As a SketchUp power user, you probably live in the world of .skp, .dae, and .kmz. But here’s a pattern we see all the time in the SketchUp community: a client sends a STEP file (.step or .stp) from SolidWorks, Fusion 360, or FreeCAD, and the user doesn’t know the fastest way to turn it into something printable.
SketchUp Pro can import STEP with certain extensions and workflows, but the path from STEP → printable mesh is often clunky. You import, you clean, you scale, you export to STL. It works, but it’s not instant.
The faster bridge: STEP to STL in the browser
If your end goal is 3D printing, you can skip the middleman entirely. There are now browser-based converters that turn a STEP file into a binary STL in under a second—no upload to a server, no sign-up, no SketchUp import step.
One tool that’s become popular in the CAD/3D-printing crossover community is step-to-stl.com. It runs 100 % client-side: you drop the STEP file, it triangulates the B-Rep geometry, and you download a slicer-ready STL. Open it in Cura, PrusaSlicer, Bambu Studio, or OrcaSlicer and print.
When to use SketchUp, when to go direct
| Situation | Best path |
|---|---|
| You need to edit the model first | Import STEP into SketchUp Pro, modify, export STL |
| You need to check fit with other SketchUp components | Import into SketchUp, assemble, then export |
| The model is ready and you just need to print | Convert STEP → STL directly in the browser |
| You received a STEP file but don’t own SketchUp Pro | Browser converter (no license needed) |
Pro tip: keep the “direct” link in your bookmarks
Even if you prefer SketchUp for 90 % of your workflow, keeping a direct STEP-to-STL bookmark saves time on repetitive conversions. It also keeps your SketchUp workspace clean—no temporary imports just to re-export a mesh.
Bottom line: SketchUp is unbeatable for spatial design, furniture, and architectural models. But for pure “CAD file to printer” logistics, a dedicated STEP-to-STL pipeline is the quiet hack that saves hours.



