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3D Prototype Services
What is a 3D printed prototype?
A 3D printed prototype is a physical part built directly from your CAD model, used to validate shape, fit, function, and appearance before committing to production. It replaces weeks of machined or molded sample work with a part in hand in days.
A prototype answers the questions a screen cannot: does it fit the assembly, does the latch click, is the grip comfortable, does the wall flex under load? 3D printing produces that answer straight from your CAD file — no tooling, no setup fee, no minimum order.
Because each part is printed individually from the model, changing the design changes only the file. That makes 3D printing the fastest, cheapest way to move from a digital idea to a tangible, testable object — and to do it again the next day with the fix applied.
Related: Compare FDM and SLA processes.
Upload your file to get exact pricingWhat types of prototypes can you make?
Three main types: concept models that prove the shape and proportions, functional prototypes that survive mechanical and environmental testing, and visual prototypes that show the final finish and form for presentations or ergonomic review.
Concept models are quick, low-cost FDM prints in PLA that confirm size, proportion, and basic geometry early in design. Functional prototypes use engineering plastics — PETG, ABS, ASA, Nylon, Polycarbonate, or carbon-fiber composites — so you can stress-test fit, durability, heat, and real-world conditions.
Visual and presentation prototypes use SLA resin for injection-mold-quality surfaces, crisp detail, and clear or paintable finishes — ideal for design reviews, photography, and investor or customer demos. The same CAD file can produce all three; you choose the process and material per goal.
Related: Browse the full materials catalog.
Upload your file to get exact pricingHow much does a 3D printed prototype cost?
A 3D printed prototype costs $25–$500 per part. FDM prototypes start at $25; SLA resin parts start at $35. There is no tooling cost, so a single one-off is priced the same way as a batch — by part volume, material, and quantity.
Price scales with part volume in cm³, machine time, and material class — PLA and PETG at the low end, Nylon and standard resin in the middle, PA-CF and Polycarbonate at the top. Small FDM parts run $25–$50, medium $50–$150, large $150–$500+. SLA runs about 40–60% higher at each size for slower cure times.
Every quote is instant and itemized, with no setup or minimum-order fee. Iterating is cheap: change the file, re-upload, get a new price. Automatic quantity discounts start at 5+ units (6%) and reach 15% at 1,000+ — a mix of different prototype designs on one order still counts toward the next tier.
Related: See the full pricing breakdown.
Upload your file to get exact pricingHow do I get a 3D prototype made?
Upload your CAD file for an instant price, choose your process and material, and check out. We print, run QC, and ship in 2–5 business days. No quote request forms, no waiting for a callback.
Step one: upload an STL, STEP, OBJ, 3MF, or IGES file. The tool measures your part and prices it in seconds. Step two: pick FDM or SLA, a material, color, and finish — the price updates live and our engine flags any geometry risk such as thin walls or support-heavy overhangs.
Step three: check out and we go to print. You get order tracking, QC before dispatch, and nationwide shipping. Need engineering eyes on the design first? Request a paid design-for-manufacture review at checkout and our team returns notes before production begins.
Related: Start an instant quote.
Upload your file to get exact pricingFDM or SLA — which is better for prototypes?
FDM is best for functional prototypes: strong engineering plastics, low cost, fast turnaround. SLA is best for visual prototypes: smooth surfaces, fine detail, transparency. Choose by what the prototype needs to prove.
Choose FDM when the prototype has a job to do — snap fits, living hinges, load-bearing brackets, enclosures that must survive a drop, or parts that face heat, UV, or chemicals. PETG, ASA, Nylon, Polycarbonate, and PA-CF cover those cases at a fraction of machined-part cost.
Choose SLA when appearance and precision lead: housings with a class-A finish, transparent lenses and light pipes, tiny detailed features, dental and medical models, or any part that will be photographed or shown to a customer. Many teams run both — FDM to validate, SLA to present.
Related: Need it faster? See rapid prototyping.
Upload your file to get exact pricingFrequently asked questions
What kinds of prototypes can you 3D print?
What file formats do I upload for a prototype?
Which process should I pick for my prototype — FDM or SLA?
How accurate are 3D printed prototypes?
Can I order one prototype, or do I need a minimum quantity?
How fast can I get a prototype?
Is my design kept confidential?
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