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3D Printing for Automotive Parts and Tooling Production


Amanda

Amanda Laidler

Manufacturing Marketing Manager

Automotive with SSYS logo

How to Choose the Best 3D Printer for Your Automotive Needs

Compare automotive 3D printing technologies, materials, and applications to identify the right solution for prototyping, tooling, and production.

At a Glance: 

In this guide, we look at how automotive manufacturers use additive manufacturing to produce functional prototypes, lightweight parts, custom tooling, replacement parts, and low-volume production components. We’ll cover the materials, technologies, and production strategies that help engineering teams reduce tooling costs, shorten development timelines, and improve assembly efficiency. 

Automotive companies use additive manufacturing across the full vehicle lifecycle, from early design validation through to production tooling and final-use parts. Depending on the application, manufacturers can produce lightweight parts for performance vehicles, low-volume production components, or replacement parts that are hard to get through traditional supply chains. 

The flexibility of additive manufacturing also helps engineering teams test and refine designs quickly without waiting for expensive tooling or molds. This speeds up development while helping teams validate form, fit, and function earlier in the process.  

Automotive manufacturers also use validated additive manufacturing workflows. In some cases, this includes Production Part Approval Process (PPAP) support, which helps verify that parts meet defined manufacturing and engineering standards before production. 

Today, automotive manufacturers use additive manufacturing for far more than concept models and functional prototypes. Production-ready polymer parts are increasingly being used for low-volume, bridge manufacturing, assembly applications, and aftermarket support. This shift allows manufacturers to move from design validation into 3D printed car parts using the same digital workflows and additive manufacturing systems.

Types of 3D Printed Car Parts

3D printed car parts are typically used for interior components, aerodynamic exterior trim, functional automotive parts, and replacement parts. Automotive manufacturers use these applications throughout vehicle development, low-volume production, aftermarket support, and specialized vehicle programs. Different applications require different materials, from UV-resistant ASA™ for exterior parts to engineering thermoplastics and resins for functional components and production-ready parts. 

Interior Components and Design Validation

Interior automotive parts are a common additive manufacturing application because they often require customization, rapid iteration, and high-quality surface finishes. Automotive manufacturers use industrial 3D printing for dashboard trim, switch surrounds, vents, mounting brackets, clips, and bespoke cabin features. 

PolyJet™ technology is widely used for interior concept modeling and design reviews because it can produce smooth surfaces, realistic textures, and highly detailed prototypes. 

For example, Italdesign used the Stratasys J750™ to produce marble-effect interior components for its DaVinci concept car, including the central console, air conditioning diffusers, and door inlays. The company used PolyJet™ technology to create highly realistic textures and finishes within tight development timelines that would have been difficult to achieve using traditional methods. 

Italdesign used the Stratasys J750™
Italdesign used the Stratasys J750™ to produce marble-effect interior components for its DaVinci concept car

Exterior Components

Exterior automotive parts must balance appearance with durability. Manufacturers use additive manufacturing to produce mirror housings, trim components, lighting surrounds, ducts, and aerodynamic features. 

Materials such as ASA for FDM® are commonly used because they offer strong UV resistance and weather durability, making them suitable for exterior environments and low-volume production applications.  

Additive manufacturing also supports custom car parts for specialty vehicles, motorsport programs, and low-volume applications. 

Roush used Stratasys Direct Manufacturing
Roush used Stratasys Direct Manufacturing to produce low-volume automotive production parts while reducing tooling costs and lead times

Under the Hood and Functional Parts

Under-the-hood automotive applications require materials capable of handling heat, vibration, and mechanical stress. Engineers use additive manufacturing to create functional prototypes, brackets, ducts, housings, and fluid-routing systems, and production-ready components for specialized automotive applications. 

FDM® technology supports these applications through engineering-grade thermoplastics designed for functional testing and manufacturing environments. 

The parts were the result of nearly three years of design and development, with the NASCAR Next Gen car completing more than 37,000 miles of testing before launch. The resulting windshield ventilation assemblies became the first 3D printed production parts used across the entire NASCAR Cup Series fleet. 

Nascar
We’ve helped NASCAR move from 3D printed prototypes to end-use production parts on its high-performance race cars.” – Pat Carey, Senior Vice president, Strategic Growth for Stratasys

Replacement and Legacy Parts

One of the biggest advantages of additive manufacturing is the ability to reproduce hard-to-find or obsolete replacement parts. Instead of storing physical inventory for years, manufacturers can keep digital part files and produce components on demand. 

This is especially useful for heritage vehicles, specialty programs, and low-volume automotive production where original tooling or suppliers may no longer exist. 

For example, Stratasys Direct Manufacturing helped restore the 1930 Sampson Special race car by recreating obsolete radiator components using PolyJet™ technology. This allowed replacement parts to be reproduced accurately without relying on traditional tooling methods. 

Special car
Using PolyJet 3D printing technology, we were able to help recreate obsolete radiator components for this 1930 Sampson Special race car.

Types of 3D Printed Automotive Tooling

3D printed automotive tooling includes the tools used to build, assemble, inspect, and handle vehicle components during production. This includes jigs, fixtures, molds, robotic tooling, and inspection aids made using additive manufacturing. 

Automotive manufacturers use additive tooling across assembly lines, inspection stations, paint operations, and automated manufacturing systems. Compared to traditional machined tooling, these tools are often easier to revise, faster to produce, and better suited to low-volume production and changing manufacturing requirements.

Subaru
Subaru streamlined its tool-making process using FDM® additive manufacturing
jigs and fixtures.

Jigs and Fixtures

Jigs and fixtures help position, hold, and guide parts during manufacturing and assembly. Automotive manufacturers use these tools throughout welding, trimming, inspection, and assembly operations to improve consistency and repeatability on the production line. Additive manufacturing makes it easier to produce lightweight, custom tooling quickly and revise it when production requirements change. J.W. Speaker used 3D printed manufacturing fixtures to support production workflows while reducing tooling time by 89% compared to traditional methods.

Bar clamp printed with FDM PC-ESD on F900

Molds and Forming Tools

Automotive manufacturers use additive manufacturing to produce thermoforming molds, composite layup tooling, and forming tools for prototypes and lower-volume production. Compared to conventional tooling methods, 3D printed forming tools can be produced faster and at lower cost, especially when designs change frequently during development. 99P Labs used Stratasys to develop a metal forming tool for automotive applications, helping reduce tooling lead times while supporting faster iteration and testing during development.

eoat.

End of Arm Tooling (EOAT)

End-of-arm tooling (EOAT) includes robotic grippers, pick-and-place tools, and vacuum systems attached to automated manufacturing equipment. Automotive manufacturers use EOAT in robotic handling, automated assembly, and material transfer systems across the factory floor. Teams can create lighter tooling designs and combine multiple features into a single part, helping simplify robotic tooling setups. General Motors used FDM® Nylon 12CF to produce lightweight assembly-line risers, reducing weight by 72% compared to steel while shortening lead times from nine weeks to two weeks.

General Motors

Assembly and Inspection Aids

Assembly and inspection aids help workers maintain accuracy and consistency during production. These tools include gauges, drill guides, alignment fixtures, and fit-check tools. Using additive manufacturing, engineers can produce these tools quickly and update them more easily during launch and ramp-up phases.

jigs and fixtures.

Jigs and fixtures help position, hold, and guide parts during manufacturing and assembly. Automotive manufacturers use these tools throughout welding, trimming, inspection, and assembly operations to improve consistency and repeatability on the production line. Additive manufacturing makes it easier to produce lightweight, custom tooling quickly and revise it when production requirements change. J.W. Speaker used 3D printed manufacturing fixtures to support production workflows while reducing tooling time by 89% compared to traditional methods.

Bar clamp printed with FDM PC-ESD on F900

Automotive manufacturers use additive manufacturing to produce thermoforming molds, composite layup tooling, and forming tools for prototypes and lower-volume production. Compared to conventional tooling methods, 3D printed forming tools can be produced faster and at lower cost, especially when designs change frequently during development. 99P Labs used Stratasys to develop a metal forming tool for automotive applications, helping reduce tooling lead times while supporting faster iteration and testing during development.

eoat.

End-of-arm tooling (EOAT) includes robotic grippers, pick-and-place tools, and vacuum systems attached to automated manufacturing equipment. Automotive manufacturers use EOAT in robotic handling, automated assembly, and material transfer systems across the factory floor. Teams can create lighter tooling designs and combine multiple features into a single part, helping simplify robotic tooling setups. General Motors used FDM® Nylon 12CF to produce lightweight assembly-line risers, reducing weight by 72% compared to steel while shortening lead times from nine weeks to two weeks.

General Motors

Assembly and inspection aids help workers maintain accuracy and consistency during production. These tools include gauges, drill guides, alignment fixtures, and fit-check tools. Using additive manufacturing, engineers can produce these tools quickly and update them more easily during launch and ramp-up phases.

Why Use 3D Printing for Car Parts and Tooling

3D printing car parts and tooling provides significant advantages by eliminating expensive molds, reducing lead times, and enabling on-demand production. This technology allows manufacturers to iterate designs rapidly, produce bespoke components without expensive retooling, and store replacement parts digitally rather than holding large physical inventories.  

Automotive manufacturers also use additive manufacturing to improve production flexibility, respond faster to engineering changes, and reduce dependency on long external supply chains.

Reduce Cost Lead Times

Reduce Tooling Lead Times

Traditional tooling can take weeks to machine, especially for low-volume production, prototypes, or tools that need frequent updates. Additive manufacturing allows teams to move directly from CAD design to production, making it easier to respond quickly to manufacturing changes and production issues. Subaru used the Stratasys F770™ to reduce tooling production time by around 50%, helping the company support faster manufacturing updates and production workflows. Digital inventories also make it easier to reproduce replacement parts and tooling without storing large physical inventories for years.

Special car

Support Vehicle Launches and Engineering Changes

Vehicle programs often continue evolving during launch and ramp-up phases. Design changes, process updates, and fit issues can all require tooling revisions at short notice. Additive manufacturing makes it easier to update tooling, fixtures, and production aids without restarting long machining or outsourcing processes. This helps manufacturers maintain production schedules while adapting more quickly to engineering changes.

A collection of 3D printed controllers using Stratasys PolyJet technology

Produce Parts on Demand

Manufacturers can produce production parts and replacement components when needed rather than storing large physical inventories. This is especially useful for short-run production, aftermarket support, and legacy vehicle programs where demand may be unpredictable.

Person frustrated at overcrowded warehouse of supplies due to stockpiling

Reduce Inventory and Supplier Dependency

Producing tooling and parts in-house helps manufacturers reduce dependency on external suppliers and long supply chains. When teams can produce tooling, production-ready components, and assembly aids internally, they can respond faster to shortages, delays, or production changes. Karsan used the Stratasys F770™ to produce automotive production parts in-house, reducing production costs by up to 80% compared to outsourced sheet metal manufacturing while shortening production cycles by 3–4 weeks.

64 camera mounts in each build

Make Low-Volume Production More Economical

Traditional manufacturing methods often require expensive tooling investments that are difficult to justify for smaller production runs. Additive manufacturing means manufacturers can produce custom car parts and low-volume production components without investing in new tooling for every design variation. Roush used Stratasys Direct Manufacturing to produce low-volume automotive production parts while reducing tooling costs and shortening lead times compared to traditional manufacturing methods. The project also included PPAP support to help meet automotive production requirements

Reduce Cost Lead Times

Traditional tooling can take weeks to machine, especially for low-volume production, prototypes, or tools that need frequent updates. Additive manufacturing allows teams to move directly from CAD design to production, making it easier to respond quickly to manufacturing changes and production issues. Subaru used the Stratasys F770™ to reduce tooling production time by around 50%, helping the company support faster manufacturing updates and production workflows. Digital inventories also make it easier to reproduce replacement parts and tooling without storing large physical inventories for years.

Special car

Vehicle programs often continue evolving during launch and ramp-up phases. Design changes, process updates, and fit issues can all require tooling revisions at short notice. Additive manufacturing makes it easier to update tooling, fixtures, and production aids without restarting long machining or outsourcing processes. This helps manufacturers maintain production schedules while adapting more quickly to engineering changes.

A collection of 3D printed controllers using Stratasys PolyJet technology

Manufacturers can produce production parts and replacement components when needed rather than storing large physical inventories. This is especially useful for short-run production, aftermarket support, and legacy vehicle programs where demand may be unpredictable.

Person frustrated at overcrowded warehouse of supplies due to stockpiling

Producing tooling and parts in-house helps manufacturers reduce dependency on external suppliers and long supply chains. When teams can produce tooling, production-ready components, and assembly aids internally, they can respond faster to shortages, delays, or production changes. Karsan used the Stratasys F770™ to produce automotive production parts in-house, reducing production costs by up to 80% compared to outsourced sheet metal manufacturing while shortening production cycles by 3–4 weeks.

64 camera mounts in each build

Traditional manufacturing methods often require expensive tooling investments that are difficult to justify for smaller production runs. Additive manufacturing means manufacturers can produce custom car parts and low-volume production components without investing in new tooling for every design variation. Roush used Stratasys Direct Manufacturing to produce low-volume automotive production parts while reducing tooling costs and shortening lead times compared to traditional manufacturing methods. The project also included PPAP support to help meet automotive production requirements

Best Materials for 3D Printed Car Parts

Different automotive applications require different combinations of strength, heat resistance, durability, flexibility, and surface finish. Material selection depends on where the part will be used and the conditions it needs to withstand. 

ASA (Acrylonitrile Styrene Acrylate) 

ASA™ is a UV-resistant thermoplastic commonly used for exterior trim, housings, and low-volume parts exposed to weather and sunlight. 

ABS Materials: ABS-CF10™ and ABS-M30™ 

Durable engineering thermoplastics used for functional prototypes, manufacturing aids, and production components that require strength and dimensional stability. ABS-M30™ provides improved strength and impact resistance for functional parts, housings, and factory-floor tooling. ABS-CF10™ adds carbon fiber reinforcement for greater stiffness, making it suitable for lightweight brackets, tooling, and structural components. 

Nylon (PA12 and PA11) 

Nylon materials such as SAF™ PA12 and SAF™ High Yield PA11 provide a strong balance of toughness, wear resistance, and lightweight performance, ideal for functional parts, production tooling, ducts, clips, brackets, and robotic tooling where durability and repeatability are important. 

Polypropylene 

Polypropylene supports automotive applications that require chemical resistance, flexibility, and durability. It is commonly used for fluid-contact components, covers, and functional prototypes where repeated movement or impact resistance is important. 

Photopolymer Resins (ToughONE™ and Dura56™) 

Photopolymer materials such as ToughONE™ for PolyJet™ and Dura56™ for P3™ DLP have smooth surface finishes, fine feature detail, and strong dimensional accuracy, making them useful for interior components, concept models, fit-check parts, and production aids. 

Car seat adjustment level, printed with SAF™ PA12
Car seat adjustment level, printed with SAF™ PA12

Best Materials for 3D Printed Automotive Tooling

Automotive tooling materials need to withstand repeated use, changing temperatures, and demanding factory-floor conditions. Different tooling applications require different combinations of strength, stiffness, heat resistance, and durability. 

Carbon-Fiber Composites 

Carbon-fiber-reinforced materials combine low weight with high stiffness, making them well suited to automotive tooling applications. Manufacturers commonly use materials such as FDM® Nylon 12CF for jigs, fixtures, and end-of-arm tooling where lightweight strength and repeatability are important.  

High Performance Polymers  

Materials such as ULTEM™ 1010 resin offer strong heat resistance, chemical resistance, and dimensional stability, helping tools maintain accuracy during repeated production use. These materials are commonly used for automotive manufacturing aids, composite tooling, and applications exposed to higher temperatures on the factory floor. 

FDM Thermoplastics for Durable Fixtures 

FDM® thermoplastics are widely used for durable manufacturing fixtures, drill guides, inspection aids, and assembly tooling. Materials such as ASA™ are commonly used for durable fixtures and tooling exposed to regular handling and changing shop-floor conditions. 

High Temperature Polymers for Forming Applications 

High-temperature polymers are used for thermoforming molds, composite layup tooling, and forming applications where heat resistance is critical. They help to produce tooling faster and support fast, low-volume production. 

Stratasys 3D Printing Technologies for Car Parts and Tooling

Stratasys technologies support different stages of automotive development and production, from design validation and prototype parts to custom tooling, short-run production parts, and PPAP-supported manufacturing through Stratasys Direct Manufacturing. 

FDM® for Functional Parts and Production Tooling 

FDM® technology is widely used for functional prototypes, production tooling, and durable production parts. Its engineering-grade thermoplastics support automotive applications that require strength, dimensional stability, and reliable factory-floor performance. Manufacturers commonly use FDM® for jigs, fixtures, end-of-arm tooling, and low-volume production components. 

SLA for Prototype Parts and Tooling 

Stereolithography is used for accurate prototype parts, aerodynamic models, and tooling patterns that require smooth surfaces and strong dimensional accuracy. 

Automotive manufacturers use our Neo® systems during vehicle development to support faster testing and design iteration. 

PolyJet™ for Visual Prototyping and Design Reviews 

PolyJet™ technology produces highly detailed prototypes with smooth surfaces, fine feature detail, and realistic textures. Automotive design teams use PolyJet™ for interior concepts, fit-and-finish reviews, ergonomic studies, and design validation where appearance and accuracy are important. 

SAF™ for Volume Production Parts 

SAF™ technology supports repeatable production of polymer production parts at higher volumes. It is designed for manufacturing environments where consistency, throughput, and part repeatability are important, making it suitable for low-volume production and bridge manufacturing applications. 

P3™ for Injection Mold Quality Short Runs 

P3™ technology supports highly accurate parts with strong surface quality and fine detail. Automotive manufacturers use P3™ for prototypes, tooling, and short-run production parts where injection mold-like quality is needed without the cost and lead time of traditional tooling. 

Automotive Inspection Fixture.
Additive tooling enables inspection fixtures to be produced and revised quickly while supporting repeatability and usability.

How 3D Printed Car Parts Are Designed and Sourced

3D printed automotive parts are designed using CAD software optimized for additive manufacturing (DfAM), which enables complex, lightweight geometries. Parts are sourced through in-house production for rapid iteration or on-demand service bureaus for specialized materials. To ensure safety and consistency, components undergo the Production Part Approval Process (PPAP), validating they meet strict automotive engineering standards. 

CAD Design and Design for Additive Manufacturing 

Design for Additive Manufacturing (DfAM) allows engineers to design parts specifically for additive manufacturing rather than traditional machining or molding. 

This makes it easier to reduce weight, combine multiple parts into a single component, and create more complex geometries that would be difficult to manufacture conventionally. 

GrabCAD Print™ and Software Workflow 

Software like GrabCAD Print™ helps engineering teams prepare, manage, and monitor additive manufacturing workflows. 

The software simplifies print setup and helps support repeatability across different printers, teams, and production environments. 

In-House Printing vs. On-Demand Part Services 

Some automotive manufacturers produce tooling and parts in-house for faster iteration and production flexibility, while others use services such as Stratasys Direct Manufacturing for specialized materials, PPAP support, bridge manufacturing, and additional production capacity. 

Many organizations use a combination of both depending on the application, production timeline, and manufacturing requirements.  

Production Part Approval Process (PPAP) for Automotive 

Production Part Approval Process (PPAP) workflows help validate that automotive production parts meet required engineering and manufacturing standards. 

As additive manufacturing moves further into automotive production environments, PPAP-supported workflows help manufacturers maintain consistency, traceability, and production quality. 

CAD Design