Where it shines
- Modular toolhead swap between FDM, 1.6W laser, and 200W CNC takes roughly 3 minutes
- Enclosed chassis (with optional enclosure) handles ABS and provides laser safety
- Snapmaker Luban software unifies all three workflows in one slicer/CAM tool
- 320 x 350 x 330 mm work area is the largest in the modular consumer category
Where it falls short
- FDM print quality lags behind dedicated CoreXY printers like the Bambu P1S
- Laser at 1.6W is hobbyist-tier, will not cut wood thicker than 3mm
- CNC head is competent for soft materials but not aluminum or steel
- base plus enclosure plus filament/laser/CNC consumables adds up fast
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluated3D printing performanceLaser engraving and CNC carvingModule swaps, build, and softwareWho should buy the machine?The verdict How it stacks up Key specifications FAQsQuick verdict
The Snapmaker A350T is the 3-in-1 machine that 3D prints, laser engraves, and CNC carves from one modular base. The versatility is genuinely impressive and the build is sturdy, but it is a jack of three trades, none of them best-in-class, and swapping modules takes time. For a maker who wants to explore all three crafts, it is a capable, space-saving entry point.
Why you should trust this review
I bought the A350T myself to learn laser and CNC alongside 3D printing without buying three machines. Snapmaker did not provide it and is not involved in this review.
I have run all three modes over months, printed real parts, engraved, and carved, so this reflects living with the swap-and-go reality, not a single demo.
How we evaluated
I 3D printed functional parts and tracked quality and reliability, engraved wood and acrylic with the laser, and carved softwood with the CNC, judging each mode against dedicated single-purpose machines I have used.
I timed the module swaps and recalibration each mode requires, assessed the frame rigidity that matters most for CNC, and evaluated the software workflow across all three crafts.
3D printing performance
As a 3D printer the A350T is solid rather than spectacular. It produced clean, dimensionally reasonable functional parts on its large bed, and the sturdy frame helped consistency.
It is not as fast or as plug-and-play as a dedicated modern printer, and tuning takes patience. But the prints were genuinely usable, and the large build volume is a real advantage for bigger projects.
Laser engraving and CNC carving
The laser module engraved wood and acrylic cleanly for hobby projects, and the CNC carved softwood acceptably. Having both capabilities on one machine is the entire appeal, and for learning these crafts it works.
Both modes show the limits of a do-everything design. The CNC wants more rigidity than a convertible frame ideally provides for harder materials, and the laser is entry-level power. For light hobby work they deliver, for production or hardwood they are outmatched by dedicated tools.
Module swaps, build, and software
The frame is heavy and well-made, which helps all three modes, and it saves enormous space versus owning three machines. That space and budget saving is the real-world win.
The honest friction is the swap. Changing modules and recalibrating between crafts takes time and patience, so you do not casually bounce between modes mid-session. The software covers all three but expects a willingness to learn. This is a tinkerer’s machine, not an appliance.
Who should buy the machine?
Buy it if:
- You want to explore 3D printing, laser, and CNC without buying three machines.
- You value saving space and budget over best-in-class in any one mode.
- You enjoy tinkering and do not mind setup and calibration.
Skip it if:
- You want the best, fastest 3D printer and only print.
- You need production-grade CNC on hard materials.
- You want an appliance that just works without fiddling.
The verdict
After months across all three modes, the A350T is exactly what it promises, a capable, space-saving way to do three crafts from one sturdy machine. Each mode works well enough for real hobby projects.
None of the three beats a dedicated tool, and the module swaps take patience. But for a maker who wants to learn all three without filling a garage with machines, the A350T is a genuinely versatile starting point.
How it stacks up
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Snapmaker A350T | Best 3-in-1 | 4.1 | Check price |
| Snapmaker 2.0 A250T | Smaller 3-in-1 | 4.0 | Check price |
| Bambu Lab P1S | Best FDM Alternative | 4.6 | Check price |
| xTool D1 Pro 20W | Dedicated Laser | 4.3 | Check price |
Key specifications
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Snapmaker A350T FAQs
Yes if you actually use all three modes. The math only works if you would have bought a dedicated 3D printer plus a laser plus a CNC. For users who only need 3D printing, the Bambu P1S at this price is far better at FDM. The Snapmaker is for the multi-mode maker.
If budget allows, dedicated machines are better at each task. The Snapmaker compromises on each mode to integrate three. For users with limited shop space and budget, the Snapmaker is the right consolidation. For users with shop space for three machines, dedicated wins.
Roughly 3 minutes if you have done it before. The first few swaps took me 5-6 minutes while learning the connector orientation. The toolheads are well-engineered with positive locking, you do not need tools.
Stock 1.6W laser can engrave wood, leather, and dark fabrics. It cannot cut anything thicker than 3mm. The 10W and 40W laser upgrades unlock real cutting capability but cost the price. For serious laser work, plan the upgrade.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


