PCB Prototype for Startups: From Design to Production
You have a hardware idea. You've sketched the schematic. Now you need to turn it into a physical board โ fast, cheap, and without the headaches that kill most hardware startups before they even ship a product.
This guide is for founders who need to prototype PCBs, iterate quickly, and eventually scale to production โ without burning through their runway on manufacturing mistakes.
The Startup Prototyping Playbook
The biggest mistake hardware startups make is treating prototyping like production. At the prototype stage, your goal isn't perfection โ it's learning. You need to answer: does this thing actually work?
| Phase | Goal | Quantity | Cost Target |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rev 0 (Proof of Concept) | Does the core idea work? | 3-5pcs | < $15 |
| Rev 1 (Functional Prototype) | Does it work in the real world? | 5-10pcs | < $30 |
| Rev 2 (Pre-Production) | Is it ready for customers? | 20-50pcs | < $100 |
| Production | Ship it. | 100-1000pcs | Per-unit economics |
Choosing Your EDA Tool
Your EDA tool is where you design your PCB. Here's what most startups use:
| Tool | Cost | Best For | Learning Curve |
|---|---|---|---|
| KiCad | Free (open source) | Most startups, hobbyists | Moderate |
| EasyEDA | Free (web-based) | Quick prototypes | Easy |
| Fusion 360 Electronics | Free (hobbyist) | Mechanical + electrical | Moderate |
| Altium | $300+/year | Professional teams | Steep |
Your First Prototype: What to Expect
Day 1: Export & Submit
Export Gerber files from KiCad/EasyEDA. Send them to your manufacturer via WhatsApp. Include layer count, quantity, and any special requirements.
Day 1-2: DFM Review & Quote
Engineer reviews your files. You get a quote and a DFM report within 24 hours. Fix any issues flagged in the review.
Day 2: Approve & Pay
Review the quote. Approve. Pay via PayPal or bank transfer.
Day 3-7: Manufacturing
Boards are fabricated. You'll receive photos before shipping.
Day 8-12: Delivery
DHL delivers to your door. DDP โ no customs surprises.
Total: 6-12 business days from design to physical boards in your hands.
Cost Optimization for Startups
1. Keep It 2-Layer (If You Can)
A 2-layer board costs $2 for 5pcs. A 4-layer board costs $5. That's 2.5x more โ and the difference compounds at scale. Only go to 4+ layers if you genuinely need the routing density or signal integrity.
2. Use Standard Specs
Standard FR4, 1.6mm thickness, green solder mask, lead-free HASL โ these are the cheapest options because factories have them in stock. Custom colors, thin boards, and ENIG finish all add cost.
3. Order 10pcs Instead of 5
The per-unit cost of 10pcs is often lower than 5pcs. You get double the boards for maybe $1.50 more. Always worth it.
4. Use JLCPCB/LCSC for Components
If you're doing assembly, LCSC (JLCPCB's component supplier) has the cheapest basic components. For specialty parts, use Digi-Key or Mouser.
5. Prototype Before Production
This sounds obvious, but startups skip it all the time. They design a board, order 500pcs, and discover a bug on the first power-up. Always test with 5-10pcs first.
When to Move to Production
You're ready for production when:
- Your Rev 2 prototype has been tested and validated
- You have confirmed demand (pre-orders, LOIs, beta users)
- Your BOM is finalized and all components are available
- You've done at least one full assembly run at production quantity
Ready to Prototype?
Send your Gerber files and we'll get you a quote within 24 hours. Free DFM review included. If you're early-stage, we can also advise on design choices that will save you money when you scale.
๐ฌ Start Your Prototype on WhatsAppRelated: PCB Cost Guide ยท Prototype Service ยท Assembly Service