glossary Glossary 2 min read

Hot-rolled steel

Hot-rolled steel is formed hot into standard structural sections (UB, UC, PFC) to AS/NZS 3679.1, usually Grade 300 and designed under AS 4100, unlike cold-formed steel.

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Hot-rolled steel is steel formed at high temperature, above its recrystallisation point, then rolled into standard structural sections: universal beams (UB) and columns (UC), parallel flange channels (PFC), and angles. In Australia these sections are produced to AS/NZS 3679.1:2016, and the residential and general structural default is Grade 300 (300 MPa minimum yield strength). For example, a 200 UB 25 lintel or a steel post carrying a load-bearing wall is a hot-rolled section.

Hot-rolled is distinct from cold-formed steel, which is shaped from thin sheet at room temperature into light-gauge sections such as residential wall studs and top-hat battens. The two are not interchangeable: hot-rolled structural members are designed under AS 4100, while cold-formed framing is designed under AS/NZS 4600, and specifying the wrong family is a common drafting error. Cold-formed hollow sections such as SHS and RHS sit under AS/NZS 1163 (typically Grade C350), separate again from the hot-rolled open sections.

Hot-rolled sections are the default where a load or span exceeds what timber or LVL can carry, where a fire rating drives the design, or where a beam is also a visible architectural element. The section size is the engineer’s call from the structural drawing; the builder’s decisions are coating (galvanising or powdercoat for exposure) and connections (welded, bolted, or end-plate). See steel beams for the section families, coatings, and typical lead times.

Also known as: Hot-rolled structural steel, hot-rolled sections, HR steel.

Category: Materials / Structural steel.

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Last updated: 2026-05-30. Verified: 2026-05-15. Quarterly review for currency.