When You Need CAD Away From Your Desk
More and more often, pulling out a laptop and launching SolidWorks simply isn't an option:
- On the factory floor — you spot a fit issue and need to check or adjust a dimension on the spot.
- In a client meeting — they ask "can we make this 10 mm wider?" and you want to show them in real time.
- Commuting or traveling — an idea hits you on the train and you want to capture it as real geometry, not just a napkin sketch.
- In a workshop or lab — your hands are dirty, your laptop is in the office, but your phone is in your pocket.
- Teaching or presenting — you want to demo a concept without a projector and a full CAD workstation.
Mobile CAD has gone from "nice to have" to a real productivity lever. The question is: which app actually delivers?
Major Mobile CAD Apps — An Honest Review
1. Shapr3D
Platforms: iPad (primary), Mac, Windows, Vision Pro
Price: Free (limited exports) / \$299/year Pro
Shapr3D is widely regarded as the best touch-native CAD experience today. It was built for Apple Pencil from day one, and it shows.
| Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|
| Polished touch + pencil UI | iPad only for mobile — no Android, no phone |
| Full parametric solid modeling (Parasolid kernel) | Free tier severely limits exports (watermarks, limited formats) |
| STEP, IGES, STL, X_T export | Best on iPad Pro or Air |
| Active development | Annual cost adds up (\$299/yr for full features) |
| Built-in visualization and rendering | No phone — tablet only |
Verdict: If you have an iPad Pro and want serious parametric CAD on the go, Shapr3D is the benchmark. It leaves out Android users and anyone who wants to work on a phone.
2. Onshape (Mobile App)
Platforms: iOS, Android (phone + tablet)
Price: Free (public documents) / \$1,500+/year (Standard)
Onshape is a fully cloud-native parametric CAD platform. Its mobile app lets you view, annotate, and make light edits to models created in the web version.
| Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|
| True cross-platform — iOS and Android, phone and tablet | Mobile is mainly for viewing and light edits, not full modeling |
| Full parametric CAD in the browser | Complex modeling still needs the web UI on a larger screen |
| Real-time collaboration | Free tier makes all designs public |
| Version control (Git-like for CAD) | Paid plans are expensive for individuals |
Verdict: Strong for teams who review and annotate on the go. You won't build complex parts from scratch on your phone — the mobile app is a companion, not a replacement.
3. Fusion 360 Mobile (Autodesk)
Platforms: iOS, Android
Price: Free (companion to a desktop Fusion 360 license)
Autodesk's mobile companion syncs with your cloud projects so you can view, mark up, and share designs.
| Strengths | Limitations |
|---|---|
| Free if you already use Fusion 360 | View-only — no modeling on mobile |
| View 3D models, check dimensions, comment | Needs an active Fusion 360 account and project |
| Push notifications for updates | Essentially a viewer, not a design tool |
| Fits the Fusion desktop workflow | Limited offline use |
Verdict: Handy for Fusion users who need to check designs remotely. If you want to create or edit geometry on your phone, this isn't it.
4. FreeCAD (Mobile Workarounds)
Platforms: No official mobile app
Price: Free
FreeCAD has no official mobile app. Some people use remote desktop or Linux-on-Android; those are awkward workarounds, not real mobile CAD.
Verdict: Not a practical mobile option today. FreeCAD stays desktop-first.
5. Other Notable Apps
| App | Platform | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| CAD Sketcher | iPad | 2D drafting, not full 3D |
| uMake | iPad | Conceptual surfaces, not parametric |
| Nomad Sculpt | iOS, Android | Mesh sculpting (ZBrush-lite) — organic shapes, not engineering |
| SketchUp Mobile | iOS, Android | Architecture — weak for mechanical design |
Common Limits of Mobile CAD
Even strong mobile CAD apps share constraints:
| Limitation | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Screen size | Picking edges and faces precisely on a 6" phone is hard |
| Processing power | Large assemblies can lag on mobile chips |
| Input precision | Fingers are less precise than a mouse; Apple Pencil helps, but not on Android |
| File compatibility | Some apps use proprietary formats; round-tripping to desktop CAD can lose data |
| Feature gaps | Most mobile apps are subsets of desktop — no simulation, limited assemblies |
So you get tablet-only (Shapr3D), view-only (Fusion Mobile), or light edit (Onshape Mobile). Full modeling on a phone stays unsolved — unless you change how you input design.
A Different Path: AI + Mobile = Nora3d
What if sketching on glass wasn't the main input at all?
Nora3d takes a different path: text as the primary input. You describe the part in natural language; Nora generates a parametric solid.
Why Nora Works on Mobile Where Others Struggle
| Challenge | Traditional mobile CAD | Nora3d |
|---|---|---|
| Small screen | Crowded toolbars, fuzzy touch targets | Text input — what phones are built for |
| No stylus on Android | Sketching without a pen is painful | No sketching — describe in words |
| Processing power | Heavy work on the device | Cloud generation — the phone mainly displays |
| Learning curve | You still need CAD concepts | Everyday language is enough |
All Devices, One Account
- iOS and Android — phones and tablets.
- One account, everywhere — sketch a model on your phone during your commute; continue on your desktop in the web app at the office. Cloud sync keeps your work with you.
Real CAD Output, Not Just a Preview
Unlike viewers that only show models made elsewhere, Nora lets you create new geometry on mobile:
- Parametric solid from a text description.
- Download STEP (edit in SolidWorks, Fusion, FreeCAD) or STL (3D print).
- Iterate by changing the description — "add 5 mm thickness," "slot on the left."
- Refine on desktop — open the STEP in full CAD when you need detail.
Mobile → Desktop Workflow
- Phone (on the go): Describe the part → Nora generates STEP → lightweight edits → save to your account.
- Desktop (at work): Open the same model in Nora's web app → keep editing → download STEP.
- Back on phone: Review, share, or iterate again.
Same STEP file everywhere — no awkward file shuffling.
👉 Try Nora3d — CAD on any device
Comparison Table: Mobile CAD at a Glance
| App | iOS | Android | Phone | Tablet | Create on mobile? | Output | Price |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shapr3D | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ (iPad) | ✅ Full parametric | STEP, STL, X_T | Free (limited) / \$299/yr |
| Onshape | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ⚠️ Light edits only | STEP, STL (via web) | Free (public) / \$1,500+/yr |
| Fusion 360 Mobile | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ View only | N/A | Free (with Fusion license) |
| Nomad Sculpt | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ Mesh sculpt | OBJ, STL | \$15 one-time |
| Nora3d | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ Text → parametric CAD | STEP, STL | See www.nora3d.ai |
Who Should Use What?
- iPad Pro + love drawing with Pencil? → Shapr3D.
- Team needs review and markup on the go? → Onshape Mobile.
- Fusion user who only checks dimensions remotely? → Fusion 360 Mobile.
- Android, iPad, phone, or anyone who wants to create parts on mobile? → Nora3d — text fixes the small-screen problem; STEP output is production-grade.
The Future of Mobile CAD
CAD is moving off the desktop. Shrinking desktop UIs onto smaller screens has hit a wall.
The real shift is input: when the main input is natural language instead of clicks and shortcuts, screen size matters less. Your phone can match a workstation for the first design step — and you still get a SolidWorks-grade STEP file.
Mobile CAD isn't a compromise. It's another — sometimes faster — way to start.