Three.js vs Babylon.js — Choosing the Right Engine
Three.js wins for creative web work; Babylon.js wins for 3D web apps with physics, GUI, and editor needs.
Three.js dominates creative web (Awwwards, portfolios, brand microsites). Babylon.js dominates 3D web apps (configurators with physics, educational software, simulations). Both render WebGL. Three.js has 5x more npm packages and bigger community. Babylon has built-in physics (Havok), GUI system, scene editor. For 90% of web 3D projects I default to Three.js; switch to Babylon when project leans toward "3D application" rather than "3D website".
Quick summary
The short version: Three.js vs Babylon.js — Choosing the Right Engine is a comparison between two real choices working developers actually face on production projects. Both options have valid use cases and neither dominates the other. The right pick depends on team skills, target browser support, and the specific 3D features your project needs.
When option A wins
Pick the first option when the team prefers a stable mature ecosystem with a large community, when the project will run on production for 5+ years (long-term maintainability), and when the design constraints are well-understood before kickoff. The first option also wins for projects with a meaningful budget that can afford engineering depth.
When option B wins
Pick the second option when speed-to-prototype matters more than long-term maintenance, when the team includes a generalist rather than a 3D specialist, and when the visual ambition fits within the framework's built-in capabilities. The second option ships fast and rarely fights the tooling, which matters for marketing-driven launches.
My default choice
On most projects I default to the first option because clients tend to want the site to last 3-5 years without rewrites, and a mature ecosystem with strong tooling pays dividends throughout that lifespan. But I keep both in the toolbox — when a project's profile clearly favors the second, I switch. Tool-fit beats tool-loyalty.
Frequently asked questions
Can I switch options later?
Which tool do you personally use?
How long does this take?
What does it cost?
What if my visitors are on weak phones?
Ready to ship a 3D experience?
Tell me what you need — fixed price, fixed deadline, no surprises.