252.225-7008 Restriction on Acquisition of Specialty Metals.
Prescription and Applicability
DFARS Prescription, 225.7003-5(a)
(a) Unless the acquisition is wholly exempt from the specialty metals restrictions at 225.7003-2 because the acquisition is covered by an exception in 225.7003-3 (a) or (d) (but see paragraph (d) of this section)--
(1) Use the clause at 252.225-7008 , Restriction on Acquisition of Specialty Metals, in solicitations and contracts, including solicitations and contracts using FAR part 12 procedures for the acquisition of commercial product, that--
(i) Exceed the simplified acquisition threshold; and
(ii) Require the delivery of specialty metals as end items.
(2) Use the clause at 252.225-7009 , Restriction on Acquisition of Certain Articles Containing Specialty Metals, in solicitations and contracts, including solicitations and contracts using FAR part 12 procedures for the acquisition of commercial products and commercial services, that--
(i) Exceed the simplified acquisition threshold; and
(ii) Require delivery of any of the following items, or components of the following items, if such items or components contain specialty metal: (A) Aircraft. (B) Missile or space systems. (C) Ships. (D) Tank or automotive items. (E) Weapon systems. (F) Ammunition.
Current Text
252.225-7008 Restriction on Acquisition of Specialty Metals.
As prescribed in 225.7003-5(a)(1), use the following clause:
Restriction on Acquisition of Specialty Metals (MAR 2013)
(a) Definitions. As used in this clause—
Alloy means a metal consisting of a mixture of a basic metallic element and one or more metallic, or non-metallic, alloying elements.
(i) For alloys named by a single metallic element ( e.g., titanium alloy), it means that the alloy contains 50 percent or more of the named metal (by mass).
(ii) If two metals are specified in the name ( e.g., nickel-iron alloy), those metals are the two predominant elements in the alloy, and together they constitute 50 percent or more of the alloy (by mass).
Produce means—
(i) Atomization;
(ii) Sputtering; or
(iii) Final consolidation of non-melt derived metal powders.
Specialty metal means—
(i) Steel—
(A) With a maximum alloy content exceeding one or more of the following limits: Manganese, 1.65 percent; silicon, 0.60 percent; or copper, 0.60 percent; or
(B) Containing more than 0.25 percent of any of the following elements: Aluminum, chromium, cobalt, molybdenum, nickel, niobium (columbium), titanium, tungsten, or vanadium;
(ii) Metal alloys consisting of—
(A) Nickel or iron-nickel alloys that contain a total of alloying metals other than nickel and iron in excess of 10 percent; or
(B) Cobalt alloys that contain a total of alloying metals other than cobalt and iron in excess of 10 percent;
(iii) Titanium and titanium alloys; or
(iv) Zirconium and zirconium alloys.
Steel means an iron alloy that includes between .02 and 2 percent carbon and may include other elements.
(b) Any specialty metal delivered under this contract shall be melted or produced in the United States or its outlying areas.
(End of clause)
[74 FR 37639, July 29, 2009, as amended at 78 FR 18879, Mar. 28, 2013]
Active Class Deviations Affecting This Clause
Class Deviation 2026-O0041, DFARS RFO Implementation (Part 25)
- Status: Active
- Date Issued: 2026-02-17
- Change type: MODIFIED
- Action: Modified by RFO class deviation
Suggested Questions
You can ask your AI assistant:
- Should I include this provision in my solicitation?
- Does this clause apply to commercial acquisitions?
- Does this clause apply to R&D contracts under Part 35?
- Which alternate should I use for a multiple-award contract?
- Are there any active Class Deviations that modify this clause?
- What changed in the most recent amendment?