"How long does injection molding take?" It's one of the first questions every product manager, engineer, and procurement team asks — and the honest answer is: it depends. But "it depends" isn't helpful when you're trying to set a launch date, commit to a customer, or build a production calendar. So let's break the injection molding lead time down into its real components and give you actual numbers to plan around.
Phase 1: Mold Design — 1 to 2 Weeks
Before any steel gets cut, the mold has to be designed. This phase starts when you deliver finalized CAD files — or close to finalized — and includes a design for manufacturability (DFM) review, gate and runner layout, cooling channel routing, ejection strategy, and parting line selection.
For straightforward single-cavity molds, design can wrap up in a week. More complex multi-cavity tools, molds with side actions or lifters, or parts with tight tolerances can take two weeks or longer. The biggest variable here isn't complexity — it's communication. If your design team and your mold maker are trading emails across time zones, expect delays. If they're in the same building, things move fast.
At Ace's Injection Molding in Bohemia, NY, our mold designers and toolmakers work side by side. DFM feedback happens in hours, not days. That alone can shave a week off the front end of a project.
Phase 2: Mold Fabrication — 4 to 8 Weeks
This is the longest phase in the injection molding timeline, and the one most people think of when they ask about lead times. Mold fabrication involves CNC machining the core and cavity, EDM work for fine details and textures, fitting and assembly, and surface finishing or polishing.
A simple aluminum prototype mold can be machined in as little as 2 to 3 weeks. A production-grade steel mold — P20 or H13 — typically takes 4 to 8 weeks depending on complexity, number of cavities, and surface finish requirements.
Some factors that push mold fabrication toward the longer end:
- Multi-cavity molds — more cavities means more machining time and tighter tolerances between them
- Side actions and lifters — undercuts and complex geometry require additional moving components in the mold
- Tight tolerances — parts held to ±0.001" need more precise machining and more careful fitting
- Surface textures — chemical etching, polishing to SPI-A1, or custom textures add time after machining
- Outsourced components — if the mold maker sources hot runner systems, mold bases, or specialty steels from outside vendors, supply chain delays become your delays
Shops that build molds entirely in-house — design through final assembly — consistently deliver faster than those who outsource portions of the work. At AIM, we machine, fit, assemble, and test molds under one roof, so there are no shipping delays between vendors.
Phase 3: First Article and Sampling — 3 to 5 Days
Once the mold is built, it goes on the press for initial sampling. This is where you find out if the design, the mold, and the process all come together the way they should. The first shots off a new mold are inspected for dimensional accuracy, surface quality, fill balance (in multi-cavity molds), and cosmetic defects like sink marks, flash, or weld lines.
First article inspection and sampling typically takes 3 to 5 business days. If adjustments are needed — gate modifications, venting improvements, or dimensional tweaks — add another 3 to 7 days depending on what needs to change. Minor adjustments like polishing a gate or adding vents can be done same-day if your mold shop and molding floor are in the same facility.
This is another area where having mold making and injection molding under one roof pays off. When a first article reveals an issue, the mold can be pulled, modified in the tool room, and back on the press the same afternoon. At shops where the mold has to ship to a separate facility for modification, you're looking at a week of transit time alone.
Phase 4: Production Runs — 1 to 3 Weeks
With the mold approved and process parameters locked in, production runs are the fastest phase. How long production takes depends on three things: part quantity, cycle time, and number of cavities.
A single-cavity mold running a 30-second cycle produces about 2,800 parts per day on a single shift. A four-cavity mold with the same cycle time produces over 11,000. For most small to mid-size production orders — 5,000 to 50,000 parts — you're looking at 1 to 3 weeks of production time, including quality checks and packaging.
Rush orders for smaller quantities can often be turned around in days. Larger runs of 100,000+ parts may take 4 to 6 weeks, though they're typically scheduled in batches to manage inventory and cash flow.
What Speeds Things Up — and What Slows Them Down
Understanding what affects injection molding lead time helps you plan more accurately and avoid surprises:
Things that speed up the timeline:
- Clean, finalized CAD files — designs that are ready for tooling with no ambiguity eliminate back-and-forth
- Aluminum tooling — for runs under 10,000 parts, aluminum molds cut fabrication time nearly in half
- Standard materials — common resins like ABS, polypropylene, and nylon are always in stock; exotic materials may have lead times of their own
- Simple part geometry — fewer undercuts, uniform wall thickness, and generous draft angles all reduce mold complexity
- Single-source manufacturing — working with a shop that handles design, tooling, and molding eliminates vendor coordination delays
Things that slow it down:
- Design changes after mold cutting begins — modifications mid-build can add weeks and significant cost
- Multi-vendor supply chains — every handoff between shops introduces transit time and communication lag
- Specialty resins or colors — custom color matching and engineering-grade resins may require sourcing lead time
- Regulatory requirements — FDA, UL, or MIL-spec documentation adds inspection and certification steps
- Overseas tooling — offshore molds may appear cheaper but add 4 to 8 weeks of shipping, and modifications require international transit each time
Why Aces Turns Around Faster
At Ace's Injection Molding Inc. in Bohemia, NY, we've structured our entire operation around minimizing lead time without cutting corners on quality. Here's what that looks like in practice:
Everything under one roof. Mold design, CNC machining, EDM, mold assembly, injection molding, and quality inspection all happen in one 10,000+ square foot facility. There are no shipping delays between vendors because there are no other vendors.
In-house rapid prototyping. Need to validate a design before committing to steel? We can 3D print functional prototypes in production-similar materials and have parts in your hands within days. That validation step up front prevents costly mold revisions later. Read how we handle the full prototype-to-production transition.
30+ years of toolmaking experience. Our team has built thousands of molds. That experience means fewer surprises during fabrication, faster DFM reviews, and first articles that are right the first time more often than not.
Flexible scheduling for small shops. We're not a 200-press operation with six-month backlogs. We're a focused team that can prioritize your project and move it through the shop floor without it sitting in a queue.
Typical total lead time at AIM — from receiving your CAD files to shipping first production parts — runs 6 to 10 weeks for a standard project. Complex multi-cavity tools in hardened steel will be longer. Simple aluminum tools for short runs can be significantly shorter. For budget planning alongside your timeline, see our injection molding cost guide.
Need Parts on a Timeline?
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