizing media.
Inconel 625 Preferred
Seawater and Chloride-Rich Environments
Both alloys perform well. Inconel 625 has excellent seawater resistance up to moderate temperatures. C-276 offers superior resistance to chloride-induced pitting and stress corrosion cracking in the most demanding offshore conditions. For subsea or high-temperature seawater service, C-276 is the safer choice.
Both viable — C-276 for extreme conditions
Pitting and Crevice Corrosion
CPR (Critical Pitting Temperature) and CCC (Critical Crevice Temperature) tests consistently favor C-276. If your application involves stagnant water, crevices, or deposits, C-276 provides a larger safety margin.
C-276 Preferred
3. Mechanical Properties
| Property | Inconel 625 | Hastelloy C-276 |
|---|---|---|
| Yield Strength (0.2% offset) | ≥414 MPa | ≥310 MPa |
| Tensile Strength | ≥827 MPa | ≥690 MPa |
| Elongation | ≥30% | ≥40% |
| Hardness (Brinell) | ≤293 HB | ≤241 HB |
| High-temp strength (650°C) | Excellent | Moderate |
Inconel 625 is the stronger alloy at room temperature and maintains its strength far better at elevated temperatures. If your component sees sustained high temperatures (above 600°C), Inconel 625 is the natural choice. C-276 has better ductility and impact toughness, which matters for cryogenic applications.
4. Temperature Limits
| Parameter | Inconel 625 | Hastelloy C-276 |
|---|---|---|
| Max continuous service temperature | 980°C (oxidation), 650°C (strength-critical) | 1035°C (oxidation), 540°C (strength-critical) |
| Low temperature limit | -196°C (cryogenic OK) | -196°C (cryogenic OK) |
| Thermal fatigue resistance | Excellent | Good |
5. Weldability and Fabrication
✅ Inconel 625 — Easier to Work With
Excellent weldability by GTAW (TIG), GMAW (MIG), and SMAW (stick). Minimal heat input control needed. Can be fabricated using standard shop methods. No post-weld heat treatment required for most thicknesses.
⚠ Hastelloy C-276 — Requires Care
More sensitive to heat input and interpass temperatures. Weld metal composition can shift if not carefully controlled. Recommended: low heat input, interpass temp below 150°C, dedicated C-276 filler metals. Post-weld cleaning essential to avoid preferential attack.
Fabrication tip: If your project involves complex weld geometries or shop fabrication with varying skill levels, Inconel 625 will save you headaches and reduce QA overhead. C-276 rewards experienced welders with excellent results but punishes shortcuts.
6. Cost and Availability
| Factor | Inconel 625 | Hastelloy C-276 |
|---|---|---|
| Relative material cost | Lower baseline | 15–30% higher |
| Availability (plate/sheet) | Widely stocked | Good availability |
| Availability (forgings/rings) | Good | Requires longer lead time |
| Machining cost | Moderate | Higher (work hardening) |
7. Real-World Applications
Where Inconel 625 Wins
- Aerospace components — turbine seals, engine exhaust systems, afterburner hardware
- Gas turbine blades and ducting — high-temperature strength is the primary requirement
- Marine propeller blades and shafting — seawater resistance with good mechanical properties
- Pollution control equipment — scrubbers, ducts handling oxidizing flue gases
- Oil & gas christmas trees — subsea wellhead components with combined temperature/pressure demands
- Solar panel structural alloy components
Where Hastelloy C-276 Wins
- Chemical process vessels — handling HCl, H₂SO₄, phosphoric acid at concentration
- Flue gas desulfurization (FGD) systems — highly corrosive wet-dry interfaces
- Pharmaceutical reactors — high-purity requirements, aggressive cleaning agents
- Offshore platform piping and vessels — sour service, seawater splash zones
- Pulp and paper bleach plants — chlorinated dioxide environments
- Seawater heat exchangers — maximum chloride resistance
8. Selection Decision Framework
| Your Priority | Recommended Alloy | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Reducing acid (HCl, H₂SO₄) | C-276 | Superior Mo content handles reducing media |
| High temperature (>600°C) | Inconel 625 | Retains strength and oxidation resistance |
| Oxidizing media / seawater | Inconel 625 | Higher Cr for stable passive film |
| Maximum chloride pitting margin | C-276 | Higher Mo+W gives best CPT/CCT values |
| Fabrication simplicity | Inconel 625 | More forgiving weld procedures |
| Complex welded fabrications | C-276 | No heat sensitization risk |
| Budget-constrained project | Inconel 625 | 15–30% lower material cost |
| Maximum corrosion margin | C-276 | Most versatile of the two |
9. The Hidden Cost Nobody Talks About
Beyond the material price tag, consider inspection and certification costs. Both alloys require EN 10204 Type 3.1 mill test reports at minimum. For critical applications:
- PMI (Positive Material Identification) on-site verification is strongly recommended — confirm alloy identity matches documentation
- For C-276, intergranular corrosion testing per ASTM G28 Method A may be specified to rule out sensitization
- Both alloys can be sourced from Chinese mills at significant cost advantage — but always verify mill certification credentials and request independent test reports for high-value orders
What we see in the field: Over 60% of material-related failures in corrosive service trace back to either wrong alloy selection or unverified certificates. Spending an extra 2–3% on proper verification upfront prevents catastrophic failures that cost 20× more to repair.
Need Help Choosing?
With 30 years in specialty alloy supply, I've helped engineers and procurement teams select the right material for applications ranging from offshore wind foundations to pharmaceutical reactors. The right choice depends on your specific environment, temperature profile, stress requirements, and budget.
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