The quick answer
A single 3D floor plan rendering costs $100–$1,200 when outsourced to a freelancer or agency. Desktop software subscriptions run $25–$200/month but require you to model everything manually. Automated mobile tools like Ritn3D start at free (3 renders/month) with a Pro plan at $9.99/month for 20 renders.
The price you pay depends on how much of the work you want to do yourself and how fast you need the result.
Pricing breakdown by method
1. Freelance 3D artists
Hiring a freelancer on Fiverr, Upwork, or a specialized rendering studio is the most common approach for one-off projects.
| Quality level | Price per plan | Turnaround | What you get |
|---|---|---|---|
| Basic | $100–$200 | 2–4 days | Simple top-down 3D view, basic textures |
| Standard | $300–$600 | 3–7 days | Furnished 3D model, realistic materials, 2–3 camera angles |
| Premium | $600–$1,200 | 5–14 days | Photorealistic renders, walkthrough video, custom furniture |
Best for: One-time projects where you need photorealistic marketing material and have budget and time.
Downside: Every new plan costs full price again. A real estate agent processing 5 listings per month would spend $1,500–$3,000 on standard-quality renders alone.
2. Rendering agencies and services
Companies like BoxBrownie, Styldod, and VirtualStaging.com offer floor plan rendering as a productized service.
- Floor plan redraw (2D to clean 2D): $15–$50
- 3D floor plan render: $150–$500
- 3D walkthrough video: $500–$2,000
- Virtual staging: $25–$75 per photo
These are faster than freelancers (often 24–48 hour turnaround) but still charge per deliverable. Volume discounts typically start at 10+ orders.
Best for: Real estate agencies with consistent volume who want hands-off production.
3. Desktop software (DIY)
Software tools let you build 3D floor plans yourself. The trade-off is your time.
| Software | Price | Learning curve | Output quality |
|---|---|---|---|
| SketchUp Free | Free | Medium–High | Good with skill |
| SketchUp Pro | $349/year | Medium–High | Professional |
| Planner 5D | $7–$25/month | Low–Medium | Good |
| RoomSketcher | $49–$99/year | Low | Good |
| Cedreo | $79–$199/month | Medium | Professional |
| HomeByMe | Free–$30/month | Low–Medium | Good |
Best for: People who enjoy the design process and want full creative control.
Downside: You are drawing every wall, placing every door, and arranging every piece of furniture manually. Even experienced users spend 30–60 minutes per floor plan. Beginners spend hours.
4. Automated conversion tools
A newer category of tools that take an existing floor plan and automatically convert it to 3D — no manual drawing required.
| Tool | Price | Speed | What you upload |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ritn3D | Free / $9.99/month (20 renders) | Under 2 minutes | PDF, JPG, PNG floor plan |
| Floor-Plan.ai | ~$20–50/plan | Minutes | Floor plan image |
| Coohom | Free–$39/month | Varies | Manual draw or upload |
Best for: Anyone who already has a floor plan and wants a 3D model fast, without learning software or hiring someone.
Cost comparison: 10 floor plans per month
For someone processing multiple floor plans regularly (a realtor, property manager, or architect):
| Method | Cost for 10 plans/month | Your time per plan |
|---|---|---|
| Freelancer (standard) | $3,000–$6,000 | 15 min (briefing) |
| Rendering agency | $1,500–$5,000 | 10 min (ordering) |
| Desktop software (DIY) | $25–$199/month + your time | 30–60 min |
| Ritn3D Pro | $9.99/month | 2–5 min |
The difference is not subtle. Automated tools are 100–600x cheaper than outsourcing for recurring use.
What affects the price?
Several factors push the cost up or down:
- Complexity — More rooms, irregular shapes, and multi-story plans cost more with freelancers
- Furnishing — Furnished renders cost 2–3x more than empty rooms
- Render quality — Photorealistic output requires more processing time and skill
- Turnaround time — Rush orders typically cost 50–100% more
- Revisions — Most freelancers charge for revisions beyond the first round
When free is enough
If you need a single 3D floor plan occasionally, a free-tier tool will handle it. Ritn3D's free plan gives you 3 renders per month with a bird's eye view and sharing with up to 5 people. No credit card required.
This is enough for a homeowner checking what their apartment layout looks like in 3D, or an architecture student experimenting with visualizations.
When to upgrade
The Pro tier ($9.99/month) makes sense when you:
- Process more than 1 floor plan per month
- Need walkthrough mode to explore rooms interactively
- Want to share with more than 5 people per project (Pro allows 50)
- Want to share interactive 3D links with clients or buyers
- Want no watermark on your 3D models
- Need 90-day cloud sync to access models across devices
Bottom line
The 3D floor plan market has a massive pricing gap. Professional rendering services charge hundreds of dollars per plan because the manual labor is real — an artist spends hours building your model in Blender or SketchUp.
Automated tools close that gap by handling the conversion in minutes. If you already have a floor plan and just need it in 3D, there is no reason to pay $300+ per model in 2026. See our step-by-step conversion guide to get started.