TL;DR
In 2026 Malaysia, a single 3D interior render typically costs RM 180 – RM 1,500. The most common residential range is RM 350 – RM 700 per camera angle; commercial and high-styling F&B / showroom shots fall in RM 800 – RM 1,500. Anything below RM 150 is usually overseas freelancer work — fine for concepts, risky for client-facing.
What actually drives the number: detail level, number of angles, material complexity, revision rounds, turnaround speed, and designer experience. This guide breaks each down with real ranges.
What's in this guide
1. Real price ranges by render type
These ranges come from our work surveying Malaysian render artists, interior design studios, and freelance designers building MY Render Hub through 2025–2026. They are honest mid-market numbers — not Fiverr floor, not boutique studio ceiling.
| Type of render | Typical detail | Price per angle (MYR) |
|---|---|---|
| Concept block-out | Simple geometry, neutral materials, no styling | RM 180 – 280 |
| Standard residential | Bedroom / living / dining with stock furniture, mid styling | RM 350 – 700 |
| High-detail residential | Custom furniture, fluted oak, marble, fabric textures, lifestyle styling | RM 700 – 1,200 |
| F&B / café interior | Bar counter, signage, food props, mood lighting | RM 700 – 1,500 |
| Showroom / retail | Brand-fidelity props, accurate product modeling | RM 800 – 1,500 |
| Exterior / landed home | Façade, landscaping, day or twilight | RM 500 – 1,200 |
| 360° panorama | Equirectangular for VR / Matterport-style | +RM 250 – 500 |
| Animated walkthrough (15s) | One camera path, basic motion | RM 800 – 2,500 |
2. What actually drives the price
Six factors, in roughly decreasing order of impact on price:
(1) Detail level — empty room vs fully styled
An empty room with stock furniture might be a 3-hour job. The same room with custom-modeled headboard, ironed bed linens, candle reflections, books with readable spines, and a coffee that's actually steaming is a 10-hour job. Same square meters, 3x the price.
(2) Number of camera angles in scope
The first angle costs the most — you're building the full 3D model. Each additional camera in the same room is incremental work, so add-on angles are typically 30–50% of the first angle's price. If a quote charges full price per angle in the same room, that's a red flag.
(3) Material complexity
White walls and laminate flooring is fast. Honed marble, fluted oak veneer, brushed brass with fingerprint smudges, and aged leather is slow. Materials drive both modeling time and render time (the GPU has to ray-trace through more reflection bounces).
(4) Revision rounds included
Most Malaysian render packages include 2 free revisions. After that, each round is RM 80–200 depending on scope. Big lesson: a clear brief upfront saves more money than negotiating price.
(5) Delivery turnaround
Standard turnaround is 3–7 working days. Rush jobs (24–48h) carry a 30–50% surcharge. Same-day is rare; if offered, expect 100%+ surcharge and very limited revision rounds.
(6) Designer experience and software stack
A junior using SketchUp + V-Ray with preset materials charges less than a senior using 3ds Max + Corona/Chaos Vantage with custom-scanned materials. Both can produce client-ready work for the right brief. Match the artist to the use case — you don't need photorealistic for a pitch deck.
3. What "one render" typically includes
The Malaysian market norm for a single residential render:
- One final camera angle, rendered in 4K (3840×2160 or 4096×2731)
- Final delivery format: JPG or PNG, sRGB
- Model build from your 2D AutoCAD plan, SketchUp model, or annotated reference photos
- Standard styling — pre-modeled furniture, materials from library
- 2 free revision rounds
- 1 draft preview before final render
Common add-ons priced separately:
| Add-on | Typical cost (MYR) |
|---|---|
| Each extra camera angle (same room) | RM 150 – 400 |
| 360° panorama version | +RM 250 – 500 |
| Day + Night variants | +RM 250 – 500 |
| Material swap variants (e.g. 3 colour options) | RM 100 – 200 each |
| Source .max / .skp / .blend file | RM 200 – 500 |
| Rush 24–48h delivery | +30–50% |
| Animated walkthrough (15s) | RM 800 – 2,500 |
4. Overseas (Fiverr) vs local Malaysian artists
This is the question every first-time buyer asks. The honest answer:
| Overseas (Fiverr / Upwork) | Local Malaysian | |
|---|---|---|
| Price per render | USD 20 – 60 (≈RM 95 – 285) | RM 280 – 1,500 |
| Communication | +5–8h timezone offset, English-only | Same timezone, EN/BM/Chinese |
| Revision speed | 24–48h round-trip per cycle | Same-day to 24h |
| Local taste fit | Generic Western | Knows MY market (wet/dry kitchen, lift lobby, etc.) |
| Site visits | Not possible | Possible, charged separately |
| Payment | USD via PayPal / Wise (FX + fee) | MYR direct to local bank |
| Quality consistency | High variance | More consistent at mid range |
5. Hidden fees and gotchas to ask about
Before you pay a deposit, get written confirmation on each of these. The disputes we see most often in the Malaysian market come from unclear scope, not unfair pricing.
- How many revisions are included? (Standard is 2. If they say "unlimited within reason", get the "within reason" defined in writing.)
- What counts as a revision vs a new render? (Camera angle change = new render. Furniture swap = revision. Material change = revision. Layout change = new render.)
- Resolution and file format of final delivery. (4K is standard. 8K costs more. PNG with alpha costs more than flat JPG.)
- Who owns the .max / .skp source files? (Default: the artist. If you want them, negotiate upfront — costs RM 200–500 extra.)
- Rush surcharge thresholds. (Define what "rush" means in days, not "as soon as possible".)
- Watermarks during draft. (Standard — drafts have watermarks until final payment. Don't be offended.)
- Reference image rights. (If you supply reference photos from Pinterest, the artist may be copying copyrighted work. For commercial use, supply your own or licensed references.)
- Payment terms. (Most local artists ask for 50% deposit, 50% on final delivery. Some new-to-market artists ask 100% upfront — this is fine if there's escrow protection. 100% upfront with no escrow is a risk.)
6. How long does a render actually take?
Standard turnaround for a single residential render in Malaysia:
| Scope | Working days |
|---|---|
| Concept block-out, single angle | 2 – 3 days |
| Standard residential, single angle | 3 – 7 days |
| High-detail residential, 3 angles | 7 – 12 days |
| Commercial F&B set (5–8 angles) | 10 – 18 days |
| Animated walkthrough (15s) | 10 – 20 days |
Rush is possible (24–48h on single angles) but expect a 30–50% surcharge and only one revision round.
Late delivery is one of the most common disputes in the local market. Always confirm turnaround in writing before paying deposit, and get the artist to commit to a specific delivery date — not "within a week".
7. How to brief well (and pay less for revisions)
The cheapest render is the one that goes through 1 revision instead of 4. Here's what makes a brief that produces a usable first draft:
- A 2D plan — AutoCAD .dwg if you have it, a clean PDF or even a measured sketch works. Include wall thickness, door swings, window openings, and ceiling height.
- 3 reference images for overall mood (light, colour, atmosphere)
- 1–2 reference images per major piece of furniture you have in mind
- Material list — floor tile spec, wall paint code, key feature wall material. SKUs help; "wood feel" doesn't.
- Specify the camera angle — "from the entrance door looking diagonally into the room" beats "make it look nice".
- Specify time of day — day, dusk, night with interior lights on, etc.
- What is the render for? — pitch to client, social media, IG carousel, developer brochure. The use case changes resolution, aspect ratio, and styling choices.
- What CAN change? — tell the artist explicitly what you'd accept variations on. This shortens the revision queue dramatically.
MY Render Hub — opening 18 May 2026
The honest pricing in this guide is exactly the range we built MY Render Hub for. Vetted Malaysian designers, clients pay upfront into escrow, transparent per-render pricing. Set up your project brief in 5 minutes.
See how it works →8. FAQ
How much should I budget for a 4-room residential render set?
Why are some local studios charging RM 2,000+ per render?
Are AI renders (Stable Diffusion, Midjourney) cheaper?
Should I pay 100% upfront or 50/50?
Can I use the render in my own portfolio / Instagram?
What about render artists in Penang, JB, or East Malaysia?
Where can I find vetted Malaysian render artists?
This guide will be updated as the Malaysian market shifts. Last updated 13 May 2026. If you spot something off, email hello@myrenderhub.com — we'd rather be accurate than viral.