When procuring GN pans, chafers, serving equipment, or kitchen tools, buyers frequently encounter two stainless steel grades: 304 and 201. Both are marketed as stainless steel, both look similar on a polished surface, and both are offered at very different price points. Understanding the genuine technical and practical differences between these two grades is one of the most important decisions a catering buyer can make — because the difference affects not just longevity, but hygiene safety, operating cost, and compliance.
Stainless steel gets its corrosion resistance primarily from chromium, which forms a passive oxide layer on the steel surface that prevents rust. The amount of chromium — and crucially, the amount of nickel — determines how effective and durable that protection is.
Here is the core compositional difference between the two grades:
| Element | 304 Stainless Steel | 201 Stainless Steel |
|---|
| Chromium (Cr) | 18–20% | 16–18% |
| Nickel (Ni) | 8–10.5% | 3.5–5.5% |
| Manganese (Mn) | ≤ 2% | 5.5–7.5% |
| Carbon (C) | ≤ 0.08% | ≤ 0.15% |
| Corrosion Resistance | Excellent | Moderate |
| Magnetic after forming | No | Slight (yes) |
| Relative Cost | Higher | Lower |
The key insight from this table: 201 reduces nickel and increases manganese to lower cost. Nickel is expensive — it is the element most responsible for the bright finish and long-term corrosion resistance that makes premium stainless steel such a reliable material for commercial catering. Manganese partially compensates for strength, but it does not replicate nickel’s corrosion-resistance properties, particularly in wet, acidic, or high-salt environments.