Free 3D Print Pricing Calculator
Set better prices for custom prints and products by modeling true cost first. This tool combines filament, machine electricity, labor, packaging, shipping, and target margin to generate a practical sell price and expected profit range. If you are wondering how much to charge for 3D prints, start here and tune assumptions based on your workflow.
How to use this page for better quoting
First, estimate material using your slicer and typical waste rate. Next, be honest with labor. Packaging, machine setup, post-processing, and messaging time are all labor. If labor dominates your cost stack, your pricing strategy should emphasize minimum order size or process batching. Finally, pick a target margin that can absorb inevitable reprints and support overhead.
You can then move to the marketplace fee calculator to adjust for Etsy or payment processing deductions. Many sellers set prices based on pre-fee assumptions and discover margin compression later. Filamath helps prevent that by making each cost category visible before listing goes live.
Open the sponsored utility hub in a new tab if you want adjacent offers beyond Filamath.
FAQ
Is markup the same as margin?
No. Margin is profit as a percent of sell price, while markup is added on top of cost.
What margin should I target?
Many small sellers aim for at least 25-40% depending on product complexity and support load.