Vrocure Blog · Education

How to Write an RFQ That Gets You Accurate Quotes (Not Guesses)

By The Vrocure Team · 2026-07-02 · 7 min read

A request for quote is the single most important document in your sourcing process — and most of them are missing the information a supplier needs to give you a real number. When a shop cannot answer a question, they do one of two things: pad the price to cover the risk, or email you back and wait. Both cost you days.

A good RFQ removes ambiguity. Here is how to write one that earns fast, accurate, comparable quotes.

What every manufacturing RFQ must contain

These are the fields a machinist or estimator opens first. Leave any of them blank and you are inviting an assumption.

The four mistakes that inflate every quote

1. Sending a model without a drawing

A STEP file shows geometry, not intent. Without dimensioned tolerances the shop cannot tell a ±0.005 mm bore from a ±0.5 mm clearance hole — so they machine everything to the tightest reasonable tolerance and you pay for precision you did not need.

2. Over-tolerancing "just to be safe"

Tight tolerances feel responsible. They are also the fastest way to double a price. Every tenth of a thousandth adds setup, slower feeds, and inspection time. Tolerance the features that matter and open up the ones that do not.

3. Hiding the quantity

Buyers sometimes withhold volume hoping for a keener price. It backfires — the shop quotes for the worst case (a one-off) because that is all they can see. Share real quantities and let amortised setup work in your favour.

4. Leaving finish and inspection to the end

Finish, certs, and inspection are not afterthoughts; they are cost drivers. Deciding them after the quote means a revised quote, another round-trip, and a slipped date.

A copy-ready RFQ checklist

  1. Part name, revision, and drawing number
  2. Quantity + expected reorder cadence
  3. Material, grade, and temper
  4. Dimensioned drawing (PDF) and 3D model (STEP)
  5. Critical-to-function features called out
  6. Surface finish and any coating/treatment
  7. Inspection, certs, and documentation requirements
  8. Need-by date and delivery location + Incoterms
  9. A single point of contact for technical questions

Make quotes comparable, not just accurate

Accuracy gets you a real number. Comparability lets you decide. If every supplier quotes against the same structured RFQ — same fields, same drawing, same terms — you can put bids side by side on price, lead time, and quote quality instead of untangling five different email formats. That is the difference between negotiating and guessing.

Vrocure structures every RFQ into the same fields, runs a Dr. Review manufacturability check on your drawing, and returns bids you can compare on one screen — with supplier identity blind so pricing stays honest. You can start free and send your first RFQ the same morning.