Products Design & Engineering SOLIDWORKS Electrical

SOLIDWORKS® Electrical

Schematic to 3D Harness in One Tool

Purpose-built electrical design for electromechanical products. Schematics, 3D cable routing, and manufacturing reports — all synchronized with your mechanical model.

SOLIDWORKS Electrical

SOLIDWORKS Electrical is a dedicated electrical CAD environment that synchronizes live with your 3D mechanical assembly. Add a connector in the schematic and it appears in the model. Route a harness in 3D and the schematic updates. No export-import — real-time bidirectional sync. Includes IEC/ANSI libraries, 500,000+ manufacturer components, and automated BOM, wire list, and harness flat-pattern output.

SOLIDWORKS Authorized Reseller Morphos 3D is an authorized SOLIDWORKS reseller. We sell and implement SOLIDWORKS Electrical for manufacturing customers.
Why Morphos for SOLIDWORKS Electrical: Our team understands manufacturing, not just design. When we implement Electrical, we think about how the reports will be used in purchasing, how the cable schedules land in your build documentation, and how the schematic data feeds into your ERP. We set it up to work end-to-end, not just in the design office.

SOLIDWORKS Electrical Packages

Three tiers for different team structures — schematic-only, 3D routing only, or both combined in one seat.

SOLIDWORKS Electrical Schematic Standard
2D Electrical Design — Standalone

Full schematic editor with IEC & ANSI symbols, 500K+ manufacturer parts, automated wire numbering, PLC I/O management, and one-click BOM and wire list reports. Standalone — no SOLIDWORKS seat required.

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SOLIDWORKS Electrical 3D
3D cable and harness routing integrated with SOLIDWORKS Design

3D routing module for teams that already have a Schematic seat. Adds 3D cable & harness routing to SOLIDWORKS with real-time schematic synchronization.

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Available on Device Term License (machine-locked, 3-month or 1-year) or Single-User Subscription (person-tied, any device). Contact us to discuss which fits your shop.

Compare All Features

Capability Schematic Standard Electrical 3D Electrical Professional
2D Schematic Editor (IEC & ANSI)
Manufacturer Parts Library (500K+ components)
Automated Wire Numbering
Terminal Strip Design
PLC I/O Management
BOM, Wire List, Cable Schedule Reports
DWG/DXF Import (AutoCAD Electrical migration)
3D Cable & Harness Routing (in SOLIDWORKS)
Real-Time Bidirectional Sync (Schematic ↔ 3D)
Auto-Calculate Cable Lengths
Clearance and Interference Checks
Flattened Harness Drawings for Manufacturing

Note: SOLIDWORKS Electrical 3D requires a SOLIDWORKS seat. Talk to us about what your team needs.

Migrating from AutoCAD Electrical?

SOLIDWORKS Electrical supports DWG and DXF import from AutoCAD Electrical, including symbol mapping and wire attribute transfer. SOLIDWORKS provides migration tools to help map legacy symbols to the Electrical library. For EPLAN, DXF export can be imported as a starting point. We can advise on the cleanest migration path for your specific legacy tool and project history.

What You Can Do with SOLIDWORKS Electrical

Foundation
Schematic Design That Moves at Engineering Speed

Most electrical engineers waste significant time on the busywork of schematic creation: manually numbering wires, writing reports by hand, hunting for component specs. SOLIDWORKS Electrical automates all of it. Draw your schematic from a library of IEC and ANSI-compliant symbols, pull real manufacturer components with actual electrical properties from the 500,000-part library, and let the software handle wire numbering, cross-references, and terminal strip generation automatically.

  • IEC 60617 and ANSI Y32.2 symbol libraries included
  • Manufacturer parts from Schneider, Siemens, Phoenix Contact, Molex, and more
  • Automated wire numbering with user-defined formats
  • Single-line and multi-line (ladder) diagram support
  • PLC I/O rack configuration and address management
  • Terminal strip design with plug/socket pairing
SOLIDWORKS Electrical schematic editor with IEC-compliant wiring diagram and component library
For control panel designers: If you are drawing the same panel diagrams repeatedly with minor variations, Electrical's project templates and reuse functions cut your documentation time significantly. We see customers reduce schematic creation time by 50–70% after implementation.
3D Integration
Route Cables and Harnesses in the Actual Assembly

SOLIDWORKS Electrical 3D lets you route cables, wires, and harnesses directly inside the mechanical assembly — not in a separate tool, not by hand. The routing happens in context: you see the enclosure, the connectors, the brackets, and the clearance constraints as you work. The software auto-calculates cable lengths from the actual routed path, not a rough estimate from a schematic.

  • Route cables, conduits, and harnesses in 3D mechanical context
  • Auto-calculate cable lengths from the 3D routed path
  • Clearance checks against mechanical components
  • Flatten harnesses into manufacturing drawings with bend allowances
  • Connector placement driven by schematic data
SOLIDWORKS Electrical 3D showing cable harness routing through a mechanical assembly
For machine builders: Harness design is one of the most painful handoffs from engineering to the floor. Electrical 3D generates flattened harness drawings that your wiring team can actually build from — with real cable lengths, not rough estimates that get corrected on the floor.
Bidirectional Sync
Schematic and 3D Model Stay in Sync — Automatically

The version mismatch between electrical schematics and mechanical models is one of the most common sources of rework in electromechanical product development. The electrical team adds a connector; the mechanical team does not know. The mechanical team repositions a bracket; the cable routing is now wrong. SOLIDWORKS Electrical's bidirectional sync eliminates this. Changes in the schematic push into the 3D model. Changes in the 3D model update the schematic. Both teams are always looking at the same design.

  • Add a component in the schematic → it appears in the 3D model
  • Reroute a cable in 3D → the schematic updates
  • Change a connector type → both views update simultaneously
  • Conflict detection flags disconnects between schematic and model
  • Project-level synchronization across multi-sheet schematics
SOLIDWORKS Electrical showing real-time synchronization between 2D schematic and 3D model
Why this matters: Most ECAD and MCAD tools synchronize via file export, which means someone has to remember to do it and ECN tracking becomes a manual process. Electrical's sync is automatic — there is no export step, no "latest version" guessing.
Manufacturing Output
Reports That Go Directly to the Floor — No Re-Entry

The value of a good schematic is in what you can generate from it. SOLIDWORKS Electrical's report engine produces BOM, wire lists, terminal strip drawings, cable schedules, and "from-to" connection tables directly from the schematic data. These are not manually assembled spreadsheets — they are generated automatically and they update when the schematic changes. Purchasing gets accurate parts lists. The panel builder gets a terminal layout. The wiring team gets connection tables. No manual transcription.

  • Bill of materials with manufacturer part numbers and quantities
  • Wire list with wire number, gauge, color, and from/to connections
  • Terminal strip drawings with plug/socket pairing
  • Cable schedule with routed lengths and connector assignments
  • "From-to" connection reports for wire harness assembly
  • Custom report templates to match your shop documentation standards
SOLIDWORKS Electrical automated BOM and wire list report output
For purchasing and production: If your electrical reports currently come out of the design tool as PDFs that someone re-types into your ERP, Electrical's export can feed structured data directly into your procurement and production workflow. We configure this as part of implementation.

Common Questions About SOLIDWORKS Electrical

No — SOLIDWORKS Electrical Schematic is a standalone product. Electrical engineers who only work in 2D diagrams do not need a SOLIDWORKS seat to use it. SOLIDWORKS Electrical 3D (and the Professional tier which includes 3D) does require a SOLIDWORKS seat because it operates as an add-in to the 3D modeling environment.
SOLIDWORKS Premium includes basic pipe, tube, and wire routing tools — these are geometry-based and work in the mechanical model. They do not have schematic design, manufacturer component libraries, wire numbering, report generation, or bidirectional sync with an electrical schematic. SOLIDWORKS Electrical is a purpose-built electrical CAD tool that treats the schematic as the authoritative source and syncs to the 3D model from there. If you are doing anything beyond simple wire routing through a panel, Electrical is the right tool.
Yes. SOLIDWORKS Electrical supports DWG and DXF import from AutoCAD Electrical, including symbol mapping and wire attribute transfer. Migrating from AutoCAD Electrical is a supported workflow, and SOLIDWORKS provides migration tools to help map legacy symbols to the Electrical library. For EPLAN, direct import is not native, but DXF export from EPLAN can be imported as a starting point. We can advise on the cleanest migration path for your specific legacy tool.
The library is maintained by Trace Software and contains over 500,000 components from major electrical manufacturers — Schneider Electric, Siemens, ABB, Phoenix Contact, Molex, TE Connectivity, and many others. Each component includes electrical properties (voltage, current rating, amperage), the associated IEC/ANSI symbol, and the 3D model where available. You can search by manufacturer, part number, or specification, and add components directly to your schematic. Custom components can be added using the built-in component editor.
Yes. Upgrades are handled through your annual subscription — you pay the difference between tiers. All your project data, custom component libraries, and templates carry over when you upgrade. Many teams start with Schematic and add 3D routing capability once the electrical team is comfortable with the schematic workflow. We can help plan the rollout so the transition is smooth.
Indirectly — SOLIDWORKS Electrical generates structured BOM output (with manufacturer part numbers and quantities) that can be fed into DELMIAWorks for purchasing and production planning. The integration is typically handled through PDM (SOLIDWORKS PDM Professional), which collects Electrical project data alongside SOLIDWORKS files and passes the combined BOM to the ERP. We implement this full workflow for customers running both products.

Ready to see SOLIDWORKS Electrical in action?

We can walk you through a demo using your type of product — control panel, machine design, or harness assembly — and help you figure out which tier fits your team's workflow.

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