Layer 01Guide
What 3D-print fulfilment actually costs.
If you sell 3D-printed products, the price you pay to have each one made, packed and posted decides your margin. This guide breaks down what sits inside a 3D-print fulfilment cost, what moves it up or down, and how to model your margin before you list. Real figures always come from a live quote on your own file, so treat any numbers here as illustrative.
Makr3D is the early-access platform; Yorkshire3D is the UK print farm in Huddersfield behind it, running roughly 100 Bambu printers at 300+ plates a day. You can see Makr3D’s pricing for the transactional detail.
Layer 02The short answer
How much does 3D-print fulfilment cost?
There is no single sticker price, because a 3D-printed product is made to order rather than pulled from a shelf. The cost of any given part is built up from how much filament it uses, how long it occupies a printer, whether it needs more than one colour, the human check before dispatch, packaging and postage. A small single-colour keyring and a large multi-colour display piece can differ by an order of magnitude.
With Makr3D, each file is quoted individually. Dropship fulfilment starts from a £2.95 minimum charge per order and rises with the work in the part, all before postage, which is added separately from carrier rate tables. There is no monthly fee at launch, and bulk tiers apply automatically so the per-unit price falls as quantity rises. The only way to know your exact number is to run a live quote on your file.
Layer 03The cost drivers
What drives the price of a 3D print?
Six things move the cost of any 3D-printed product. Understanding them tells you why two parts that look similar can be priced differently, and where you can design cost out before you ever upload a file.
Material and filament weight
Print time and machine time
Colours and nozzle
The per-order human QA check
Packaging
Postage
Layer 04How Makr3D quotes
How does Makr3D turn those drivers into a price?
Makr3D quotes per file. Upload an STL, or a Bambu or Orca 3MF, and the platform reads the geometry and your settings to work out filament weight, print time, colours and nozzle. In faithful 3MF mode it honours the slice you have already approved; an STL is re-sliced against validated production profiles. You can read more about that on the 3MF fidelity page.
From those inputs you get a dropship fulfilment charge, from a £2.95 minimum per order upward, quoted before postage. Postage is then added from carrier rate tables by weight and destination. There is no monthly fee at launch and no listing fees, and bulk tiers drop the per-unit price automatically as quantity rises. The full ordering flow, from upload to a priced print option, is on the how it works page.
Layer 05A worked example
How do I estimate my margin?
Your margin is the gap between what you charge your customer and what Makr3D bills you for fulfilment and postage. The simplest way to see it is a worked example. The figures below are illustrative and are not a quote; your real numbers come from a live quote on your own file.
- A single-colour phone standretail £18.00
- Makr3D fulfilment cost (before postage)~£6.33
- Contribution margin before postage~42%
In this illustration an £18 phone stand with a roughly £6.33 fulfilment cost leaves about a 42% contribution margin before postage. Postage is usually passed on to the buyer at checkout, so it sits outside this figure, but factor it in if you absorb shipping. To plug in your own numbers, model your margin with the calculator on the pricing page; everything there runs in your browser.
Layer 06In-house or a partner
Should I print in-house or outsource fulfilment?
Both routes are valid, and which one wins depends on your volume and how you want to spend your time. The trade-offs are real on either side.
Capital and capacity. Printing in-house means buying and maintaining machines, holding filament and finding floor space. A fulfilment partner turns that fixed cost into a per-order cost, so you only pay when you sell.
Time and failure rate. Running your own farm means babysitting prints, clearing failed plates and packing parcels. Those hours and failures are a cost too, even if they never show on an invoice. Outsourcing moves the failure risk and the QA check to the partner.
Scaling. A handful of orders a week is comfortable on a home printer. A spike in demand is where in-house capacity breaks and a partner with a full farm absorbs the volume. The flip side is control: in-house you own every variable, with a partner you trade some of that for capacity you do not have to fund.
Makr3D sits on the partner side of that choice. You keep your own store, brand and checkout, and Makr3D prints, checks, packs and dispatches under your label, with a public /v1 API and webhooks for sellers who want to wire fulfilment straight into their own systems.
See your real fulfilment cost
Create a free account, upload a file or pick a catalogue product, and see your fulfilment cost and dispatch estimate before you commit. No monthly fee at launch.