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Laser Engraving on Metal: Materials, Lasers & Settings 2026

Laser Engraving on Metal: Materials, Lasers & Settings 2026
Laser Engraving on Metal Materials, Lasers & Settings 2026
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Laser Engraving on Metal: Pick the Right Laser, Power, and Settings for Every Material

Laser engraving on metal is the only marking process that hits Solve-tier depth for industrial UID, gunsmithing, jewelry, and signage in one workflow — yet most online guides skip the parameters that determine whether a job runs in 30 seconds or 30 minutes. This guide pulls absorption physics, ANSI safety classes, and per-metal power/speed/frequency settings from primary literature into one operator-grade reference, working with metals like stainless steel, aluminum, and brass.

Quick Specs — Metal Laser Engraving at a Glance

Power range 20W – 100W (fiber); 5W – 200W (CO2 + spray); 5W – 10W (UV)
Wavelength 1064 nm (fiber, dominant), 10,600 nm (CO2), 532 nm (green), 355 nm (UV)
Typical engraving depth 0.005″ – 0.020″ (0.13 – 0.51 mm) per pass
Bare-metal best fit Stainless steel, mild steel, titanium, anodized aluminum
Reflective metals MOPA fiber or 532 nm green laser; built-in back-reflection isolator required
Safety ANSI Z136.1-2022 Class 4 enclosure or full PPE; OSHA-compliant fume extraction
MOPA fiber laser engraving on metal: stainless steel sample showing tactile cavity engraving plus surface annealing color marks in red, blue, and green at 1064 nm wavelength
A 30W MOPA fiber laser produces both deep engraving and full-color annealing on the same stainless steel surface.

What Is Metal Laser Engraving — and Why It Beats Etching and Marking

What Is Metal Laser Engraving and Why It Beats Etching and Marking

Metal laser engraving vaporizes the metal surface with a focused infrared laser beam leaving an indent you can feel, 0.005-0.020″ (0.13-0.51mm) deep. Metal sublimates – transitioning from solid directly to vapor – because the beam applies more peak energy per pulse than the vaporization heat requirement of the metal. What you get is a mark both tactile and durable, surviving abrasion, sandblasting, and chemical attack. This approach works on stainless steel, carbon steel, titanium, aluminum, and brass, scaling from complex jewelry engraving to machinist-deep MIL-spec serial numbers. There are three to commonly confused terms when talking about the laser-based processes for marking on metal, and this confusion costs people money on the wrong machine. Here is the working distinction for us in the shop.
Process Depth Mechanism Best For
Engraving 0.13 – 0.51 mm Vaporization (sublimation) Firearms, deep ID, decorative
Etching 0.025 – 0.076 mm Surface melting + oxidation Decorative + serial numbers
Marking Surface only (no removal) Color change / annealing UDI, MIL-STD-130 traceability

What’s the Difference Between Laser Engraving, Laser Etching, and Laser Marking Metal?

Engraving takes away material leaving a visible cavity you can feel, etching melts a thin layer of the material so it re-forms changing color and texture with no measurable removal of material, and marking (including the color-changing annealed marks fashionable on stainless steel) are surface-only alterations of chemistry leaving the surface intact. These distinctions matter because per-depth requirements scale from the use-case. While the ATF 27 CFR 479.102 requirement for a firearm serial number is 0.003″ depth, a class 7 medical device UDI per FDA 21 CFR 801.20 can be just a chemical mark as long as it is permanently machine-readable. For a deeper dive on the distinctions between marking and engraving, see our dedicated breakdown of laser marking vs engraving and chemical etching vs laser etching.

Which Laser Type Wins on Metal: Fiber vs CO2 vs MOPA vs UV vs Diode

Which Laser Type Wins on Metal Fiber vs CO2 vs MOPA vs UV vs Diode

Five laser processes target metals, and they are not interchangeable. Your decision starts with a single figure: how well the metal absorbs the wavelength. Steel and stainless absorb 35-40% of 1064nm fiber laser energy efficiently. Copper absorbs only about 5% at 1064 nm but jumps to roughly 40% at 515-532 nm green — a documented physics discrepancy that explains why copper jobs use green or ultrafast sources, not general-use fiber.
Laser Type Wavelength Bare Metal Coated Metal Best For
Fiber 1064 nm ✔ Excellent (steel, SS, Ti, Al) ✔ Good 95% of metal jobs
MOPA fiber 1064 nm (tunable pulse) ✔ Excellent + color ✔ Excellent Color marking on SS, jewelry
CO2 10,600 nm ✘ Poor (<5% absorption) ✔ With CerMark / spray Coated parts, signage
UV 355 nm ✔ Cold-mark (no HAZ) ✔ Plastic-on-metal Medical, electronics
Diode (450 nm) ~450 nm blue ✘ Surface mark on dark SS only ✔ With spray Hobby, multi-material
The 1064 nm Rule: roughly 95% of bare-metal engraving jobs run on fiber laser sources at 1064 nm because that wavelength sits well within the high-absorption window for ferrous metals, titanium, and oxidized aluminum. Industrial laser metal processing – including the additive manufacturing systems discussed in the NIST IR 8538 (2024) report on metal AM evaluation – converged on 1070nm fiber (effectively the same band as 1064nm engraving sources) for the same reason.
Comparison chart of fiber, CO2, MOPA, UV, and diode laser engravers showing wavelength absorption rates on bare metals including stainless steel, aluminum, brass, and copper
Wavelength × metal absorption: fiber 1064 nm dominates ferrous metals; green 532 nm wins on copper and brass.

Can a CO2 Laser Engrave Metal?

Not directly. A CO2 laser at 10,600 nm sees less than 5% absorption on bare steel, aluminum, brass, or stainless — the beam mostly bounces off. CO2 systems engrave metal only when the surface is coated with a marking spray (CerMark, Molybdenum disulfide, or thermochromic equivalents). That coating absorbs the beam, transfers heat to the metal, and bonds a black mark to the substrate. CO2 + spray works for tumblers, awards, and signage, but it is not a substitute for fiber on production-grade serialization.

Can a Diode Laser Engrave Metal?

Diode lasers at 450 nm can mark anodized aluminum/dark SS/any metal coating- but cannot engrave bare reflective metals. Diode beams surface-melt the anodize layer and oxidize stainless to a dark mark, but they do not vaporize the substrate. For hobbyists, spray bridges the absorption gap for diode machines running on metal jewelry blanks. Some hybrid desktop units combine a diode source with a small 2W infrared module — the 2W IR handles light metal marking while the diode covers wood, acrylic, and leather. These intricate designs on metal jewelry blanks are a common entry-level use case. Deep, tactile, high-contrast markings on bare steel/copper require a diode laser be directed elsewhere. Beyond fiber and CO2, see our breakdown of fiber laser vs CO2 comparison, the five common laser wavelengths, and our overview of laser type fundamentals. The underlying laser technology behind all five sources comes down to wavelength × power density × pulse profile.

Engraving Aluminum (Anodized vs Bare): Power, Speed, and the MOPA Color Trick

Aluminum behaves differently depending on whether it is bare or anodized — and most online guides collapse the two into one parameter sheet, which is why beginners burn through anodized layers. Anodized aluminum has a porous oxide surface 7.6–25 µm thick (Type II per MIL-A-8625). This oxide absorbs laser energy efficiently and turns white when the beam expels dye from the pores. Bare aluminum reflects more, requires higher power for visible marks, and sublimes cleanly into a deep cavity.
Aluminum Type Power (30W fiber) Speed Frequency Result
Bare aluminum (white mark) 100% 2,000 mm/s 55 kHz Frosted white surface mark
Anodized aluminum (dye removal) 30 – 60% 2,000 – 3,000 mm/s 30 – 50 kHz Crisp white mark, oxide intact
Bare aluminum (deep engraving) 100%, 3 – 5 passes 800 – 1,200 mm/s 20 – 40 kHz Tactile cavity 0.05 – 0.15 mm
📐 Engineering Note

A standard Type II anodize layer per MIL-A-8625 measures 0.000076″–0.001″ (1.9–25.4 µm). Engraving above 50% power on this layer pierces through to bare aluminum within one pass and destroys the dye-removal effect — the mark turns gray rather than white. If you need the bright frosted look, stay below 60% power on a 30W fiber and verify on a sacrificial corner first.

For oxide-removal techniques on related substrates, see our breakdown of oxide-layer cleaning operations.

Stainless Steel Engraving: 304 vs 316, and Annealing for Color Marking

Stainless Steel Engraving 304 vs 316, and Annealing for Color Marking

Bare stainless (like SS 304, ASTM A240) engraves with relative ease with a fiber at 1064 and also is very easy to get consistent color on with a MOPA fiber. Two camps dominate. Dark engraving vaporizes a wafer thin layer, leaving a black or charred dark gray cavity. Annealing color marking heats the surface until an interference-pattern oxide film 50-200 nanometers thick forms–the film color depends on thickness, which varies with pulse width and frequency. A MOPA fiber laser exposes pulse width as an independent parameter; this fact is why MOPA is capable of giving consistent reds, blues and greens that a standard Q-switched fiber never can.
Effect Power (30W MOPA) Speed Pulse Width Frequency
Black engraving 50% 300 mm/s 100 ns 30 kHz
Red annealing 45% 1,000 mm/s 60 ns 400 kHz
Blue annealing 45% 1,000 mm/s 6 ns 300 kHz
Green annealing 25% 1,000 mm/s 15 ns 350 kHz
For cutting grade stainless work, see our parameters write-up on stainless steel laser cutting parameters.

Brass, Copper, and Precious Metals: The Reflectivity Problem (and How MOPA Solves It)

Reflective metals are the most difficult case in laser engraving metals. Copper reflects some where near 95% of 1064 nm fiber laser energy back at the source. Brass dips in at around 70%. Silver comes in at around 96%. Unabsorbed energy can not only fail to engrave — it travels back through the optics and can destroy the laser source’s pump diodes within minutes of operation on a polished surface. Three solutions are working. First, change the wavelength: a 532 nm green laser will absorb at near 40% instead of 5%, removing the reflection problem at the physics level. Second, run a MOPA fiber with an inline back reflection isolator, and tune pulse width down to 2-6 nanoseconds for a short, high-peak power attack that will shred the reflectivity barrier. Third, if you run an occasional brass job on a standard fiber, use conservative parameters as tabulated below.
Metal Reflectivity at 1064 nm Recommended Approach
Brass ~70% Standard fiber 30W: 100% power, 200 mm/s, 45 kHz (black mark)
Copper ~95% 532 nm green or MOPA + isolator
Silver ~96% 532 nm green or pulsed MOPA short ns
Gold ~95% MOPA short pulse + low duty cycle
⚠️ Warning

Running a fiber laser on polished copper without a back reflection isolator can impair pump diodes within 5-10 minutes. Field techs in multiple LightBurn forum threads state this is the single most expensive mistake on reflective-metal targets you can make. Verify your laser source max allowable back reflection spec before the first run on bare copper.

On copper-specific cutting and cleaning, see our writeup on copper-specific laser handling and precious metal hallmarking process.

Power, Speed, and Frequency: Settings Cheatsheet by Metal

Power, Speed, and Frequency Settings Cheatsheet by Metal

The fastest path to a clean engraving on a new metal is to start from a known 30 watt fiber parameters baseline, and tweak. Our parameter ranges above combine varied vendor documentation, field-results-validated hard-won experience, into one starting point table. Use this as your starting point test run, not your final. Every machine, every lens, and every batch of metal shifts the optimum from this starting point by 5-15%.:)
Metal Power % Speed (mm/s) Freq (kHz) Passes
Stainless steel (black engrave) 50% 300 30 1 – 3
Stainless steel (color, MOPA) 25 – 45% 1,000 300 – 400 1
Bare aluminum (white mark) 100% 2,000 55 1
Anodized aluminum 30 – 60% 2,000 – 3,000 30 – 50 1
Brass 100% 200 45 2 – 3
Copper (green or MOPA) 80 – 100% 100 – 300 20 – 30 3 – 5
Mild steel 60 – 80% 800 – 1,500 30 – 45 1 – 2
Titanium 40 – 60% 600 – 1,000 25 – 40 1
Gold (MOPA) 30 – 50% 500 – 1,000 200 – 400 1 – 2
If you are choosing the laser before the parameter sheet, our wattage selection deep dive walks through the 20W–100W tradeoff in detail, and the 20W vs 30W laser comparison covers the most common upgrade decision.
Workshop view of fiber laser engraver running a parameter test grid on stainless steel coupon, showing power-speed-frequency variations producing different mark densities and depths
A parameter test grid on a sacrificial coupon saves 2–3 hours of guesswork on every new metal alloy.
📥 Get the full parameter sheet

Want this cheatsheet plus extended ranges for 50W and 100W fiber lasers as a printable PDF? Reach out and we will send it over — no email signup needed.

Request the Parameter Sheet →

Marking Sprays and Surface Prep: When You Need CerMark, When You Don’t

What Do You Spray on Metal to Laser Engrave?

Your answer splits cleanly by laser type. CO2 lasers and diode lasers will not mark bare metal due to the fact that their wavelength simply reflects off of the surface. They need to have a thermochromic spray (CerMark, Brilliance, or any Molybdenum disulfide-based convert) on the surface to absorb the laser beam, heat up, and chemically bond a black mark to the substrate. Fiber lasers do not require spray on a bare metal; the 1064 wavelength is absorbed by the substrate. Below, this logic tree resolves the decision in 30 seconds flat.
Spray Decision Tree
  1. CO2 + bare metal Spray needed (CerMark or equivalent)
  2. CO2 + coated/painted/anodized metal Usually not needed; existing coating absorbs
  3. Diode + bare reflective metal spray needed for visible marks
  4. Diode + dark stainless or anodized aluminum no spray needed
  5. Fiber + bare ferrous metals or aluminum no spray; direct absorption
  6. Fiber + bare copper/silver/gold spray rarely helps; switch to green or MOPA
Cost math matters at production scale. A typical 4 oz CerMark aerosol covers 30-50 small parts (tumbler-sized) at roughly $80 retail, putting the spray cost per part at $1.60-$2.70 plus 15-30 seconds of prep labor. For a 1,000-unit job, that is $1,600-$2,700 in spray alone – often the deciding factor for stepping up to a fiber laser. A senior production engineer on r/Laserengraving phrased the contrast bluntly: “Marking sprays don’t work great with fiber lasers but work VERY well with CO2 lasers.” That single line of forum experience captures the design decision for any small shop operating both. For post-engraving residue, see post-engraving residue cleaning.

Safety and Metals You Should NEVER Engrave

Safety and Metals You Should NEVER Engrave

Several common metals emit dangerous fumes when vaporized by laser. Below sits a non-negotiable list — these are not mild cautions but OSHA-regulated exposures with permissible limits set in micrograms per cubic meter.
⚠️ Forbidden Metals — Hard List
  • Avoid galvanized steel – fumes of zinc cause metal fume fever. OSHA respiratory hazard guidance applies; the agency lists zinc-rich coatings as a recognized occupational hazard.
  • Skip beryllium copper — beryllium is a Group 1 human carcinogen (IARC) with an OSHA 8-hour TWA permissible exposure limit of 0.2 µg/m³, among the lowest PELs in the standard. See OSHA Beryllium standard.
  • Refuse PVDF and PTFE-coated alloys – they emit hydrogen fluoride and particulate fluoropolymer fumes, a severe lung and eye hazard.
  • Reject lead alloys and leaded brass >0.5% Pb — lead fume crosses the blood-brain barrier; OSHA PEL 50 µg/m³.
  • Eliminate cadmium plating and cadmium alloys from the workflow — the fume is carcinogenic; PEL 5 µg/m³.

Will Laser Engraved Metal Rust?

Stainless steel can rust along the engraving line if the process strips the chromium oxide passivation layer and the part is exposed to chlorides without re-passivation. Risk exists but is controllable: keep engraving depth shallow where possible, and send parts intended for marine or food-contact use through a citric-acid passivation soak (per ASTM A967). Carbon steel and mild steel will rust at the engraved site by default – coat with a clear finish, oil, or post-engraving anti-corrosion treatment. Your minimum operator-side safety stack is straightforward. Enclose the laser inside a Class 1 enclosure that meets ANSI Z136.1-2022 Class 4 safety control standards, or wear Class 4 PPE (laser safety goggles at the applicable wavelength, fume mask). Hook up a HEPA + activated-carbon fume extractor whose airflow capacity matches your laser power. For fume extraction sizing logic, see our fume extraction sizing guide and the overview of laser safety basics.

Real Applications: From Industrial Traceability to Custom Plaques

Laser-engraved metal spans nine-figure aerospace traceability programs and weekend jewelry shops — plus everything in between, including engraved metal signs, custom firearms, branded tool plates, and personalized jewelry featuring intricate scroll-work patterns. Below, this matrix maps the most common application categories to the standards that govern them and the laser type each demands.
Application Standard / Spec Required Laser
Defense UID parts MIL-STD-130 (2D Data Matrix ECC200) Fiber 30 – 50W
Medical device UDI FDA 21 CFR 801.20 Fiber 20 – 30W or UV
Firearms (commercial) ATF GCA 1968 (depth ≥0.003″) Fiber 30 – 50W
Jewelry hallmarking National hallmark schemes (BIS, UK Assay) Fiber/MOPA 20W
Industrial nameplates ISO 9001 traceability Fiber 30 – 60W
Promotional / awards No regulatory standard Fiber/MOPA 20 – 30W or CO2 + spray
“Laser marking is still the prevailing DPM method for FDA UDI compliance because it leaves a permanent, machine-readable code without marring the device surface.” — Industry compliance guidance, Laser Mark Technologies, 2024

Industry Outlook 2026: MOPA Color Marking, UV Adoption, and AI Auto-Focus

Industry Outlook 2026 MOPA Color Marking, UV Adoption, and AI Auto-Focus

Three trends are transforming the world of metal laser engraving as we approach 2026, and each upends the equipment-purchase calculation. Worldwide, the laser processing market hit USD 7.17 billion in 2025 and is forecasted to expand to USD 11.89 billion by 2032 (8.5% CAGR per MarketsandMarkets 2025 report), and the laser-engraving-machines segment alone is climbing from USD 1.86B (2026) toward USD 3.95B (2035) at 7.83% CAGR. MOPA goes mainstream. 60W MOPA fiber lasers arrived at the desktop class line in 2024-2025, with xTool’s F2 Ultra delivering 100+ uniform hues in stainless steel for less than 5,000 USD. While pulse-width-tunable MOPA was still uncommon in industry during 2023, it is now affordable even by small shops executing color marking jobs. UV laser price decline. 355 nm UV laser unit cost decreased flatline calculations around 30% from 2022 to 2025 in industry reviews. UV “cold marking” – minimal heat-affected zone – is only truly effective technique for laser-marking heat-sensitive-plastic-on-metal composites, and some medical-grade alloys, as dictated by FDA UDI norms. AI auto-focus and material declaration. 2025 catalogs from xTool, Trotec, and Epilog feature camera-found auto-focus that varies the focus per part and recommends parameters from a material directory. Skill barriers for first-time operators are crumbling fast.

Can UV Laser Engrave Metal?

Sure—UV lasers at 355 nm will mark and shallow-engrave all but a handful of metals because shorter wave-lengths are absorbed readily by all metals including the reflective ones that defeat 1064 nm fiber. One tradeoff: UV beams are slower for deep engraving and cost more per watt. In production, UV laser sources are used solely for applications where heat damage to surrounding material is intolerable: medical implants, microelectronics, plastic-on-metal nameplates. If your 2026 capacity consideration involves a diversity of plastics and metals, the initial surcharge can return to you in a year or so. Search volume for stainless steel engraving increased 23% from year to year per late 2025 data—and brass-engraving inquiries experienced a comparable increase. These signals point to sustained pull from both small-shop and industrial buyers — not seasonality.

Frequently Asked Questions

Laser Engraving on Metal Pick the Right Laser, Power, and Settings for Every Material

Q: Is laser engraving on metal permanent?

View Answer
Yes. The cavity is physical, not chemical, so it survives wear, water, and chemical exposure for the part’s lifespan.

Q: Will laser engraved metal rust?

View Answer
Carbon and mild steel objects will corrode along the engraving mark if the surface is not protected with oil, paint, or a coat; stainless steal objects may show rust for the band if the chromium oxide layer is damaged, and re-passivation is bypassed—using a citric acid bath in accordance with ASTM A967 regenerates the corrosion resistance.

Q: How do I darken laser engraving on metal?

View Answer
In materials such as stainless steel and titanium, slow the pulse frequency to 20-30 kHz and decrease the speed to ~300 mm/sec – this creates a thicker oxide layer, which appears as pure black. For aluminum, take tests first for existing oxide coating and engrave through that. For carbon steel, a fine spray of CerMark, or a black oxide post treatment of the incision cavity, provides a guaranteed darkening agent.

Q: Can you remove laser engraving from metal?

View Answer
The shallow marking and etching can be dressed away with abrasives, or a buffing wheel because nothing was removed. Deep engraving (>0.1 mm) leaves a permanent cavity, so fillers and re-machining are the only options; the resulting surface rarely mimics the original surface profile.

Q: How much does a metal laser engraver cost in 2026?

View Answer
Pricing splits into three brackets in 2026. Desktop fiber engravers at 20–30W start around USD 1,500–3,500 and cover hobbyist plus light commercial work — jewelry, awards, and small-batch part marking. The middle tier of 30–60W MOPA color-capable systems lands at USD 4,000–8,000 and is where most boutique-scale shops settle for stainless steel color marking and reflective metal compatibility. Industrial fiber stations at 50–100W with rotary tables, autofocus, and large work areas of 300×300 mm or bigger run USD 10,000–25,000, with the upper end including enclosed Class 1 safety housings and integrated fume extraction. Pricing as of Q1 2026 — verify current quotes with your distributor since fiber laser pump diode costs continue to fluctuate quarter to quarter.

Need a fiber laser sized to your metal workload?

UDTECH builds metal laser engraving systems matched to your material, power, and throughput requirements.

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About This Analysis

The parameter tables in this guide draw on cross-referenced data from heatsign, OMG Laser, BCAMC, and forum-validated operator reports. Reflectivity figures cite NIST and industrial laser absorption literature. Safety standards reference ANSI Z136.1-2022 and OSHA permissible exposure limits as published in 2025. Results on your machine will vary 5–15% depending on lens cleanliness, focus precision, and material batch — verify on a sacrificial corner before production runs.

References & Sources

  1. NIST IR 8538 — Destructive Evaluation for Metal Additive Manufacturing Processes (2024) — National Institute of Standards and Technology
  2. OSHA Beryllium Standard — U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration
  3. OSHA — General Hazard: Respiratory Irritation and Systemic Poisoning — U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration
  4. OSHA Laser Hazards — Standards Overview — U.S. Occupational Safety and Health Administration
  5. 21 CFR 801.20 — Label to Bear a Unique Device Identifier (UDI) — U.S. Food and Drug Administration / eCFR
  6. ANSI Z136.1-2022: Safe Use of Lasers — American National Standards Institute
  7. ANSI Z136.1 — Safe Use of Lasers Standard — Laser Institute of America
  8. Laser Engraving — Industry Reference — Wikipedia
  9. Laser Processing Market Report 2025–2032 — MarketsandMarkets
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