How Much Does 3D Printing Cost in Australia?
There is no useful flat price for a custom 3D print. Two parts with the same outside dimensions can use different material, take different machine time, need different supports, and carry very different failure risk. A reliable Australian 3D printing quote starts with the file, not a price per centimetre copied onto every job.
The main cost drivers are process, material use, machine time, support geometry, post-processing, quantity, and delivery. Wyntek reads the uploaded geometry and returns a dollar quote before submission, so the useful question is not only how much 3D printing costs, but which design choices move the quote.
The seven main cost drivers
| Driver | Why it changes price | How to control it |
|---|---|---|
| Process | FDM and SLA use different machines, materials, and finishing steps | Use FDM unless detail or surface needs justify SLA |
| Material | Material price and handling vary by polymer or resin | Choose for function, not the most advanced label |
| Part volume | More solid material increases direct consumption | Use shells, ribs, and sensible infill where appropriate |
| Machine time | Tall builds, fine layers, and slow geometry occupy equipment longer | Reduce unnecessary height and detail |
| Supports | Supports add material, time, removal, and surface cleanup | Improve orientation or redesign unsupported features |
| Finishing | Sanding, coating, and cosmetic work add labor | Specify only the finish the prototype actually needs |
| Delivery | Destination, package size, speed, and tracking affect freight | Combine parts when timing allows |
FDM cost vs SLA cost
FDM is normally the lower-cost process for functional prototypes, larger parts, fixtures, and basic fit checks. PLA and PETG are efficient starting materials, and Wyntek offers a free FDM tier for eligible work. ABS and nylon may cost more but can be justified by heat resistance, toughness, or repeated flexing.
SLA is usually selected for detail and surface quality rather than the lowest possible price. Resin, supports, washing, and post-curing all contribute to the quote. It becomes good value when the design question depends on fine features or a smoother visual surface that FDM would not show clearly.
Why machine time can matter more than weight
A light part can still take a long time if it is tall, uses a fine layer setting, or forces slow movement around many small features. A heavier but compact part may finish sooner. This is why price-per-gram calculators can be misleading when used without geometry and machine time.
How orientation changes the quote
Orientation changes build height, supports, finish, and strength. Laying a part down may shorten the build but move supports onto a cosmetic face. Standing it up may protect the face while increasing machine time. The cheapest orientation is only useful if the part still answers the intended design question.
One part, prototypes, and short runs
3D printing has low setup cost, which makes one-off parts and rapidly changing prototypes practical. Quantity still matters because repeated parts consume repeated machine time and material. Some handling and setup can be shared across a batch, but additive manufacturing does not create the same tooling economy as injection moulding.
For a design that is still moving, print one or two parts first. Confirm fit and function, revise the file, then order the batch. The cheapest unit price is irrelevant if all units carry the same unresolved mistake.
Australian delivery and total landed cost
Compare the complete cost of receiving a usable part. A low offshore print price can be offset by international freight, customs handling, slower feedback, or the cost of replacing a failed revision. Domestic production can shorten that loop for Australian teams, especially when a design review is waiting on one physical part.
Ways to reduce 3D printing cost without weakening the prototype
- Use FDM for early fit and volume checks before paying for a cosmetic process.
- Remove material with shells, ribs, and appropriate infill instead of making every region solid.
- Reduce unsupported features so the build needs less support material and cleanup.
- Use a coarser layer setting when fine surface detail is not part of the test.
- Split a large part only when the joining strategy is simpler and cheaper than one difficult build.
- Order a first article before committing to a batch.
- Upload the final revision and verify scale so machine time is not spent on the wrong file.
How to compare quotes
Check whether each quote uses the same process, material, layer setting, infill, supports, finish, inspection, and delivery speed. A lower number may describe a different part outcome. The most useful quote makes those assumptions visible before you submit the job.
Common Questions
- How is 3D printing cost calculated?
- A useful quote accounts for process, material use, machine time, support geometry, post-processing, quantity, inspection, and delivery. File-based quoting is more reliable than a single flat price per gram.
- Is FDM cheaper than SLA in Australia?
- FDM is usually the lower-cost option for functional prototypes and larger parts. SLA generally costs more because resin printing includes additional material handling, washing, supports, and post-curing.
- Can I get one custom part 3D printed?
- Yes. 3D printing has low setup cost and is well suited to one-off parts, prototypes, and small batches. Wyntek has no minimum order quantity.
- How can I make a 3D print quote cheaper?
- Use the simplest suitable process, reduce unnecessary material and supports, avoid fine layers when detail is not required, verify the file scale, and order a first article before a batch.