Updated for 2026

The Complete Guide to Laser Cutting Software

Everything you need to know before buying quoting, nesting, or production software for your fabrication shop. No sales pitch — just a practical comparison of what's out there and what actually matters.

1. What is Laser Cutting Software?

Laser cutting software is a broad term covering three distinct categories of tools that fabrication shops use to run their businesses. Most shops need at least one; many end up with all three.

Quoting software calculates job costs from part geometry. You upload a DXF, DWG, or STEP file, and the software works out cutting time, material cost, gas consumption, pierce counts, and secondary operations to produce an accurate quote. The best tools do this in seconds, not hours.

Nesting software arranges parts on sheet material to maximise material usage and minimise waste. This ranges from basic rectangular bounding-box nesting (which most quoting tools include) to true-shape nesting engines that rotate and interlock irregular parts for 80%+ sheet utilisation.

Production management covers everything after the quote is accepted: job cards, operator time tracking, scheduling across machines, packing slips, delivery notes, and invoicing. This is where quoting software overlaps with manufacturing ERP.

The challenge for most shops is that these three categories have historically been separate products from separate vendors, each with their own data entry, file formats, and pricing. Modern platforms are increasingly combining all three into a single tool — which saves time, reduces errors, and means your quote price actually reflects your real production costs.

2. Key Features to Look For

Not all laser cutting software is created equal. Here are the features that separate genuinely useful tools from the ones that look good in a demo but fall short in daily use.

DXF, DWG & STEP Import

Upload any industry-standard file and get an instant quote. STEP support with automatic unfolding is essential if your customers send 3D models.

True-Shape Nesting

Parts should be arranged by their actual contours, not bounding boxes. Look for nesting that achieves 80%+ sheet utilisation on real jobs.

Accurate Cost Calculation

Cutting time should be calculated from real physics — acceleration, deceleration, pierce time, rapid moves — not flat per-metre rates.

Customer Portal

Let customers upload files and get instant pricing 24/7 without a phone call. This is the feature that saves the most time for growing shops.

Secondary Operations

Folding, welding, painting, milling — if your shop does more than cut, your software should quote it all in one place with real parameters.

Production Scheduling

Visual scheduling across machines with operator time tracking. Know what's running, what's late, and where the bottleneck is.

3. Quoting & Pricing Engines

The quoting engine is the core of any laser cutting software. It takes a part file, analyses the geometry, and calculates a price. But how it does this varies enormously between products.

What good quoting software does

The best quoting engines use velocity profile modelling to calculate cutting time. This means they simulate how your laser actually moves — accelerating into straight runs, decelerating around corners, pausing for pierce points, and making rapid moves between cuts. The result is a cutting time that matches what your machine will actually do, not a rough estimate.

On top of cutting time, the software should calculate material cost (from your actual sheet prices and nesting efficiency), gas consumption, machine hourly rate, setup time, and any secondary operations. All of this should be configurable per machine, per material, and per thickness.

Look for software that supports multiple pricing modes. Some shops work on a fixed margin over costs. Others target a specific net profit percentage. The best tools support both and let you set different strategies for different customers.

What to avoid

Be wary of tools that calculate cutting time from simple per-metre rates. A complex part with 200 pierce points and tight corners will take dramatically longer than a simple rectangle with the same total cut length — a per-metre rate can't account for this.

Also avoid tools that charge per-quote transaction fees. At high volume, these add up fast and create a perverse incentive to avoid re-quoting when parameters change.

4. Nesting Software Explained

Nesting is how parts are arranged on sheet material before cutting. The efficiency of your nesting directly impacts material cost, which is typically the largest component of a laser cutting job.

Types of nesting

Rectangular / bounding-box nesting treats each part as a rectangle and arranges these rectangles on the sheet. It's fast and simple, but wastes material on irregular parts because the gaps between bounding boxes aren't filled.

True-shape nesting uses the actual part contours to arrange pieces, rotating and interlocking them to fill gaps. A good true-shape nesting engine achieves 80-90%+ sheet utilisation on typical jobs, compared to 50-65% for bounding-box methods. On a busy shop cutting 50+ sheets per week, this difference pays for the software many times over.

Common-line nesting goes further by sharing cut edges between adjacent parts, reducing total cut length and kerf waste. This is most effective for simple geometric parts.

Integration matters

The biggest trap with nesting software is buying a standalone nesting tool that doesn't talk to your quoting system. If your quote assumes 70% sheet utilisation but your actual nesting achieves 85%, you're leaving money on the table — or vice versa. The best approach is a platform where nesting results feed directly back into your quote pricing.

5. Production & Shop Floor Management

Once a quote is accepted, it becomes a job. Production management software tracks that job from order through programming, cutting, secondary operations, quality control, packing, and delivery.

Key capabilities to look for:

Production features are typically only available on higher-tier plans, which makes sense — a one-person shop quoting from a garage has different needs than a 20-person fabrication facility running three shifts.

6. Software Comparison

How the main laser cutting software platforms stack up across the features that matter most.

Feature CutQuote Tempus Tools DigiFabster OSH Cut
DXF / DWG Import
STEP File Import Auto-unfold
Tube & Section Cutting
Velocity-Based Cutting Time Partial
True-Shape Nesting
Customer Self-Serve Portal
Secondary Ops (Fold / Weld / Paint) All four Fold only Limited
Assemblies & BOM Multi-level
Production Tracking
Scheduling (Gantt)
CRM & Pipeline
Xero / Accounting Integration
Per-Quote Transaction Fee None 2-3% 2% None
Starting Price $95/mo $175/mo $250/mo Free (limited)

Comparison based on publicly available information as of March 2026. Features and pricing may have changed.

7. What Does Laser Cutting Software Cost?

CutQuote offers three tiers with no per-quote fees, no contracts, and a 14-day free trial on every plan.

Starter

Solo shops and new businesses

$95/mo
or $855/yr (save 25%)
  • 1 user included
  • Unlimited quotes
  • DXF & DWG import
  • Manual shapes
  • Customer portal (view & accept)
  • Stripe payments
  • Basic CRM
Start Free Trial

Business

Full production & management

$900/mo
or $8,100/yr (save 25%)
  • 3 users included (+$230/extra)
  • Everything in Pro
  • True-shape nesting included
  • Production tracking & scheduling
  • Advanced CRM & pipeline
  • Website quoting widget
  • REST API & white-label
Start Free Trial

All plans include a 14-day free trial. No credit card required. No contracts — cancel anytime.

8. Buyer's Checklist

Questions to ask before committing to any laser cutting software.

Before you buy, confirm:

  • Does it import your file formats? (DXF, DWG, STEP at minimum)
  • How does it calculate cutting time — flat rate per metre, or velocity profile with acceleration and pierce?
  • Can you configure machine-specific parameters (speed, pierce time, gas cost) per material and thickness?
  • Does nesting feed back into the quote price, or are they disconnected?
  • Are there per-quote or per-transaction fees on top of the subscription?
  • Can customers self-serve quotes through a portal without calling you?
  • Does it handle your secondary operations (folding, welding, painting, milling)?
  • Can you embed a quoting widget on your own website?
  • Does it integrate with your accounting software (Xero, QuickBooks)?
  • Is production tracking included, or do you need a separate system?
  • Can you run a free trial with your own files and materials before paying?
  • Is pricing transparent and published, or "contact us for a quote"?

Ready to see what modern laser cutting software looks like?

CutQuote combines quoting, nesting, and production in one platform. Upload a DXF and get your first quote in under 5 minutes. Free for 14 days, no credit card required.