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Guide to Flexible 3D Printing: Materials, Technologies, and Applications


flexible pipe

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At a Glance

In this guide, we cover the key materials, technologies, and applications behind flexible 3D printing. You’ll learn how different material types, from TPU to PolyJet™ rubber-like materials and P3™ elastomers like silicones, behave in practice. We look at how Shore hardness relates to flexibility, and how to match material performance to real-world use. We also compare Stratasys technologies including FDM®, PolyJet, and P3 DLP, explore where flexible materials are used across industries, and provide a clear framework to help you choose the right material for your application.

 

What is Flexible 3D Printing?

Flexible 3D printing is the process of producing parts using elastomeric materials designed to bend, stretch, compress, or absorb impact while returning to their original shape. It uses flexible thermoplastics and photopolymers such as TPU (Thermoplastic Polyurethane) and other elastomeric materials with varying Shore hardness and elongation properties. Flexible 3D printing is widely used to manufacture ergonomic grips, seals, gaskets, wearables, cushioning features, and medical or dental components that require softness, resilience, or repeated flexing.

Flexible 3D printing is about producing parts that undergo large, reversible deformation – bending, compressing or absorbing impact – and recover their shape when the force is removed. Depending on the material, that can mean anything from a slight flex under load to a fully rubber-like response.

Not all flexible materials behave the same. Some are designed to simulate rubber for fit and feel. Others are built to handle repeated stress, abrasion, or mechanical use without breaking. That distinction matters early, because it affects both material choice and printing process.

Shore hardness and elongation at break are the simplest way to quantify these. Lower Shore A values indicate softer, more compliant materials. Higher values are firmer and offer more support. Elongation at break indicates how much a material can stretch before it snaps.

The key question is how the part needs to perform. If it’s about realism of grips, seals, or overmolded features, you’re usually optimizing for feel and surface quality. If it’s functional, such as protective covers, tooling, or something with repeated flex, you’re looking more at durability and consistency over time.

shorehardnessscale

Types of Flexible 3D Printing Materials

Flexible 3D printing materials cover a wide range of behaviors, from tough, slightly flexible plastics to soft, rubber-like materials. The right choice depends less on “how flexible” something is in isolation, and more on how it needs to perform in use, e.g. repeated bending, surface grip, sealing, or simply replicating the feel of a final product.

These materials are best understood by their performance characteristics:

  • Flexible thermoplastics, including thermoplastic urethanes (TPU) and thermoplastic elastomers (TPE) are known for durability and real-world part performance.
  • Rubber-like photopolymers, including Agilus30™, Tango™, and Elastico®, are used where realism and detail are needed.
  • Silicone and elastomers, including P3™ Silicone, P3™, Stretch™ IND475 and 80 resin are ideal for repeatable deformation, compression, elasticity, and recovery are vital in real-world applications.

Some materials offer limited flexibility, such as semi-flex photopolymers or polypropylene-based materials, but these do not provide the rubber-like behavior covered in this guide.

TPE, TPU and Other Flexible Filaments

Thermoplastic Elastomers (TPE) is a broad category of flexible thermoplastics, while it’s also a specific type of TPE. TPU, which is used in Stratasys FDM® systems, sits within the TPE category and offers a balance of flexibility and durability.

Materials like FDM® TPU 92A offer a balance of flexibility and durability, so you might use them where performance matters more than surface finish: parts that need to withstand wear, vibration, or repeated movement.

TPU
TPUs are well suited to parts like this large air intake hose that needs to withstand wear, vibration and repeated movement.
PJ SHoes
Full size shoe model, printed with Agilus30™ Colors in vibrant colors for exceptional flexibility.

PolyJet Rubber-Like Materials

Flexible PolyJet materials such as Agilus30, Tango and Elastico are designed to simulate elastomers with high detail and control. These materials offer different levels of softness and flexibility, allowing you to match material feel and behavior to the application. Digital material blends extend this further by allowing you to tune Shore hardness and behavior within a single part. And with multi-material printing you can combine rigid and flexible elements in a single part.

You’ll find these materials used for realistic prototypes, soft-touch features, and design validation, as well as parts that require controlled flexibility without full elastomer behavior.

Ultra-Soft PolyJet Materials

Flexible 3D printing jetting resins such as TissueMatrix® and GelMatrix® extend this further into very soft, gel-like behavior. They’re used in medical simulation and training, where replicating soft tissue response is more important than mechanical strength.

P3 Elastomer Materials

Flexible materials for P3 DLP are suited to applications where behavior under load in real-world situations is important.

  • P3 MED Silicone 25A replicates the response of skin and soft tissue, while also functioning as an elastomer for sealing and compression. Since it’s a true silicone, it offers long-term elasticity and recovery, even under challenging thermal and mechanical conditions, similar to moldable silicone.
  • P3 Silicone 25A – the industrial member of the P3 silicone family – is used for parts that rely on long-lasting compression and softness, such as seals and wearables.
  • Stretch materials (Loctite 3D IND402, P3 Stretch IND475, P3 Stretch 80) are elastomeric resins designed for repeated deformation and recovery, such as soft grippers and handling tools.
Silicon 25A
Part printed with P3™ Silicone 25A on Origin® Two 3D printer

Silicone-Like vs True Silicone Materials

Not all “silicone” 3D printed parts are actually silicone.

True silicone materials, like P3 Silicone 25A, behave like molding silicone. They support compression, sealing, and repeated deformation and age over time in a way that silicone-like materials typically can’t.

This is important when moving from concept to application. If the part needs to perform under real conditions for an extended period of time, material behavior and aging matters more than appearance.

Stratasys Technologies for Flexible 3D Printing

Stratasys supports flexible 3D printing across multiple technologies, each suited to a different type of application. The choice isn’t just about how soft a material is, but more about how the part needs to perform, how it will be used, and how consistent the output needs to be.

This means selecting between FDM for durable functional parts, PolyJet for high-detail rubber-like prototypes, and P3 for elastomer applications closer to production performance. Each sits in a different space in terms of durability, realism, and material behavior.

FDM for Flexible Filaments

FDM is ideal for functional flexible parts, especially when your parts need durability and wear resistance.

Materials like TPU 92A don’t just flex once. They handle repeated bending, abrasion, and day-to-day wear without breaking down. That’s why you see them used for things like protective covers, ducts, seals, and end-of-arm tooling. You don’t get the highest surface finish, but you do get parts that are tough, predictable, and reliable enough to run on the workshop or production floor.

Electronic device
Electronic device cover with a durable flexible hinge, printed in TPU 92A using FDM

PolyJet for Rubber-Like and Multi-Material Parts

PolyJet is designed for high-detail, rubber-like ,particularly where realism and surface quality matter. Materials like Agilus30, Elastico and Tango allow you to control softness, and can be combined with rigid materials in a single build.

This makes it well suited to overmolded parts, seals, soft-touch features, and complex assemblies. You can vary Shore hardness within a part and achieve fine features that aren’t possible with filament-based systems.

PolyJet is widely used for design validation, medical models, and applications where the look, feel, and fit of the part need to closely match the final product.

Tango
Flexible gasket printed on PolyJet with TangoBlack

P3 for Elastomer and Silicone Applications

The P3 DLP platform extends flexible 3D printing into true elastomer performance for real-world applications, including silicone and high-stretch materials. This is where flexible printing moves beyond simulation into parts that can behave like production elastomers.

P3™ Silicone 25A is used for low volumes or prototyping of parts that are traditionally made with moldable silicones: where long-term compression and softness under demanding circumstances are important, such as gaskets, seals, anything that needs to deform and recover predictably over an extended period of time, in humid, lower or higher temperatures. Circumstances where standard elastomers or flexible materials won’t hold up.

Elastomeric materials like Stretch 80 and IND475 are built for repeated movement. You’ll see them in soft grippers and end-of-arm tooling, where parts flex continuously.

The advantage of P3 DLP flexible materials is that rather than simply simulating rubber, you’re getting real elastomer behavior, without the need for tooling, with consistent, repeatable output, and very good surface finish.

Gaskets
Automotive supplier J.W. Speaker prints small production volumes of their gaskets with Origin technology

Applications of Flexible 3D Printing Materials

Applications of flexible 3D printing range from custom medical orthotics to industrial vibration dampeners and automotive seals. Using flexible thermoplastics and photopolymers, manufacturers can produce components that provide impact resistance, ergonomic comfort, and complex sealing geometries. These materials also support customized consumer products such as footwear, wearables, and protective equipment, while enabling durable, repeatable production for demanding industrial applications.

What varies is the role the part plays. Some applications call for functional performance, others for realistic prototypes that validate fit and feel before committing to production. Often it's both, at different stages of the same project.

Medical Applications

In healthcare, depending on the case, priorities may include realism, controlled softness, durability, biocompatibility, or long-term performance.

Flexible 3D printing materials are used to replicate soft tissue behavior for:

  • surgical planning and simulation
  • device testing and validation
  • training and education
  • orthotics and prosthetics
  • patient-specific devices

Key material requirements include: 

  • accurate response to pressure and compression
  • consistent material behavior
  • high surface detail and anatomical realism
  • skin- and tissue-like response
  • durability under repeated use
  • biocompatibility and relevant regulatory certifications

For simulation and anatomical models, very soft materials are used to mimic tissue response realistically. For functional or patient-contact components, materials must also provide mechanical reliability, elasticity, recovery and long-term performance.

 

Heart replica
This heart model replicates realistic texture and softness for surgical training and medical education. Printed on a J850 Digital Anatomy printer using Agilus Colors, TissueMatrix, and GelMatrix material
Polaris
3D printing with elastomers helps Polaris come up with better manufacturing aids and techniques and protects vehicles during the manufacturing process

Automotive Applications

Automotive applications tend to fall into three areas: prototyping and design validation, . Each has different material requirements.

  • ducts and airflow components
  • seals and gaskets
  • interior soft-touch features
  • protective jigs and assembly aids

Key requirements:

  • resistance to vibration and repeated use
  • dimensional stability under load
  • ability to validate fit and assembly
  • chemical and heat resistance
  • softness to

Prototyping and design validation focuses on how parts fit together, how they compress, and how they behave against surrounding components. Manufacturing aids and tooling prioritize durability and part protection. Final-use parts require long-term performance under wear, vibration and repeated compression.

 

The use of elastomer material has enabled the team at Polaris to rapidly iterate and test multiple, geometrically accurate designs for the intake duct on one of their vehicles.

They’re soft enough to not damage our cosmetic parts, but durable enough to withstand assembly manufacturing.

Read the case study
Earbud prototypes using PolyJet and Agilus 30
Earbud prototypes using PolyJet and Agilus 30

Consumer Products

In consumer products, the focus is often on user interaction and feel during prototyping and design validation, and on durability, comfort, and repeated-use performance for tooling and production parts.

Design teams often need to test how a product feels before committing to tooling, especially for parts that rely on touch, comfort, or flexibility.

Flexible materials are used for:

  • grips and handles
  • wearables and footwear
  • protective and comfort features

Key requirements:

  • ergonomic response (how it feels in hand or on the body)
  • surface finish and detail
  • ability to combine rigid and flexible elements
  • durability under repeated use
  • flexibility and recovery over time
Industrial applications
Junction box from Italian company Techno for telecom applications

Industrial Applications

In industrial environments, flexible materials are typically used for prototyping and validation, manufacturing aids, and final-use parts. They might be used in handling, protection, and process interaction.

For prototyping, the focus is often on validating fit, movement, compression, and interaction with surrounding components. For tooling and manufacturing aids, performance over long periods of time is important. Parts are expected to handle continuous use, which makes fatigue resistance and consistency key factors.

Typical use cases include:

  • end-of-arm tooling (EOAT) and soft grippers
  • protective covers and contact surfaces
  • vibration dampening and isolation
  • seals, gaskets and spare parts

Key requirements:

  • durability and wear resistance under repeated cycles
  • controlled flexibility without failure
  • ability to conform to parts without causing damage

Benefits of Using Flexible Materials in 3D Printing

Flexible materials add a different set of capabilities to 3D printing. Instead of focusing only on shape and fit, you can also design for movement, contact, and real-world interaction. That includes parts that need to grip, seal, absorb impact, or flex under load.

Like rigid 3D printed parts, they help reduce tooling costs, shorten development cycles, allow for more complex geometries, and support customization or low-volume production. The difference is that the material behavior itself becomes part of the design function.

In real-world terms, the benefit isn’t just “flexibility”. It’s the ability to match material behavior to how the part is intended to perform. Whether that’s durability and repeated flex with FDM TPU 92A, controlled flexibility and multi-material design with PolyJet materials such as Agilus30, Tango, and  Elastico, or true elastomer response with P3  Silicone 25A and P3 Stretch resins.  

Coin mold printed
Coin mold printed on Origin with P3 Silicone 25A material
Gasket printed
Gasket printed with P3 Silicone 25A material

Durability and Impact Resistance

Flexible materials are often used because they can absorb energy and handle repeated stress without permanent deformation. Instead of cracking under load, they recover their shape.

FDM TPU 92A is a good example. It’s widely used for parts that need to withstand abrasion, vibration, or repeated flex, like protective covers and ducts. So, it’s suitable for functional use, not just prototyping.

End-of-arm tooling is another good example: P3 Stretch materials need to be soft enough to handle parts without damaging them, but resilient enough to do it thousands of times. That combination is what makes them suited to continuous production use.

How to Choose the Right Flexible 3D Printing Material

Choosing a flexible 3D printing material comes down to how the part needs to behave in use rather than simply how soft it feels. Use this as a quick filter, then refer to the comparison table above for detailed properties.

1.   How soft does it need to be?

  • Very soft / gel-like → TissueMatrix, GelMatrix
  • Soft (rubber-like) → Tango, Elastico
  • Soft, long-term (silicone) → P3 Silicone 25A
  • Medium flexibility → Agilus30, Elastico
  • Digital Materials → Tunable flexibility
  • Firm flexible → TPU 92A, TPE

2. Does it need to perform or simulate?

  • Functional (real use) → TPU 92A, TPE, P3 Silicone, P3 Stretch
  • Prototype (fit, feel, validation) → Agilus30, Tango, Digital Materials, TissueMatrix

3. What kind of load will it see?

  • Repeated flex / fatigue → TPU 92A, P3 Silicone 25A, P3 Stretch
  • Compression / sealing → P3 Silicone 25A
  • Abrasion / wear → TPU 92A, P3 Silicone 25A,
  • Light handling only → Digital Materials, TissueMatrix

4. How important is surface finish?

  • High detail / soft-touch realism → Agilus30, Tango, TissueMatrix, P3 Silicone 25A, P3 Stretch
  • Functional finish → TPU 92A, TPE
  • Balanced (fully functional + high surface finish) → P3 Silicone, P3 Stretch IND475

5. Do you need multiple materials in one part

  • Yes (overmolding, mixed hardness) → PolyJet (Agilus30, Tango, Digital Materials, TissueMatrix)
  • No → TPU 92A, TPE, P3 Silicone, P3 Stretch

6. What stage is the part at?

  • Engineering / functional testing → TPU 92A, TPE, P3 silicone, P3 Stretch IND475
  • Production support / tooling → TPU 92A, P3 Stretch