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Editorial deep-dive · 10 products · Verified 2026-05-27

Top 10 AEC (BIM Architecture) Software for 2026

Independent ranking of AEC and BIM design software. Autodesk Revit vs Nemetschek (ArchiCAD/Allplan); SketchUp/Rhino conceptual; Bentley infrastructure.

Verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-27

AEC software covers the design, BIM authoring, and coordination layer for architects, structural and MEP engineers, and design coordinators. This is distinct from construction management platforms like Procore, which manage field workflows. Autodesk Revit (NASDAQ:ADSK) is the global enterprise BIM standard, particularly dominant in US large-firm practice. The Nemetschek European stack (ArchiCAD by Graphisoft, Allplan, Vectorworks, Solibri) is the credible alternative in Europe and where IFC-driven openBIM workflows are mandated. Bentley OpenBuildings (NASDAQ:BSY) anchors infrastructure-adjacent AEC. SketchUp (Trimble) and Rhino with Grasshopper (Robert McNeel) own conceptual and computational design. Revizto and Solibri handle BIM coordination and clash detection. The 2026 evaluation pressure: Autodesk annual renewal increases of 8-15% reported 2023-2025, BIM country mandates (UK Level 2 since 2016, France 2017, Germany federal infrastructure 2020) reshaping procurement, and SketchUp Pro vs Studio split post-Trimble creating subscription friction.

Best for your specific use case

  • Global BIM enterprise standard: Autodesk Revit Category leader (NASDAQ:ADSK). Default for US large-firm practice and any AEC team standardising on Autodesk Construction Cloud. 95%+ US large-firm penetration reported by industry sources.
  • European BIM-original alternative to Revit: ArchiCAD Graphisoft (Nemetschek-owned). BIM-original from 1984, strong in Hungary, DACH, Italy, Spain, and Nordics. The credible Revit alternative when openBIM and IFC interop are mandated.
  • Mac-friendly design practice: Vectorworks Nemetschek-owned, strongest non-Revit option on macOS. Favoured by US design boutiques, landscape architects, and theatre/event designers.
  • Structural and civil BIM in DACH: Allplan Nemetschek-owned, German structural and civil BIM with deep VOB and DIN integration. Default at German structural engineering offices.
  • Infrastructure and rail AEC: Bentley OpenBuildings Bentley Systems (NASDAQ:BSY). The infrastructure-adjacent default at owner-operators, rail authorities, and global engineering consultancies.
  • Conceptual and early-design massing: SketchUp Trimble-owned, lowest-friction 3D modelling for early-design massing. Used across architecture, interiors, and landscape practice.
  • Computational design and geometry-led practice: Rhino + Grasshopper McNeel-owned. Computational and parametric design standard for facade engineering, geometry-led architecture, and academic research.
  • Multi-discipline BIM coordination and clash review: Revizto Swiss-built, integrates Revit, Navisworks, Rhino, ArchiCAD models in one issue-tracked coordination space.
  • Open BIM model checking and QA: Solibri Nemetschek-owned. The IFC-native BIM model checker and QA tool used to validate compliance, clashes, and information delivery.
  • Conceptual Autodesk-anchored sketching: FormIt Autodesk-built conceptual modelling tied to Revit. Lightweight Revit-feeder for early-design exploration.

AEC software is the design and BIM authoring layer for architects, structural engineers, MEP engineers, and design coordinators. It is distinct from construction management software (Procore, Autodesk Build, Buildertrend) which sits downstream in the field workflow layer. The two categories adjoin but solve different problems: AEC tools produce the building model, drawing set, and coordination data; construction management tools manage RFIs, submittals, change orders, and field execution against those drawings. Many enterprise firms run both, with Revit or ArchiCAD on the design side and Procore or Autodesk Build on the construction side.

The modern AEC market formed around three lineages: the Autodesk Revit lineage (Charles River Software 1997, Autodesk acquisition 2002, dominant globally by 2010), the Nemetschek European lineage (Nemetschek founded 1963 in Munich, ArchiCAD by Graphisoft from 1984 acquired 2007, Vectorworks via Diehl Graphsoft acquired 2000, Allplan from 1984), and the conceptual and computational lineage (SketchUp from @Last Software 2000 then Google 2006 then Trimble 2012, Rhino by Robert McNeel 1998, Grasshopper by David Rutten 2007). Bentley Systems (founded 1984, NYSE:BSY since 2020) anchors infrastructure-adjacent AEC. Specialist coordination tools (Solibri founded 1999 in Finland, Revizto founded 2012 in Switzerland) handle the model-checking and clash-detection workflow that emerged after BIM mandates.

The category structural pressure in 2026: Autodesk price increases of 8-15% annually 2023-2025 driving credible Nemetschek evaluations in Europe; BIM country mandates (UK Level 2 since 2016, France 2017, Germany federal infrastructure 2020, Singapore, UAE, parts of India) reshaping procurement; SketchUp Pro vs Studio split post-Trimble creating subscription frustration; and computational design (Rhino + Grasshopper) moving from academic into mainstream facade and structural practice.

At a glance

Quick comparison

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 Autodesk Revit
Architecture, structural, and MEP firms of all sizes
$320/emp $3200 4.5 Global; strongest in US, Canada, UK, Australia, India, Middle East
2 ArchiCAD
Architectural practices, Mac-based studios, European AEC firms
$220/emp $2200 4.4 Global; strongest in Hungary, DACH, Italy, Spain, Nordics, Japan
3 Vectorworks
Design boutiques, landscape, theatre, interior architecture
$95/emp $950 4.4 Global; strongest in US (boutique), UK, Germany, Japan
4 Allplan
Structural and civil engineering offices, precast designers
$250/emp $2500 4.2 Global; strongest in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Central Europe
5 Bentley OpenBuildings
Engineering consultancies, infrastructure owner-operators
Quote - 4.2 Global; strongest in US, UK, Australia, India, Middle East infrastructure
6 SketchUp
Designers using conceptual or interior tooling
$10/emp $100 4.5 Global
7 Rhino + Grasshopper
Computational designers, facade engineers, academic AEC
$0 $0 4.6 Global
8 Revizto
Design coordinators, multi-discipline AEC practices
$140/emp $1400 4.6 Global; strong in Europe, US, Middle East
9 Solibri
BIM managers, owner-operators, QA teams
$220/emp $2200 4.4 Global; strongest in Nordics, DACH, UK, Australia
10 FormIt
Autodesk-shop conceptual designers
$0 $0 4.2 Global; strongest where Autodesk Construction Cloud is standard

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

Pricing calculator

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Estimated monthly cost (cheapest first)

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    Default weights
      Migration matrix

      How hard is it to switch?

      Switching cost is the lock-in tax. Read row → column: “If I'm on X today, how painful is moving to Y?” Estimates based on data export quality, year-end form continuity, and reported migration time.

      From ↓ / To → Autodesk Revit ArchiCAD Vectorworks Allplan Bentley OpenBuildings SketchUp Rhino + Grasshopper Revizto Solibri FormIt
      Autodesk Revit
      -
      Hard 7
      Medium 5
      Hard 7
      Medium 5
      Hard 7
      Hard 7
      OK 4
      Hard 7
      OK 4
      ArchiCAD
      Hard 7
      -
      OK 4
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Vectorworks
      Medium 5
      OK 4
      -
      OK 4
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      OK 4
      Medium 5
      OK 4
      Medium 5
      Allplan
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      -
      OK 4
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Bentley OpenBuildings
      Medium 5
      OK 4
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      -
      OK 4
      OK 4
      Medium 5
      OK 4
      Medium 5
      SketchUp
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      -
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Rhino + Grasshopper
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      Medium 6
      -
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      Revizto
      OK 4
      Hard 7
      Medium 5
      Hard 7
      Medium 5
      Hard 7
      Hard 7
      -
      Hard 7
      OK 4
      Solibri
      Hard 7
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      Medium 6
      OK 4
      Medium 6
      Medium 6
      Hard 7
      -
      Hard 7
      FormIt
      OK 4
      Hard 7
      Medium 5
      Hard 7
      Medium 5
      Hard 7
      Hard 7
      OK 4
      Hard 7
      -
      Easy (0–2) OK (3–4) Medium (5–6) Hard (7–8) Very hard (9–10)
      The ranking

      All 10, ranked and reviewed

      Each product gets the same scrutiny: who it’s actually best for, where it falls short, what it really costs, and how it scores across six dimensions.

      #1

      Autodesk Revit

      Global BIM authoring category leader (NASDAQ:ADSK).

      Founded 2000 · San Rafael, CA · public · 5–50,000 employees
      G2 4.5 (1,480)
      Capterra 4.6
      From $320 /employee/mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit Autodesk Revit

      Autodesk Revit is the global BIM authoring category leader, originated at Charles River Software in 1997, released as Revit in 2000, acquired by Autodesk in 2002, and progressively bundled into the Autodesk AEC Collection and Autodesk Construction Cloud over the 2010s and 2020s. The product authors architectural, structural, and MEP models with linked drawings, schedules, and a parametric family system. Strengths: dominant US large-firm penetration (industry-reported at 95%+ in top US architecture and engineering firms), broadest plug-in and add-in ecosystem in AEC, native integration with Navisworks, Civil 3D, FormIt, BIM 360, and Autodesk Construction Cloud, and the most extensive training and recruitment pool. Best fit for firms standardising on Autodesk Construction Cloud or working in markets where Revit fluency is a hiring requirement. Trade-offs: aggressive renewal pricing (8-15% annual increases reported 2023-2025), heavy file sizes and central-file workflow that struggles at very large project scale, weaker IFC export quality than Nemetschek tools (genuine pain point in openBIM-mandated markets), and Mac users must run Revit in Boot Camp or Parallels because there is no native macOS version.

      Best for

      Architecture and engineering firms standardising on Autodesk Construction Cloud, US large-firm practice, and any AEC team where Revit fluency is a hiring requirement or contract deliverable.

      Worst for

      Mac-only studios (Vectorworks or ArchiCAD better), small practices priced out by AEC Collection (FormIt or SketchUp better), or teams in openBIM-mandated workflows (ArchiCAD or Allplan stronger on IFC).

      Strengths

      • Industry-reported 95%+ US large-firm penetration
      • Broadest plug-in and add-in ecosystem in AEC
      • Native Autodesk Construction Cloud, Navisworks, Civil 3D integration
      • Deepest training and recruitment pool
      • Architecture, structure, and MEP in one authoring tool
      • Dynamo visual scripting available in product

      Weaknesses

      • Renewal pricing increases of 8-15% reported 2023-2025
      • Central-file workflow strains at very large project scale
      • IFC export quality below Nemetschek tools (openBIM pain)
      • No native macOS version
      • Family creation curve is steep for new staff

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • Revit (single product)
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$3,830/year
        $320 /emp/mo
      • AEC Collection (Revit + Civil 3D + Navisworks + Infraworks etc.)
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$5,760/year
        $480 /emp/mo
      • Autodesk Construction Cloud bundle
        AEC Collection + ACC at enterprise; $7K-$12K per user/year typical
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Annual renewal increases of 8-15% reported 2023-2025
      • · Premium plan add-ons for advanced support
      • · Token-based flex licensing changes for occasional users
      • · Plug-in costs (Enscape, V-Ray, Revit add-ins) on top

      Key features

      • +Architectural, structural, MEP BIM authoring
      • +Parametric family system
      • +Worksharing via central file or cloud worksharing
      • +Dynamo visual scripting
      • +IFC import and export
      • +Linked Navisworks, Civil 3D, FormIt workflows
      • +Cloud rendering via Autodesk
      300+ integrations
      Autodesk Construction CloudNavisworksCivil 3DFormItEnscapeV-RayRhino (via Rhino.Inside.Revit)
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US, Canada, UK, Australia, India, Middle East
      #2

      ArchiCAD

      The BIM-original European alternative to Revit.

      Founded 1984 · Budapest, Hungary · public · 3–2,000 employees
      G2 4.4 (620)
      Capterra 4.5
      From $220 /employee/mo
      ◐ Partial disclosure
      Visit ArchiCAD

      ArchiCAD is the BIM-original product, released by Hungarian company Graphisoft in 1984, several years before Revit existed. Graphisoft was acquired by Nemetschek in 2007 and ArchiCAD now anchors the Nemetschek architectural authoring portfolio alongside Vectorworks and Allplan. The product is architecturally focused, with deep IFC openBIM support, a Mac-native build (genuine native, not emulation), and a teamwork collaboration server. Strengths: deepest IFC export and openBIM credentials in category, native macOS as well as Windows, strong European market presence (Hungary, DACH, Italy, Spain, Nordics), and the most architect-centric UX of the major BIM tools. Best fit when openBIM and IFC interop are mandated, when the practice runs Mac, or when Nemetschek stack (ArchiCAD + Solibri + Bluebeam) is the standard. Trade-offs: weaker MEP and structural authoring depth than Revit (MEP via add-on, structural via Allplan or third-party), thinner US large-firm penetration so recruitment can be harder in US markets, and plug-in ecosystem narrower than Revit.

      Best for

      Architectural practices in Europe, Mac-based studios, firms working in openBIM-mandated workflows, and teams standardising on the Nemetschek stack (ArchiCAD plus Solibri plus Bluebeam).

      Worst for

      US large-firm practices where Revit fluency is a hiring requirement, MEP-heavy firms needing one-tool authoring (Revit better), or teams already deep in Autodesk Construction Cloud workflows.

      Strengths

      • Deepest IFC export and openBIM credentials
      • Native macOS as well as Windows
      • Strong European presence (Hungary, DACH, Italy, Spain, Nordics)
      • Architect-centric UX
      • Teamwork collaboration server stable at large project scale
      • Nemetschek stack interop with Solibri and Bluebeam

      Weaknesses

      • Weaker MEP and structural depth than Revit
      • Thinner US large-firm penetration; harder Revit-trained recruitment
      • Plug-in ecosystem narrower than Revit
      • Cloud collaboration story trails Autodesk Construction Cloud

      Pricing tiers

      partial
      • ArchiCAD Solo
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$2,640/year
        $220 /emp/mo
      • ArchiCAD Collaborate
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$3,360/year; includes BIMcloud
        $280 /emp/mo
      • ArchiCAD Enterprise
        Volume licensing and BIMcloud SaaS at enterprise scale
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · BIMcloud SaaS adds to teamwork collaboration cost
      • · Annual price increases of 5-8%
      • · MEP Modeler add-on for MEP workflows

      Key features

      • +Architectural BIM authoring
      • +IFC openBIM export
      • +Native macOS and Windows
      • +Teamwork collaboration server
      • +BIMcloud SaaS
      • +Parametric GDL object system
      • +Connection to Solibri and Bluebeam
      120+ integrations
      SolibriBluebeamBimcollabReviztoRhino (via Rhino.Inside)Twinmotion
      Geography
      Global; strongest in Hungary, DACH, Italy, Spain, Nordics, Japan
      #3

      Vectorworks

      Mac-friendly Nemetschek design tool for boutique practice.

      Founded 1985 · Columbia, MD · public · 1–500 employees
      G2 4.4 (320)
      Capterra 4.4
      From $95 /employee/mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit Vectorworks

      Vectorworks originated in 1985 as MiniCAD by Diehl Graphsoft in Maryland, was acquired by Nemetschek in 2000, and has remained the Mac-strong, design-boutique-strong member of the Nemetschek architectural portfolio. The product covers architecture, landscape, interior design, theatre and event design, and increasingly BIM-flavoured workflows in Vectorworks Architect. Strengths: native macOS as well as Windows, particularly strong fit for landscape architects, theatre and event designers, US design boutiques, and any practice resisting Revit standardisation, broad 2D-to-3D-to-BIM range in one product, and IFC openBIM support via Nemetschek heritage. Trade-offs: lighter BIM authoring depth than Revit, ArchiCAD, or Allplan when used as a primary BIM tool at large project scale, smaller plug-in ecosystem, and recruitment pool for Vectorworks-trained staff is narrower than for Revit.

      Best for

      Mac-friendly design boutiques, landscape architecture practices, theatre and event designers, and US design-led firms wanting a non-Revit architectural authoring path.

      Worst for

      Large architecture practices needing deepest BIM authoring (Revit or ArchiCAD better), MEP or structural engineering firms, or teams in openBIM-mandated infrastructure workflows.

      Strengths

      • Native macOS as well as Windows
      • Strong fit for landscape, theatre, event, interior design
      • Broad 2D-to-3D-to-BIM range in one product
      • IFC openBIM support
      • Nemetschek stack interop

      Weaknesses

      • Lighter BIM authoring depth at large project scale
      • Smaller plug-in ecosystem than Revit
      • Narrower recruitment pool than Revit
      • BIM features sit below ArchiCAD when used as primary BIM

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • Vectorworks Fundamentals
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$1,140/year
        $95 /emp/mo
      • Vectorworks Architect
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$1,920/year
        $160 /emp/mo
      • Vectorworks Designer
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$2,520/year; full design suite
        $210 /emp/mo
      Watch for
      • · Service Select renewal fees
      • · Annual price increases of 5-7%
      • · Cloud Services add-on for collaboration

      Key features

      • +Architectural and design authoring
      • +Landscape and site modelling
      • +Theatre and event design
      • +IFC openBIM export
      • +Native macOS and Windows
      • +Parametric object modelling
      • +Cloud Services collaboration
      80+ integrations
      SolibriBluebeamTwinmotionBimcollabCinema 4DRhino
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US (boutique), UK, Germany, Japan
      #4

      Allplan

      German structural and civil BIM standard.

      Founded 1984 · Munich, Germany · public · 5–2,000 employees
      G2 4.2 (180)
      Capterra 4.3
      From $250 /employee/mo
      ◐ Partial disclosure
      Visit Allplan

      Allplan is the German structural and civil BIM platform built by Nemetschek (Munich) from 1984, and remains a dominant authoring tool at German structural engineering offices and DACH civil engineering firms. The product covers architectural authoring, structural detailing, reinforcement modelling, precast workflows, and increasingly bridge and civil engineering. The Allplan Bimplus cloud collaboration layer ties into the wider Nemetschek stack. Strengths: deepest reinforcement and precast detailing in category, dominant DACH structural engineering presence, native German-language UI and DIN/VOB-aware deliverables, and IFC openBIM credentials. Trade-offs: thinner global recognition outside DACH and Central Europe, narrower architectural authoring positioning than Revit or ArchiCAD, and recruitment pool for Allplan-trained staff is largely confined to DACH.

      Best for

      German and DACH structural engineering offices, civil and bridge engineering practices, precast concrete designers, and any AEC team needing reinforcement detailing depth.

      Worst for

      US large-firm architectural practice (Revit better), non-DACH practices wanting global recognition, or design-led architectural boutiques (Vectorworks or ArchiCAD better).

      Strengths

      • Deepest reinforcement and precast detailing
      • Dominant DACH structural and civil engineering presence
      • Native German-language UI and DIN/VOB deliverables
      • IFC openBIM support
      • Allplan Bimplus cloud collaboration
      • Bridge and civil engineering authoring depth

      Weaknesses

      • Thinner recognition outside DACH
      • Narrower architectural positioning than Revit/ArchiCAD
      • Recruitment pool largely DACH-confined

      Pricing tiers

      partial
      • Allplan Engineering
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$3,000/year; structural engineering
        $250 /emp/mo
      • Allplan Architecture
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$3,120/year; architectural
        $260 /emp/mo
      • Allplan Bridge
        Bridge and civil engineering extension; quote-based
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Bimplus SaaS adds to collaboration cost
      • · Annual price increases of 4-7%
      • · Add-on modules for precast and reinforcement

      Key features

      • +Structural and reinforcement detailing
      • +Architectural BIM authoring
      • +Precast concrete workflows
      • +Bridge and civil engineering
      • +IFC openBIM export
      • +Allplan Bimplus cloud collaboration
      • +German DIN/VOB-aware deliverables
      70+ integrations
      SolibriBluebeamSCIA EngineerBimplusRevit (via IFC)ArchiCAD (via IFC)
      Geography
      Global; strongest in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, Central Europe
      #5

      Bentley OpenBuildings

      Infrastructure-anchored AEC authoring (NASDAQ:BSY).

      Founded 1984 · Exton, PA · public · 50–50,000 employees
      G2 4.2 (140)
      Capterra 4.3
      Custom quote
      ○ Sales call required
      Visit Bentley OpenBuildings

      Bentley OpenBuildings Designer is the building-authoring product within the Bentley infrastructure software portfolio (NASDAQ:BSY since 2020). Bentley is the infrastructure-software house behind MicroStation, OpenRoads, OpenRail, OpenBridge, and ProjectWise, and OpenBuildings sits as the architectural-and-structural authoring tool when Bentley is the project standard. Strengths: deepest integration with the wider Bentley infrastructure stack (rail, road, bridge, water), strongest fit at owner-operators and infrastructure programs, ProjectWise document management as a Bentley-native CDE, and stable enterprise account management. Trade-offs: thinner architectural-practice penetration than Revit or ArchiCAD, smaller plug-in ecosystem outside the Bentley world, opaque enterprise pricing, and recruitment pool concentrated at engineering consultancies rather than design practices.

      Best for

      Engineering consultancies, infrastructure owner-operators, rail and transport agencies, and any AEC team where Bentley OpenRoads, OpenRail, OpenBridge, or ProjectWise are already the project standard.

      Worst for

      Pure architectural practice (Revit or ArchiCAD better), small design studios (overkill and opaque pricing), or Mac-only design boutiques.

      Strengths

      • Deepest integration with Bentley infrastructure stack
      • Strongest fit at owner-operators and infrastructure programs
      • ProjectWise Bentley-native CDE
      • Stable enterprise account management
      • Public-company stability (NASDAQ:BSY)
      • OpenRail, OpenRoads, OpenBridge sibling products

      Weaknesses

      • Thinner architectural-practice penetration
      • Smaller plug-in ecosystem
      • Opaque enterprise pricing
      • Recruitment pool concentrated at engineering consultancies

      Pricing tiers

      opaque
      • OpenBuildings Designer
        Per-user enterprise pricing typically negotiated under SELECT
        Quote
      • Bentley SELECT subscription
        Annual maintenance + access to Bentley portfolio
        Quote
      • Enterprise License Subscription (ELS)
        Multi-product enterprise license at infrastructure-program scale
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · SELECT maintenance fees on top of license
      • · ProjectWise CDE often required for collaboration
      • · Implementation and training services

      Key features

      • +Architectural and structural BIM authoring
      • +Integration with OpenRail, OpenRoads, OpenBridge
      • +ProjectWise CDE integration
      • +IFC import and export
      • +Civil-grade coordinate handling
      • +Enterprise document management
      • +MicroStation drawing engine
      100+ integrations
      ProjectWiseOpenRoadsOpenRailOpenBridgeMicroStationSynchro 4DAutoPLANT
      Geography
      Global; strongest in US, UK, Australia, India, Middle East infrastructure
      #6

      SketchUp

      Conceptual 3D modelling for early-design massing.

      Founded 2000 · Westminster, CO · public · 1–5,000 employees
      G2 4.5 (1,080)
      Capterra 4.6
      From $10 /employee/mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit SketchUp

      SketchUp was founded in 2000 by @Last Software, acquired by Google in 2006, sold to Trimble in 2012, and has become the dominant lowest-friction 3D modeller for early-design massing, conceptual studies, and design communication across architecture, interiors, landscape, and education. Strengths: lowest friction-of-use in category (the famous push-pull modelling metaphor), enormous 3D Warehouse content library, broad plug-in ecosystem (V-Ray, Enscape, Twinmotion), and an established education-and-hobbyist installed base. Trade-offs: not a primary BIM tool when used alone (no schedule, no live linked drawings, no MEP authoring), the Pro vs Studio subscription split after Trimble re-tiered SketchUp 2023-2024 has been a source of customer frustration, and IFC export quality below Nemetschek tools.

      Best for

      Conceptual and early-design massing, interior designers, landscape architects, residential designers, and any AEC team using SketchUp as a feeder into a primary BIM tool.

      Worst for

      Primary BIM authoring at large project scale (Revit/ArchiCAD/Allplan better), MEP and structural engineering, or teams in openBIM-mandated workflows.

      Strengths

      • Lowest friction-of-use in category
      • Enormous 3D Warehouse content library
      • Broad plug-in ecosystem (V-Ray, Enscape, Twinmotion)
      • Strong education and hobbyist base
      • Trimble parent stability
      • Mac and Windows native

      Weaknesses

      • Not a primary BIM tool when used alone
      • Pro vs Studio subscription split created frustration
      • IFC export quality below Nemetschek tools
      • Heavy reliance on plug-ins for production work

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • SketchUp Go
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$120/year; web only
        $10 /emp/mo
      • SketchUp Pro
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$360/year; desktop + LayOut
        $30 /emp/mo
      • SketchUp Studio
        Per-user/month list, billed annually; ~$720/year; adds V-Ray, Scan Essentials
        $60 /emp/mo
      Watch for
      • · Studio tier required for V-Ray bundled rendering
      • · Annual price increases of 5-10% reported post-Trimble re-tier
      • · Plug-in costs (Enscape, V-Ray standalone) for production rendering

      Key features

      • +Conceptual 3D modelling
      • +LayOut documentation
      • +3D Warehouse content library
      • +IFC import and export
      • +Plug-in ecosystem
      • +Trimble Connect cloud collaboration
      • +Mac and Windows native
      150+ integrations
      V-RayEnscapeTwinmotionTrimble ConnectRevit (via plug-ins)RhinoLayOut
      Geography
      Global
      #7

      Rhino + Grasshopper

      Computational and geometry-led design standard.

      Founded 1998 · Seattle, WA · private · 1–5,000 employees
      G2 4.6 (240)
      Capterra 4.7
      From $0 /mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit Rhino + Grasshopper

      Rhinoceros 3D was released by Robert McNeel & Associates in 1998 as a NURBS surface modeller, and Grasshopper was added in 2007 as a visual programming environment by David Rutten. Together they have become the de-facto computational and parametric design standard in architecture, facade engineering, geometry-led practice, and academic research. Strengths: deepest NURBS modelling in AEC, Grasshopper visual programming enables generative design and facade optimisation, perpetual-license pricing remains genuinely unusual in 2026 (~$995 commercial Windows licence), broad plug-in ecosystem (Kangaroo, Ladybug, Karamba, Rhino.Inside.Revit), and the standard tool in facade engineering and geometry-led architecture. Trade-offs: not a primary BIM tool (no schedules, no live linked drawings, no IFC authoring strength), Rhino.Inside.Revit is the practical bridge but adds complexity, and recruitment pool for computational-design fluency is narrower than for Revit.

      Best for

      Computational and parametric design, facade engineering, geometry-led architecture, academic research, and AEC teams using Rhino as a generative front-end to Revit via Rhino.Inside.Revit.

      Worst for

      Primary BIM authoring at large project scale, MEP engineering, or teams wanting a single-tool drawing-and-BIM workflow.

      Strengths

      • Deepest NURBS modelling in AEC
      • Grasshopper visual programming for generative design
      • Perpetual-license pricing model still available
      • Broad plug-in ecosystem (Ladybug, Karamba, Kangaroo)
      • Rhino.Inside.Revit bridge to Revit workflows
      • Standard tool in facade engineering and academic practice

      Weaknesses

      • Not a primary BIM tool
      • Rhino.Inside.Revit adds complexity
      • Recruitment pool narrower for computational fluency
      • Documentation outputs require coupling with Revit or AutoCAD

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • Rhino 8 commercial perpetual
        ~$995 one-time per-seat commercial Windows or Mac licence
        $0 /mo
      • Rhino 8 educational perpetual
        ~$195 educational; verified academic licence
        $0 /mo
      • Cloud Zoo licensing
        Floating seat management for teams; included with commercial
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Major-version upgrades (Rhino 7 -> 8) require paid upgrade
      • · Plug-in costs for V-Ray, Enscape, specialised Grasshopper tools

      Key features

      • +NURBS surface modelling
      • +Grasshopper visual programming
      • +Plug-in ecosystem (Ladybug, Karamba, Kangaroo)
      • +Rhino.Inside.Revit
      • +Mac and Windows native
      • +IFC export
      • +Cloud Zoo team licensing
      200+ integrations
      Revit (via Rhino.Inside)GrasshopperV-RayEnscapeKaramba3DLadybug ToolsTwinmotion
      Geography
      Global
      #8

      Revizto

      Multi-discipline BIM coordination and clash review.

      Founded 2012 · Lausanne, Switzerland · private · 10–5,000 employees
      G2 4.6 (180)
      Capterra 4.6
      From $140 /employee/mo
      ◐ Partial disclosure
      Visit Revizto

      Revizto was founded in 2012 in Lausanne, Switzerland, and has become a primary multi-discipline BIM coordination and issue-tracking platform across Revit, Navisworks, Rhino, ArchiCAD, and IFC models. The product positions between authoring tools and field workflows: design coordinators load federated models from multiple disciplines, run clash detection, raise issues with comments and stamps, and route them back to authors. Strengths: aggressive feature pace under independent ownership, strong fit for design coordinators running multi-discipline workflows, supports Revit and ArchiCAD and Rhino in one coordination space, and a high-velocity AR/VR review capability. Trade-offs: per-user pricing scales aggressively at coordinator-heavy firms, vendor is private and less public-financials visibility, and some overlap with Solibri (model checking) and Navisworks (clash detection) creates buyer confusion.

      Best for

      Design coordinators running multi-discipline BIM coordination across Revit, ArchiCAD, Rhino, and IFC models, and AEC teams wanting issue-tracked clash review in one platform.

      Worst for

      Single-discipline practices, teams already deep in Navisworks for clash detection, or model-checking and QA workflows (Solibri better).

      Strengths

      • Multi-tool federated coordination (Revit, ArchiCAD, Rhino, IFC)
      • Issue tracking with comments and stamps
      • AR/VR review capability
      • High feature velocity
      • Strong design-coordinator UX

      Weaknesses

      • Per-user pricing scales aggressively
      • Private vendor; thinner financial transparency
      • Overlap with Solibri and Navisworks creates buyer confusion

      Pricing tiers

      partial
      • Revizto Workspace
        Per-user/month list; ~$1,680/year per coordinator
        $140 /emp/mo
      • Revizto Workspace Enterprise
        Volume licensing at enterprise scale
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Per-user scales with coordinator headcount
      • · Annual price increases of 5-8%

      Key features

      • +Federated model viewing
      • +Multi-tool import (Revit, Navisworks, Rhino, ArchiCAD, IFC)
      • +Clash detection
      • +Issue tracking with comments and stamps
      • +AR/VR review
      • +BCF support
      • +Cloud collaboration
      30+ integrations
      RevitNavisworksArchiCADRhinoBCFBimcollab
      Geography
      Global; strong in Europe, US, Middle East
      #9

      Solibri

      IFC-native BIM model checking and QA.

      Founded 1999 · Helsinki, Finland · public · 5–5,000 employees
      G2 4.4 (140)
      Capterra 4.5
      From $220 /employee/mo
      ◐ Partial disclosure
      Visit Solibri

      Solibri was founded in 1999 in Helsinki, Finland, and acquired by Nemetschek in 2015. The product is the IFC-native BIM model checker and QA tool used to validate compliance with information delivery standards, run rules-based clash and quality checks, and produce model audit reports. Strengths: deepest IFC openBIM model-checking depth in category, rules-engine for customised compliance and quality checks, strong fit at owner-operators and BIM managers running ISO 19650 information delivery workflows, and Nemetschek stack interop with ArchiCAD, Allplan, and Bluebeam. Trade-offs: not a coordination-and-issue-tracking tool in the Revizto sense (more checking, less issue tracking), per-user pricing climbs at large QA teams, and the UX is functional rather than friction-free.

      Best for

      BIM managers running model QA and compliance checks, owner-operators enforcing ISO 19650 information delivery, and Nemetschek-stack teams wanting integrated model checking.

      Worst for

      Multi-discipline design coordination workflows (Revizto better), Autodesk-anchored coordination (Navisworks closer), or teams without an openBIM workflow.

      Strengths

      • Deepest IFC openBIM model-checking depth
      • Rules-engine for customised compliance checks
      • Strong ISO 19650 information-delivery fit
      • Nemetschek stack interop
      • Audit-grade model QA reports

      Weaknesses

      • Not a coordination and issue-tracking tool
      • Per-user pricing climbs at large QA teams
      • UX is functional, not friction-free

      Pricing tiers

      partial
      • Solibri Office
        Per-user/month list; ~$2,640/year per BIM manager
        $220 /emp/mo
      • Solibri Site
        Per-user/month list; ~$960/year viewer/lighter checking
        $80 /emp/mo
      • Solibri Enterprise
        Volume licensing for owner-operators
        Quote
      Watch for
      • · Per-user scaling at large QA teams
      • · Annual price increases of 4-7%

      Key features

      • +IFC model checking
      • +Rules engine for compliance checks
      • +Clash detection
      • +Information delivery audit reports
      • +ISO 19650 alignment
      • +Nemetschek stack interop
      30+ integrations
      ArchiCADAllplanRevit (via IFC)BluebeamBCFBimcollab
      Geography
      Global; strongest in Nordics, DACH, UK, Australia
      #10

      FormIt

      Autodesk conceptual modelling tied to Revit.

      Founded 2013 · San Rafael, CA · public · 1–10,000 employees
      G2 4.2 (80)
      Capterra 4.3
      From $0 /mo
      ● Transparent pricing
      Visit FormIt

      FormIt was originally released by Autodesk in 2013 as a tablet-first conceptual modeller, then re-positioned as the Revit-anchored early-design tool for massing studies, energy analysis, and design exploration. The product is bundled into the AEC Collection, integrates with Insight 360 for energy analysis, and round-trips conceptual models into Revit for development. Strengths: Autodesk parent stability, tight Revit round-trip and AEC Collection bundling, lightweight massing workflow, integrated energy analysis via Insight, and free-tier availability for individuals. Trade-offs: thinner standalone positioning compared to SketchUp (SketchUp owns the conceptual-modeller mindshare), feature pace below SketchUp, and adoption concentrated at Autodesk-shop firms rather than as a standalone winner.

      Best for

      Autodesk shops needing a Revit-anchored conceptual front-end, AEC Collection users wanting bundled massing, and energy-analysis-led early-design workflows via Insight 360.

      Worst for

      Standalone conceptual-design teams (SketchUp better), non-Autodesk shops, or teams wanting a deeper plug-in ecosystem.

      Strengths

      • Autodesk parent stability
      • Tight Revit round-trip via AEC Collection
      • Insight 360 energy analysis integration
      • Free tier available for individuals
      • Lightweight massing UX

      Weaknesses

      • SketchUp owns the conceptual-modeller mindshare
      • Feature pace below SketchUp
      • Adoption concentrated at Autodesk shops

      Pricing tiers

      public
      • FormIt Free
        Free tier; basic conceptual modelling
        $0 /mo
      • FormIt Pro (bundled in AEC Collection)
        AEC Collection per-user/month list; FormIt Pro included
        $480 /emp/mo
      Watch for
      • · AEC Collection price increases apply
      • · Insight 360 advanced features on top

      Key features

      • +Conceptual 3D massing
      • +Revit round-trip
      • +Insight 360 energy analysis
      • +AEC Collection bundling
      • +Cloud collaboration via BIM 360
      • +Free tier
      40+ integrations
      RevitInsight 360BIM 360AEC CollectionAutodesk Construction Cloud
      Geography
      Global; strongest where Autodesk Construction Cloud is standard
      Buying guide

      6 steps to pick the right aec (bim architecture) software

      1. 1
        1. Identify your authoring discipline first

        Architecture-led practice? Revit if you are in Autodesk-standard markets, ArchiCAD if you are in openBIM or Mac markets, Vectorworks if you are a design boutique or landscape practice. Structural and civil? Allplan in DACH, Revit + Civil 3D otherwise, Bentley OpenBuildings for infrastructure-adjacent. Conceptual and computational? SketchUp for massing, Rhino + Grasshopper for computational. The discipline drives the platform; cross-discipline mismatches drive integration pain.

      2. 2
        2. Check your market and recruitment context

        In US large-firm practice Revit fluency is a hiring requirement and contract deliverable. In Hungary, DACH, Italy, Spain, and Nordics ArchiCAD and Allplan are credible defaults with deep local talent pools. Mac-only studios cannot run Revit natively. Run a quick check: search your local job market for Revit vs ArchiCAD vs Allplan postings, the ratio tells you the practical hiring story.

      3. 3
        3. Audit your interop requirements

        Does your project workflow require IFC export? Run real models through your shortlisted tools and check what comes out the other end. ArchiCAD, Allplan, and Solibri tend to win on IFC quality; Revit IFC export is functional but uneven on complex geometry. If you work into UK, France, Germany federal, Singapore, or UAE projects, openBIM mandates make IFC quality a procurement filter, not just a nice-to-have.

      4. 4
        4. Model the total cost over three years

        Autodesk AEC Collection at $5,760 per user/year is the headline. Budget 8-15% annual renewal increases on Autodesk and 5-8% on Nemetschek and Trimble. Add Solibri or Revizto at $1,680-$2,640 per user/year for coordinators, V-Ray or Enscape at $400-$700 per user/year for rendering, and Rhino at ~$995 perpetual for computational designers. Compare across vendors at three-year horizon, not first-year list.

      5. 5
        5. Run a 60-90 day POC before standardising

        Vendor demos use polished models. Test on your real building types: model a typical project at production geometry complexity, run the IFC export-import round-trip with your downstream coordinator, render at production quality, and have a junior architect run the daily-use ergonomics test. Capture pain points by frequency, not by vendor charm.

      6. 6
        6. Negotiate multi-year carefully with renewal caps

        Autodesk, Nemetschek, and Trimble all push 3-year subscriptions. Negotiate (a) annual renewal-cap clauses (5-8% maximum), (b) per-user flexibility for occasional users (Flex tokens at Autodesk, Service Select adjustments at Nemetschek), (c) volume discounts at clear seat bands, (d) training and certification credits, and (e) right-to-evaluate competitive products without contract penalty. Renewal renegotiation post-go-live is significantly harder than first-purchase negotiation.

      Frequently asked questions

      The questions buyers actually ask before they sign a aec (bim architecture) software contract.

      What is the difference between AEC software and construction management software?
      AEC software (Revit, ArchiCAD, Vectorworks, Allplan, Bentley OpenBuildings, SketchUp, Rhino) is the design and BIM authoring layer used by architects, structural engineers, MEP engineers, and design coordinators to produce building models, drawing sets, and coordination data. Construction management software (Procore, Autodesk Build, Buildertrend) is the field workflow layer used by general contractors and field crews to manage RFIs, submittals, change orders, and execution against those drawings. Most enterprise firms run both: a BIM authoring tool on the design side and a construction management platform on the build side. Buying a construction management platform expecting it to author BIM models, or buying a BIM authoring tool expecting it to manage field RFIs, is the most common cross-category mistake.
      How dominant is Autodesk Revit really, and what changes that?
      Industry sources report 95%+ Revit penetration at top US architecture and engineering firms, with similarly high penetration in UK, Australian, Indian, and Middle Eastern large-firm practice. Three things change the calculation: (1) openBIM and IFC interop mandates favour ArchiCAD or Allplan because their IFC export quality is stronger; (2) Mac-only studios cannot run Revit natively, which pushes Vectorworks or ArchiCAD; (3) the Autodesk annual renewal price increases of 8-15% reported 2023-2025 have prompted credible Nemetschek evaluations in Europe and at cost-sensitive smaller practices.
      Is the Nemetschek European stack a real alternative to Autodesk?
      Yes, in markets where openBIM and IFC interop are mandated or strongly preferred. The credible stack is ArchiCAD (architecture) plus Allplan (structural and civil) plus Solibri (model checking) plus Bluebeam Revu (drawing markup, also Nemetschek-owned). Vectorworks plays the Mac-friendly design-boutique role. IFC interop between Nemetschek tools is genuinely stronger than Revit, but always validate with a POC: run your real models, your real spec sections, your real IFC export-import round-trip before committing. Recruitment depth outside Europe is the most consistent friction point.
      Which BIM country mandates affect software selection in 2026?
      UK BIM Level 2 has been mandatory for centrally-procured public projects since April 2016, now anchored by ISO 19650 information-delivery standards. France mandated BIM for state-funded buildings projects in 2017 under the Plan Transition Numérique dans le Bâtiment. Germany mandated BIM for federal infrastructure projects in late 2020 (Stufenplan Digitales Planen und Bauen). Singapore and the UAE have BIM mandates for high-rise and major projects. India does not have a national mandate but Indian export-AEC firms working into UK and Middle East projects must work to BIM Level 2. The practical effect: openBIM-mandated workflows favour ArchiCAD, Allplan, and Solibri over Revit on IFC quality.
      What happened with SketchUp Pro vs Studio after Trimble re-tiered?
      Trimble re-tiered SketchUp subscriptions through 2023-2024, separating SketchUp Go (web), SketchUp Pro (desktop + LayOut), and SketchUp Studio (Pro plus V-Ray and Scan Essentials). Customers reported frustration: features that had been bundled in Pro moved to Studio, annual renewal pricing increased 5-10%, and standalone V-Ray for SketchUp licensing became more expensive than the Studio bundle in some configurations. The practical advice: re-evaluate at each renewal whether Studio is cheaper than Pro plus standalone V-Ray, and budget for annual increases when planning multi-year team licensing.
      How do Rhino and Grasshopper fit into a Revit-anchored workflow?
      Rhino and Grasshopper occupy the computational and parametric design layer that Revit handles weakly. The standard pattern in 2026 is: Rhino for NURBS surface modelling, facade geometry, and generative design; Grasshopper for parametric scripting and design automation; then Rhino.Inside.Revit to bring the resulting geometry into Revit as native Revit elements for documentation, scheduling, and BIM coordination. This is now the standard facade-engineering workflow at Foster + Partners-class practices and most large geometry-led architecture firms. The friction is computational-design recruitment: the talent pool fluent in Grasshopper plus Rhino.Inside.Revit is much narrower than Revit-only fluency.
      Clash detection: Navisworks vs Solibri vs Revizto, which one?
      Three different workflows. Navisworks (Autodesk) is the Autodesk-native federated viewer for Revit and Civil 3D coordination, ubiquitous at Autodesk shops and bundled in the AEC Collection. Solibri (Nemetschek) is the IFC-native model checker for compliance, QA, and ISO 19650 information-delivery audit; favoured by BIM managers and owner-operators. Revizto (Swiss) is the multi-tool federated coordination and issue-tracking platform that imports Revit, Navisworks, Rhino, ArchiCAD, and IFC into one issue-tracked space; favoured by design coordinators on multi-discipline projects. Many large firms run more than one: Navisworks for internal Autodesk-tool coordination, Solibri for QA gates, and Revizto for multi-discipline coordination across consultants.
      How aggressive are Autodesk renewal increases and what is a realistic 2026 budget?
      Autodesk renewal price increases of 8-15% annually were widely reported 2023-2025 across the AEC Collection, with some practices reporting larger jumps at multi-year cycle resets. Realistic 2026 budgeting: AEC Collection at $5,760 per user/year list, expect $6,200-$6,600 per user/year by 2027 at typical renewal pacing, and expect enterprise volume discounts to narrow under Autodesk pricing pressure. Mitigation patterns include (a) running a Nemetschek POC to create competitive leverage at renewal, (b) negotiating multi-year caps at 5-7% annual increase, (c) shifting occasional users to Flex token licensing, and (d) consolidating Revit, Civil 3D, and FormIt onto AEC Collection rather than buying separately.

      Glossary

      BIM (Building Information Modeling)
      Three-dimensional digital model of a building containing geometric and semantic information about objects, materials, and relationships. Authored in Revit, ArchiCAD, Vectorworks, Allplan, or Bentley OpenBuildings.
      IFC (Industry Foundation Classes)
      Open vendor-neutral file format for BIM models, maintained by buildingSMART. The currency of openBIM workflows and the standard for cross-vendor model exchange.
      openBIM
      A buildingSMART-led approach to BIM that emphasises open standards, IFC exchange, and vendor-neutral workflows. Nemetschek tools generally have stronger openBIM credentials than Revit.
      ISO 19650
      International standard for organising and digitising information about buildings, derived from the UK BIM Level 2 publicly available specifications. The information-delivery backbone of BIM mandates in the UK, EU, and elsewhere.
      CDE (Common Data Environment)
      A managed digital workspace that holds the single source of truth for project information; required under ISO 19650. ProjectWise (Bentley), Autodesk Construction Cloud, Asite, and Aconex are typical CDEs.
      Clash detection
      Process of identifying geometric conflicts between disciplines (architectural vs structural vs MEP) in federated BIM models. Tools: Navisworks (Autodesk), Solibri (Nemetschek), Revizto (Swiss).

      Final word

      See the full intelligence profile for any product on this page, including verified pricing, vendor trust scores, and review patterns. Browse the AEC (BIM Architecture) Software category page →

      Last updated 2026-05-27. Pricing data is reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.