The Creator 5 and 5 Pro are the cheapest printers where you get 4 tool heads to 3D print in 4 different colors with no waste, and maybe even 4 different materials at once. At only $699 for the Creator 5 and $849 for the Pro, it undercuts the Snapmaker U1, the printer that changed how multi-toolhead machines get priced across the whole industry. So how did FlashForge make a multi-toolhead printer this cheap for what it offers? That is what this post is about, and it is also why the Creator 5 is PrintMatch's Printer of the Month for July 2026.
Creator 5 vs. Creator 5 Pro
Let's use the Compare tool to look at the specs of the Creator 5 and Creator 5 Pro side by side.
| Spec | FlashForge Creator 5 | FlashForge Creator 5 Pro |
|---|---|---|
| Price | $699 $799 Best | $849 |
| Build Volume Equal | 256×256×256mm | 256×256×256mm |
| Max Speed Equal | 600mm/s | 600mm/s |
| Size | Medium | Medium |
| Level | Intermediate | Intermediate |
| Enclosure | No | Yes Best |
| Multi-Color Equal | Yes | Yes |
| Multi-Material Equal | Yes | Yes |
| Materials | PLA, PETG, TPU | PLA, PETG, TPU, ABS, ASA, Nylon |
| Nozzle Temp Equal | 320°C | 320°C |
| Bed Temp Equal | 120°C | 120°C |
| Chamber Temp | - | 65°C |
| Active Chamber Heating | No | Yes Best |
| Maintenance Equal | High | High |
| Use Cases | Hobby, School, Business | Hobby, School, Business |
| Environments | Bedroom/office, Workshop, Classroom | Bedroom/office, Workshop, Classroom, Garage |
| Creator Rating Equal | 8.7/10 | 8.7/10 |
| Last Updated | 5/10/2026 | 5/10/2026 |
Live version of this comparison: printmatch.netlify.app/compare.html
From the table you can see there are only a few real differences, price being one of them. The Creator 5 is $699 and the Creator 5 Pro is $849. There is a reason the Pro costs more though - it is "pro" after all. The main reason is the enclosure and active chamber heater, which unlock PA6-CF and PA12-CF style engineering materials on top of ABS, ASA, and basic nylons. That is nice, but honestly it is not the reason to buy this printer. You buy it for the four multi-material toolheads. They let you print multi-color parts with zero waste.
The Compromises
So what is the compromise? Why is this thing so much cheaper? You can't really see it in the specs alone, because on paper it has all the standard features you'd expect, including a 256×256×256mm build plate. To find the real answer we need to go deeper - so let's add the Snapmaker U1 to the comparison. As you can see below, the core numbers are close. It is actually worse in a few areas, like top speed, supported materials, and print temperatures.
| Spec | FlashForge Creator 5 | FlashForge Creator 5 Pro | Snapmaker U1 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Price | $699 $799 Best | $849 | $999 |
| Build Volume | 256×256×256mm | 256×256×256mm | 270×270×270mm Best |
| Max Speed | 600mm/s Best | 600mm/s Best | 500mm/s |
| Size | Medium | Medium | Medium |
| Level | Intermediate | Intermediate | Intermediate |
| Enclosure | No | Yes Best | No |
| Multi-Color Equal | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Multi-Material Equal | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Materials | PLA, PETG, TPU | PLA, PETG, TPU, ABS, ASA, Nylon | PLA, PETG, TPU, PVA |
| Nozzle Temp | 320°C Best | 320°C Best | 300°C |
| Bed Temp | 120°C Best | 120°C Best | 100°C |
| Chamber Temp | - | 65°C | - |
| Active Chamber Heating | No | Yes Best | No |
| Maintenance | High | High | Moderate Best |
| Use Cases | Hobby, School, Business | Hobby, School, Business | Hobby |
| Environments | Bedroom/office, Workshop, Classroom | Bedroom/office, Workshop, Classroom, Garage | Bedroom/office, Garage, Workshop |
Live version of this comparison: printmatch.netlify.app/compare.html
So, is the U1 pointless now? Not so fast. Once you look past the spec sheet, the compromises FlashForge made to hit $699 start to show up:
- Each toolhead is not really a full toolhead. It is closer to a nozzle with extra parts attached. This can make color changes less clean than a true toolhead swap.
- USB cables instead of a PCB. Each toolhead communicates over a USB cable rather than through a dedicated circuit board connection.
- Magnets hold the toolheads in place instead of a more robust mechanical latch.
- Manual filament loading. You have to load filament yourself. Plenty of people don't mind this at all - whether the printer auto-loads or you do it by hand rarely matters day to day - but it is worth knowing going in.
- No enclosure on the base model. You only get one on the Pro. Enclosures cost real money to build well, even ones that look like they're "just glass."
- No HEPA filter. You'll need to add your own if you want one.
- No RFID reader. If you use FlashForge-brand filament you'll need to enter its profile manually. Most people don't stick to one filament brand anyway, so this is a minor loss - and honestly a sensible place for FlashForge to cut cost.
None of these are dealbreakers on their own. They're small, deliberate cuts that add up to a genuinely lower price without touching the parts that actually matter for print quality.
Support and Software
What do you get outside the printer itself? Not many people ask this, but it matters. The Creator 5 is not fully open source, but it does run open source Klipper firmware, which means you can mod it (even if that takes more effort than a plug-and-play machine) and use third-party slicers like Orca Slicer - a genuine bonus.
FlashForge also has a track record of supporting printers for years after launch. The Adventurer 4, for example, was supported for roughly three years before being phased out - longer than most brands bother with.
Pros of the Creator 5
- It's cheap. $699 for the base model or $849 for the enclosed Pro, with zero filament waste from purging between colors.
- It's fast to swap colors. A toolhead change takes about 15 seconds, versus roughly 90 seconds on a typical AMS-style printer. Faster color changes mean less wasted filament and less wasted time - not enough to recoup the printer's cost, but it adds up, and it's kinder to the environment too.
- Open source Klipper. Support for Orca Slicer and firmware modding is something every printer should offer.
Cons of the Creator 5
- Manual filament loading. It takes about a minute and becomes a non-issue once you're used to it.
- No enclosure on the base model. Printing engineering materials means stepping up to the Pro.
- Toolhead design. Less robust than dedicated toolheads on pricier machines, which can occasionally make color transitions less clean.
Final Verdict
That's the full picture of the Creator 5 and 5 Pro - the specs, the compromises, the pros, and the cons. FlashForge made smart, deliberate choices to hit that $699 price point, cutting in places that don't matter much to most people. You lose some conveniences like auto-loading and RFID filament detection, but you gain four toolheads that print multi-color with zero waste, at a price that beats the U1.
Is it perfect? No. But for $699 you're getting a four-toolhead printer that handles multi-color and multi-material printing with no waste. That's genuinely hard to beat, and it's exactly why the Creator 5 is PrintMatch's Printer of the Month for July 2026.
Sources
- youtube.com/watch?v=WA6FuC-_R_M
- youtube.com/watch?v=H-7f43ZFx9o
- instagram.com/reel/DY9yTOOOGCW
- youtube.com/watch?v=89lEFi1ik0I
- shop3duniverse.com/products/flashforge-creator-5-pro
Product photos of the Creator 5 and Creator 5 Pro courtesy of 3D Universe.