Three ways to get a 3D printed house model
You have a floor plan and want a physical model. There are three realistic paths: model it yourself in CAD, hire a designer, or use an automated tool.
Option 1: Manual CAD modeling
Open your floor plan in SketchUp, Blender, or Fusion 360 and build the model by hand. Trace walls, extrude to height, cut door and window openings, export as STL.
Time: 3–8 hours per model. Cost: Free (if you own software). Skill: High.
Best for people who already have CAD skills and need highly customized models.
Option 2: Hire a freelancer
Outsource to a designer on Fiverr or Upwork. A simple apartment model costs $100–250 and takes 2–5 days. Complex houses run $400–800.
Time: Days to weeks. Cost: $100–800 per model. Skill: None required.
Best for one-off projects where budget is not a concern.
Option 3: Ritn3D (automated)
Upload a floor plan to Ritn3D, generate the 3D model in under two minutes, download the STL, and print.
Time: Under 5 minutes. Cost: $19.99/month for 5 downloads. Skill: None required.
Best for anyone who needs models regularly, quickly, or affordably.
Side-by-side comparison
| Factor | Manual CAD | Freelancer | Ritn3D |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cost per model | Free | $100–800 | ~$4 |
| Time to model | 3–8 hours | 2–14 days | Under 2 min |
| Skill required | High | None | None |
| Scales to volume | Poorly | Poorly | Easily |
The math for repeat use
An architect printing models for 12 client presentations at $300 per freelance model spends $3,600/year. With Ritn3D Pro+ that drops to $240/year for unlimited renders plus 60 STL downloads.
A realtor offering printed closing gifts cannot justify $500 per model. At $4 per STL plus $3 in filament, it becomes practical.
Get started
Download Ritn3D and try the free tier. Your first render is free, no credit card required.