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Tips5 November 20255 min read

How to Handle Rush Orders Without Losing Margin

DanielFounder, Printforge
rush orderspricingschedulingbusiness operations

Every 3D printing business receives rush orders — customers who need parts yesterday. These urgent requests can be extremely profitable opportunities or margin-destroying distractions, depending on how you handle them. The key is having a system in place before the panic call arrives.

Setting Up Rush Order Pricing

Rush orders should always carry a premium. The customer is asking you to prioritise their work over other commitments, potentially run printers overnight, and compress your quality control and post-processing timeline. A typical rush surcharge structure looks like this: Standard (3–5 business days): base price. Express (1–2 business days): +30–50%. Same day: +75–100%. Emergency (hours): +100–200%. These premiums aren't arbitrary — they compensate for disrupted scheduling, potential overtime, and the risk of errors when working under pressure.

Scheduling Without Chaos

The biggest risk with rush orders is cascading delays — pulling a printer off one customer's job to start another means the first order is now late. Avoid this by maintaining buffer capacity. If your printers run at 100% utilisation every day, you have zero capacity for rush work. Aim for 70–80% planned utilisation, keeping 20–30% available for rush orders, reprints, maintenance, and personal projects. If no rush orders come in, use the buffer time for stock builds or process improvements.

When a rush order arrives, assess the impact on existing commitments before accepting. Can you fit it into idle printer capacity? Can you run it overnight without displacing another job? If accepting the rush order means delaying another customer, contact that customer first and renegotiate their timeline before committing to the rush. Never silently delay one customer to accommodate another.

Managing Customer Expectations

Be crystal clear about what rush means. Faster turnaround doesn't mean lower quality, but it might mean fewer colour options (use what's loaded), simplified post-processing, or pickup-only (no time for shipping). Document these trade-offs in your rush order terms so customers know exactly what they're getting. Also make clear that the rush premium applies to turnaround time, not print speed — you're not going to crank up the print speed and compromise part quality.

When to Say No

  • If the part needs extensive design work that can't be compressed
  • If the material required isn't in stock and can't be sourced quickly
  • If accepting would require delaying a customer who's already been promised a date
  • If the timeline is genuinely impossible (a 20-hour print can't ship in 4 hours)
  • If the customer won't pay the rush premium — your schedule disruption has real cost

Making Rush Orders Work for You

Some businesses avoid rush orders entirely, seeing them as stressful and disruptive. That's a mistake — rush orders are often your highest-margin work. The customer values speed over price, which means they're less likely to haggle and more likely to appreciate the service. Deliver a rush order flawlessly and you'll earn a loyal, high-value customer. Build rush pricing into your standard rate card, keep buffer capacity in your schedule, and treat urgent requests as premium opportunities rather than inconveniences.

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