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Press_Release_content_18 - 01 - 2022


Global 3D Printer Industry Buoyant Despite Challenges in 2021

By Natalia Funkner

3D printer shipments in H2 2021 were limited by the advent of omicron and the very supply-chain woes the technology could help alleviate but the market is now poised for strong growth as interest and order rates accelerate

LONDON, 18 January 2022 - Shipments of Industrial* 3D Printers were up +39% through the first three quarters of 2021 but remained recessed -6% from pre-Covid levels (Q1-Q3 2019). Certain 3D printing technologies can bring mid-volume production of hard goods closer to the point of consumption and so shorten the supply chain, reducing the dependence on logistics that are currently problematic across the globe. However, not all components within 3D printers themselves can be made in this way and the industry was plagued with its own supply-chain challenges in Q3 2021. Shipments of new high-end printers grew over the quarter but vendors were not yet able to fire on all cylinders and many reported that demand outpaced supply. Enthusiasm was palpable at recent in-person trade events (RAPID+TCT in the US in September and Formnext in Germany in November) where would-be customers were once again able to see people and products in ‘real life'. Almost all major vendors at Formnext said that new and renewed interest in 3D printing was a consequence of global supply-chain problems. The interest is not merely anecdotal but has been carried through into order books, leaving the industry buoyant. Demand for consumer-targeted printers has waned since initial lockdowns but remained higher than pre-pandemic levels over the first three quarters of 2021.

Chart 1: Global 3D Printer Shipments by Price Class (note separate scales)

Industrial and Design
Shipments of Industrial- and Design-class printers (those selling for $20K+) rebounded strongly in 2021 after being severely impacted by reduced capital expenditure by businesses across the world in 2020. Even so, the number of new printers sold lagged behind pre-Covid levels. Strongest demand in the Industrial 3D printer category in the period was seen from printers focused on production or on mass customisation. Shipments of machines utilising some technologies was even above 2019 levels: +22% for polymer Vat Polymerisation printers and +104% for metal Binder Jetting models. The latter type of printer is used by a myriad of markets (including luxury goods, education, R&D, and the automotive and aerospace industries) for mass production. Resin Vat Polymerisation printers remain heavily in demand from the dental industry across the globe: the ever-accelerating production of clear dental aligners is an example of the use of 3D printers for mass customisation - creating many products, each of which are slightly different.

Professional
This price class was the least impacted by the pandemic and the relatively high 2020 baseline makes its +14% year-on-year growth in the first three quarters of 2021 look less impressive. However, shipments were up not only on the previous year but also +13% higher than in the same period pre-Covid. Recent growth in this sector has been driven by new product lines and the accelerating introduction of benchtop SLS polymer Powder Bed Fusion machines.

Personal and Kit & Hobby
Fully assembled Personal 3D printers have continued to give way to lower-priced kits - even though demand for both skyrocketed at the height of Covid lockdowns in 2020. demand at this lower end of the market waned as markets returned to a new normal in 2021, but shipments remained above 2019 levels. As these categories are consumer-focused, the fourth quarter is the most telling and current projections suggest that annual shipments of Personal printers could be down by as much as -10% on 2020 although still +33% up on 2019. Kit & Hobby printer shipments are on track to see growth of at least +36% year-on-year, which sounds great but many vendors had higher expectations given that 2020 sales were almost double those of 2019. The hottest items in this hobbyist-centric market are resin-based LCD printers, many of which sell for below $250.

Chart 2: Q1-Q3 2021 Global 3D Printer Shipments: Market Leaders by Class, Material and Process

Class*

Machine Material

ASTM Process

Company

Industrial

Polymer

Vat Photopolymerization

UnionTech

Industrial

Polymer

Powder Bed Fusion

HP

Industrial

Polymer

Material Extrusion

Stratasys

Industrial

Metal

Powder Bed Fusion

EOS

Industrial

Metal

Material Extrusion

Markforged

Industrial

Metal

Binder Jetting

Desktop Metal

Industrial

Metal

Directed Energy Deposition

TRUMPF

Design

Polymer

Material Extrusion

Stratasys

Design

Polymer & Wax

Material Jetting

3D Systems

Design

Composites

Material Extrusion

Markforged

Professional

Polymer

Vat Photopolymerization

Formlabs

Professional

Polymer

Material Extrusion

Ultimaker

Personal

Polymer

Material Extrusion

Flashforge

Kit&Hobby

Polymer

Material Extrusion

Creality 3D

 

During 2022, areas of focus for the industry will include high-temperature material extrusion thermoplastics, composites, the balance between organic growth and consolidation, supply-chain mitigation, and the role of digital manufacturing alongside that of additive manufacturing. The current record backlog looks set to push aggregate system revenues for 2022 up +23% on 2021. Forecasting over a 5-year period, the projection is that technologies poised to push further into mass production (for example, metal Binder Jetting, polymer Vat Photopolymerization and polymer Powder Bed Fusion) will see a CAGR of 30% or more in unit volumes.


* Price-class categorisation of PERSONAL (<$2,500), PROFESSIONAL ($2,500-$20,000), DESIGN ($20,000-$100,000) and INDUSTRIAL ($100,000+) based on fully assembled, finished-good products; new KIT&HOBBY class defined by DIY assembly required. 
 

About CONTEXT

CONTEXT's market intelligence, performance benchmarks and opportunity analysis empower clients to optimise operations and accelerate tomorrow's revenues. With over 35 years of industry partnership and experience reporting on large datasets, CONTEXT delivers analytics at all points in the value chain, providing clients with actionable insights rooted in concrete data and a profound understanding of customer needs. CONTEXT is headquartered in London, with over 300 staff across the world and in 2019 was recognised as one of the UK's Best WorkplacesTM by Great Place to Work®.
 

Press Contact
Funda Cizgenakad
T: +44 7876 616 246
E: Funda@contextworld.com

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