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TestFit

TestFit is a web-based real estate feasibility platform that maps parcels or drawn boundaries into parking layouts, building massing, and early quantity inputs so owners, architects, and engineers can test deals against pro formas before heavy BIM work, with exports to Revit, AutoCAD, and SketchUp.

Teams use TestFit when they need fast answers about how a site could lay out before they invest weeks in static models. The product centers on site planning, deal evaluation, and option iteration inside a browser workflow that pairs geometry with cost and yield signals.

Public marketing cites more than 6,200 users and, on the 2026 pricing materials, references a customer survey claim of 650 or more deals evaluated per week on the platform; treat those figures as vendor-reported until you validate them on your own pilots (TestFit, 2026).

Higher tiers add zoning and environmental map layers, 3D terrain with cut-and-fill, utilities data, and generative layout goals. Urban Planner focuses on parking and massing studies, Data Maps layers in regulatory and site context, and Site Solver adds deeper typology control plus a named account contact according to the public plan grid.

Exports go to Revit, AutoCAD, SketchUp, Excel, and PDF so the same study can feed consultants without rebuilding geometry from scratch. International teams should confirm which parcel or zoning layers exist for each region because coverage varies by market.

Specifications

Pricing

Subscription

Platforms

Web

Used for

Site feasibilityParking layoutEarly massingPro forma checksZoning studies

Used by

DevelopersArchitectsCivil engineersGeneral contractorsPlanners

Tasks

Site planningConcept massingQuantity takeoffCost modelingDesign iteration

Pros and cons

Pros

  • Keeps geometry, counts, and financial framing in one place for go or no-go meetings.
  • Clear tier ladder from parking studies through map-heavy analysis and generative goals.
  • Direct paths into Revit and CAD reduce redraw time after leadership picks a direction.

Cons

  • Parcel, zoning, and environmental layers are not uniform worldwide; verify data for each region.
  • Site Solver and Enterprise pricing needs a sales thread, so total cost is opaque from self-serve pages alone.
  • Accuracy of yield or cost outputs still depends on your assumptions and local fee structures.

Key features

  • Parcel and boundary workflows: Map parcels or sketch limits, then place roads, parking, and building pads with adjustable turning radii and topography cues.

  • Financial checks: Tie layouts to pro forma views, yield estimates, and quantity-style takeoffs for parking, earthwork, and infrastructure early in the deal.

  • Rapid optioning: Compare schemes and unit mixes against zoning or parking rules to surface highest-and-best-use ideas faster than manual redraws.

  • Map-backed analysis: Data Maps and Site Solver tiers add zoning, environmental, utility, and terrain layers where the vendor exposes them for your geography.

  • Design handoff: Push approved concepts toward Revit while still supporting AutoCAD, SketchUp, Excel, and PDF for mixed consultant stacks.

  • Team-friendly licensing: Urban Planner marketing lists unlimited users on that tier; confirm seat rules when you upgrade to Data Maps or Site Solver.

Pricing

Urban Planner (billed annually)

per year

$1,200.00

Listed as USD 100 per month with annual billing on testfit.io/pricing; promotional rates may apply. Verify current price before purchase.

Data Maps (billed annually)

per year

$4,800.00

Listed as USD 400 per month with annual billing; includes Urban Planner features per vendor grid. Confirm on vendor site.

Site Solver

per year

$10,000.00

Public copy states starting at USD 10,000 per year. Enterprise volume pricing is separate; contact sales.

Frequently asked questions

How much does TestFit cost per month?

Urban Planner is listed at about one hundred dollars per month on annual billing before short-term promotions, Data Maps near four hundred dollars per month on the same terms, and Site Solver starts around ten thousand dollars per year with custom quotes above that. Numbers change with discounts and contract terms, so confirm on testfit.io/pricing before you buy.

Does TestFit work with Revit?

Marketing pages state that Revit and SketchUp integrations are available on every public plan, with additional CAD and spreadsheet export paths. Ask sales if you need a specific Revit year or cloud-worksharing pattern covered under your agreement.

Which TestFit plan includes zoning and environmental data?

Urban Planner does not ship those map layers. Data Maps is the first tier that advertises zoning and environmental data, with terrain, utilities, and power information called out on the vendor grid. Match the subscription to the study you owe on each pursuit.

Can TestFit handle subdivisions or large parcels?

Site Solver marketing references subdivision and parcel tooling plus generative design goals. Smaller tiers still support site creation, but complex entitlement layouts usually sit on the higher plans; validate scope with the vendor before you promise a client timeline.

Is TestFit only for United States projects?

TestFit states that the product works globally while warning that parcel, flood, wetland, or zoning layers may be missing outside supported areas. Support and training hours are listed in English within United States business hours, so overseas teams should plan coverage accordingly.

How does TestFit compare to manual SketchUp feasibility studies?

Case studies on the site describe moving from day-long SketchUp exercises to sub-hour sessions for public meetings. Your mileage still depends on template quality and staff skill, so run a pilot on a known site before you retire older methods.

Tutorials and learning

Sources