In the low-cost SLS market, there have been few sustainable sources of equipment for industrial users.
Formlabs, which in September 2025 is said to have reported that 55% of SLS printers sold globally are Fuse systems, and Sinterit, which in the same month took an order of 30 machines from a single customer (and investor), are the two that have established themselves as key suppliers.
Sintratec shut down in 2024; Sharebot’s activity in the space is primarily targeted at R&D customers; and SLS4All, while able to boast the cheapest product of them all, is still in an early phase.
It has left an opportunity, another newcomer to the space believes, for a gap to be filled.
At RAPID + TCT 2025, Raise3D announced the impending launch of its RMS 220 SLS system. And in recent weeks, the first commercial systems have started shipping out to customers.
The machine is available at just shy of €27,000 and, Raise3D believes, may position itself as the ‘most robust, professional, powerful system in its sector at its price point.’
Whether it lives up to that billing, we’re about to find out. The company has built a strong reputation in the Fused Filament Fabrication and Stereolithography markets, and always eyed an expansion into powder bed fusion machines, per Sales Director Ruben Nigaglioni.