STL File Requirements for Clear Aligner Treatment Planning
Digital STL mesh of an upper dental arch prepared for clear aligner treatment planning
Treatment Planning June 12, 2026 · 11 min read

STL File Requirements for Clear Aligner Treatment Planning

A clean, complete STL file is the foundation of every accurate clear aligner setup. Here is exactly what your scan files need to contain — mesh quality, scanner export settings, bite registration, and the errors that quietly stall treatment planning.

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What an STL File Is in Aligner Planning

If you submit cases to a clear aligner lab, your STL files are the single most important thing you hand over. Every tooth movement, attachment placement, and aligner stage is built directly on the geometry inside those files. Meeting the right STL file requirements for clear aligner treatment planning is what separates a setup that comes back accurate on the first pass from one that bounces back with questions and adds days to your turnaround.

An STL (stereolithography) file is a digital description of a 3D surface stored as a mesh of tiny connected triangles. When an intraoral scanner captures a patient's arch, it stitches thousands of frames into one continuous surface and exports it as that triangulated mesh. The denser and cleaner the mesh, the more faithfully it reproduces the real anatomy — cusps, embrasures, gingival margins, and contact points.

STL is the lingua franca of digital dentistry. It carries no color, no patient data, and no proprietary metadata — just pure geometry. That simplicity is exactly why it has become the default exchange format between practices, labs, and aligner manufacturers. When your setup technician opens your file, they are working with the same surface your scanner saw chairside.

In short: An STL is the 3D blueprint of your patient's teeth. Treatment planning software moves individual teeth on top of that blueprint, so any flaw in the file becomes a flaw in the plan.

Why STL Quality Decides the Outcome

Clear aligner planning is unforgiving of bad inputs. The software has to identify each tooth, segment it from the gingiva, and rotate or translate it through space across many stages. If the mesh has holes, distortion, or missing anatomy, the technician either has to reconstruct the missing data — introducing guesswork — or send the case back to you.

The downstream cost is real. A low-resolution or incomplete scan can produce aligners that don't seat fully, attachments that miss their intended surface, or interproximal contacts that read incorrectly. Because the entire staged sequence is derived from one source file, a small error at the input stage propagates through every aligner in the series. Getting the STL right the first time protects both your turnaround and your clinical result.

This is also why the file you submit and the digital plan you review are two sides of the same workflow. Once your STL is processed into a setup, the next checkpoint is yours — and knowing how to read and approve a 3D treatment setup is just as important as sending a clean file to begin with.

STL vs. Proprietary Scan Files

Most intraoral scanners save their native capture in a proprietary format and then let you export an open STL. Understanding the difference prevents one of the most common submission delays: sending a file the lab cannot open.

File TypeWhat It IsUse for Aligner Planning
Open STLUnrestricted triangulated mesh, readable by any softwarePreferred — universal and import-safe
Closed / locked STLSTL tied to one manufacturer's ecosystem, needs export authorizationNot usable until unlocked
PLYMesh format that can also store colorAccepted by many labs; confirm first
OBJMesh format with optional texture dataAccepted by many labs; confirm first
Proprietary scan projectThe scanner's internal working fileNot directly usable — export to STL
Watch the "open" toggle: Some platforms historically defaulted to a closed STL that third-party labs cannot open. Always confirm your export is set to open / unrestricted STL before sending.

Core STL File Requirements

Across scanners and workflows, a planning-ready STL meets the same handful of technical standards. These are the non-negotiables every aligner lab looks for.

1. A watertight, manifold mesh

The surface should be continuous and closed, with no holes — particularly along the gingival margins and around the most posterior teeth. A "manifold" mesh means every edge connects exactly two triangles, with no stray, overlapping, or floating geometry. Holes at the margin force the software to interpolate where the tooth ends and tissue begins, which is precisely the boundary that matters for aligner fit.

2. Adequate resolution

The mesh must carry enough triangle density to reproduce occlusal anatomy and contact points faithfully. A full-arch scan exported at proper resolution generally lands between 5 MB and 30 MB per arch. Files that are dramatically smaller are usually decimated previews and lack the fidelity needed for accurate movement planning.

3. Separate arches plus a bite

Standard submission is three files: an upper arch STL, a lower arch STL, and a bite registration that ties them together in correct occlusion. The bite can be a buccal bite scan or two pre-articulated arches. Without it, the technician cannot reproduce how the teeth actually meet.

4. Clean, trimmed anatomy

The scan should be free of soft-tissue drape, saliva pooling, lip and cheek artifacts, and excess palate. Trimming loose tissue and bubbles before export keeps segmentation clean and avoids back-and-forth.

STL Requirements at a Glance
  • Format: Open, unrestricted STL (PLY or OBJ only if your lab confirms).
  • Mesh: Watertight and manifold — no holes at the margins.
  • Resolution: Full-density scan, roughly 5–30 MB per arch.
  • Files: Upper arch, lower arch, and a bite registration.
  • Cleanliness: No saliva, soft-tissue, or bubble artifacts.
  • Completeness: Every tooth captured to the gingival margin.

What Your Scan Must Capture

Even a technically perfect mesh is useless if it is missing anatomy the plan depends on. A complete capture includes the full arch end to end — from the most distal tooth on one side to the most distal on the other, including teeth that won't move, because they anchor the plan and define the arch form. It also needs the complete gingival margin, with 2–3 mm of gingiva scanned past each tooth so the software can cleanly segment every crown.

Accurate interproximal contacts matter just as much. Embrasures and contact areas govern how crowding is resolved and where interproximal reduction is planned, so they must be clearly defined rather than smeared together. The bite scan should show the patient in their habitual, fully seated occlusion — not a guided or shifted position — and any restorations, partially erupted teeth, or edentulous spaces should be captured exactly as they truly are.

For complex presentations — significant crowding, deep bites, or cases involving restorative work — completeness matters even more, because the plan has less room to estimate. This is the same level of detail our team relies on when building a fully custom orthodontic treatment plan from your submission.

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Scanner Export Settings by Device

Every major intraoral scanner can produce planning-ready STL output. What differs is where the export setting lives and whether the file is open by default. The brand matters far less than your technique and your export choices.

ScannerSTL ExportWhat to Watch
iTeroOpen STL export availableConfirm the file is the open export, not a locked variant
3Shape TRIOSSTL / PLY / DCM exportExport separate upper, lower, and bite
MeditSTL / PLY / OBJ from the scan appExport at full resolution, not a compressed preview
Primescan / CERECSTL export via the connect portalUse the open export option for third-party labs
Desktop lab scannerSTL from a stone model or impressionEnsure the physical model is accurate and undistorted
Tip: Always export the highest-resolution STL your scanner offers. A downsampled "preview" export saves a few megabytes but can cost you accurate contacts and margins.

If you are weighing whether to digitize physical impressions or move fully chairside, the broader question of how scanning fits into modern aligner production is covered across our clear aligner treatment planning articles.

Common Errors That Delay Setups

Almost every rejected or returned case traces back to a short list of avoidable issues. Knowing them in advance lets you catch problems on screen before you ever hit export. The most frequent offenders are a locked or closed STL that imports nowhere, holes in the mesh at the gingival margin or posterior teeth, and a missing bite registration that leaves the arches unrelatable.

Close behind are an incomplete arch where a distal molar is clipped or a tooth is skipped, soft-tissue and saliva artifacts that confuse tooth segmentation, an over-decimated file that has lost the detail needed for precise movement, and scan distortion from skipping across a large edentulous span or rescanning poorly. The good news: a quick on-screen review of your scan — rotating each arch to inspect margins, contacts, and the bite — catches nearly all of these in under a minute, and that single habit prevents the majority of treatment-planning delays.

How to Export & Submit, Step by Step

Use this sequence every time and your files will arrive planning-ready.

  1. Complete a full-arch scan Capture both arches end to end, including the full gingival margin and every tooth — even those that won't move.
  2. Capture the bite Take a buccal bite scan on each side so the arches can be articulated in true occlusion.
  3. Review on screen Rotate each arch to check for holes, distortion, soft-tissue drape, and clean interproximal contacts. Rescan any weak areas before you finish.
  4. Trim artifacts Remove loose tissue, bubbles, and excess palate so tooth segmentation stays clean.
  5. Export as open STL Choose the open, full-resolution STL export and save three files: upper, lower, and bite.
  6. Label clearly and submit Name files with the patient ID and arch, then send them with your prescription and any photos or clinical notes.
Pro move: Include intraoral and facial photos plus a short clinical note with your STL files. The richer the context, the more precisely the setup matches your treatment goals.

How We Use Your STL Files

Once your files arrive, our orthodontic team imports the open STLs, articulates the arches using your bite registration, and segments each tooth. From there we build a staged digital setup — sequencing movements, planning attachments and any interproximal reduction, and defining the final position — then return it to you for review and sign-off before a single aligner is produced.

Because that plan is built entirely on your STL, the quality of your scan directly shapes how little revision the setup needs. Clean files mean fewer rounds of back-and-forth and faster approval. If you produce aligners under your own brand, the same standards feed straight into our OEM clear aligner manufacturing process, where consistent, high-quality STL input keeps every case predictable at scale.

And once your setup comes back, the workflow hands control to you. Reviewing each stage, checking the final position, and approving — or requesting changes to — the plan is the next critical step, and one worth doing carefully on every case.

Frequently Asked Questions

What file format should I send for clear aligner treatment planning?
Open STL is the universal standard for clear aligner treatment planning. Most labs accept an upper arch STL, a lower arch STL, and a bite registration — either a separate buccal bite scan or two pre-aligned arches. PLY and OBJ are accepted by many labs too, but only STL is guaranteed to import everywhere, so it remains the safest choice.
What is the difference between an open STL and a closed STL?
A closed STL is locked to a specific manufacturer's ecosystem and cannot be opened by third-party planning software without an export authorization. An open STL has no such restriction and can be imported by any aligner lab. For treatment planning with an independent manufacturer, you must export an open, unrestricted STL.
Do I need a separate bite scan with my STL files?
Yes, in most cases. Accurate clear aligner treatment planning depends on knowing how the arches occlude. A buccal bite scan or a pre-articulated pair of arches lets the lab reproduce the patient's true occlusion. Without it, the technician has to estimate the bite, which can compromise the setup.
How large are STL files for aligner cases?
A full-arch intraoral scan exported as STL is typically 5 MB to 30 MB per arch, depending on the scanner and mesh density. Files far below this range are usually decimated too aggressively and may lack the detail needed for accurate margins and contacts.
Can I use a desktop scan of a physical model instead of an intraoral scan?
Yes. A desktop lab scanner can digitize a poured stone model or PVS impression into an STL that works perfectly well for treatment planning, provided the model is accurate and undistorted. Intraoral scans are preferred because they remove the impression-and-pour step, but a clean model scan is fully acceptable.
Why was my STL file rejected by the aligner lab?
The most common reasons are a non-watertight mesh with holes at the gingival margin, missing teeth or incomplete arches, a locked or closed STL that cannot be opened, soft-tissue and saliva artifacts, or a missing bite registration. Reviewing your scan on screen before export catches almost all of these issues.
Does scanner brand matter for STL quality?
All major intraoral scanners — iTero, 3Shape TRIOS, Medit, and Primescan — produce STL output suitable for clear aligner treatment planning. What matters more than brand is scan technique, full-arch capture, and exporting an open STL at the correct resolution rather than a downsampled preview.
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Ahsan D – Digital Marketing Strategist at Clear Moves Aligners
Ahsan D
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Ahsan D is a results-driven digital marketing strategist with deep expertise in the dental and healthcare sectors. He helps aligner brands and dental practices build content strategies that convert — combining SEO, B2B positioning, and data-led growth frameworks to turn organic traffic into qualified pipeline. At Clear Moves Aligners, Ahsan leads the digital strategy that connects dental professionals and aligner brands with scalable, certified manufacturing and treatment planning solutions.