The best Warhammer 11th Edition terrain footprints and set options from $10 to $254, ranked by how quickly you can actually get them.
11th Edition Warhammer 40k is here, and it’s time to decide which terrain area set is actually worth buying. Right now, five third-party companies have adopted the new footprint standard, roughly at the same time, each with its own spin on the layouts.
Price, material, and shipping origin are all worth looking at before you pull the trigger and place an order. So we went through what’s out there and ranked the lineup to make it easier to pick a set, based on how quickly each one ships to a US address right now, not on which one looks prettiest on Instagram.
- Sale: Five 11th Edition terrain footprint and set options ranked by US shipping ease
- Status: Mix of in-stock and pre-order
- Retailers: Frontline Gaming, Squad Marks, J15 Games, Game Mat EU, Green Stuff World
- Featured products: FLG Battlefield Ready Bundle ($199 to $254), Squad Marks Footprint Sets ($10 to $48), J15 Games 11th Edition Terrain Set ($150), Game Mat EU Area Terrain Footprints ($49), GSW Pre-Painted Foldable Pack (€125)
- Price range: $10 to $254 across the lineup
- Why it’s good: Every set is pre-cut to the 16-piece 11th Edition standard, ranked here by how fast each one actually lands on a US table
How We Ranked the Terrain Area Products
Before we get into the products, the ranking we used reflects logistics more than personal preference. We weighted shipping origin, turnaround time, live stock, and how easy it is to go from checkout to table-ready, which is why Frontline Gaming, Squad Marks, and J15 Games lead the pack for US buyers.
Game Mat EU and Green Stuff World still earn their spots, but if you need something fast, start at the top and work down unless you’ve got extra time and really want that pre-painted GSW setup.
#1: FLG Battlefield Ready Bundle $50 to $254
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Frontline Gaming gets the top spot because they ship out of the US and the new Battlefield Ready Bundle is the closest thing to a one-click table on the list. The bundle pairs the Pyrewaste terrain set, a 44″x60″ Scorched Warzone mat, and the 11th Edition Tool and Token Set.
The package runs $199 to $254, depending on options. If you want to see a deeper breakdown of the set, read our article on it here.
They also have options for just the footprints that sit around the $50 mark, but you’ll also still need your own mat and terrain.
Keep in mind that “Pre-order” is made to order, with about a 3-business-day handoff. That’s the longest lead in the top three, but still the fastest delivery once production clears, because FLG ships domestic.
#2: Squad Marks 11th Edition Terrain Footprint Sets $10 to $48
Squad Marks takes the second slot on the strength of US shipping and an active SPIKEYBITS code that saves 10% off at checkout.
You can grab the footprints in three different materials: neoprene rubber at $25 to $36, clear acrylic at $36 to $48, and MDF at $10 to $16, in either smooth or rough cut. So their entry point is the cheapest on this list, and the high end is still under most one-set retail prices.
The full set has the same 16-piece footprint as every other brand’s, with 4 large rectangles, 2 right-angle triangles, 4 medium rectangles, 2 long lines, and 4 short lines. There’s also an upgrade-only kit for players who already own the previous Squad Marks set, which is the right call given how many tables already have older Squad Marks gear.
For the full breakdown of the two options, see Squad Marks’ three-material footprint sets and the companion Squad Marks’ conversion guide.
#3: J15 Games 11th Edition Terrain Set $28-$150
J15 lands at three because they also ship from the US, and the base-free version is still in stock at $150, and the footprints are just $28. Most full-table options on this list start at or above $150, so the value holds up nicely if you don’t already have your own neoprene bases.
Plus, the set is full-color printed terrain on sprue, so you assemble but don’t paint it, just like FLG’s. J15 says it will take around 30 minutes to put a table together, which lines up with the “we want to play now, not a hobby for a month on it” buyer.
#4 Lighter Creative 11th Edition Terrain Area Set: $30 (with Free Shipping)
- Get 5% Off Your Order Using Discount Code: Spikeybits
Lighter Creative’s new 16-piece terrain area footprint set offers the most features overall. The set uses thin synthetic leather instead of neoprene, so the pieces are flexible, water-resistant, anti-slip, and non-reflective without adding a chunky edge to your ruins and terrain areas.
The big win here is accuracy. We’ve liked Lighter Creative’s Mats because their dimensions are accurate, unlike many neoprene terrain mats and footprints, which tend to be slightly off (especially for 44×60 mats). For tournament layouts, club tables, and pickup games where movement, cover, visibility, and terrain placement need to be clear, precision is important.
It is coming from overseas, so there looks to be a bit of shipping time while these are still being developed and stocked. Once production catches up, though, this should be more regularly available in the future.
#5: Game Mat EU 11th Edition Area Terrain Footprints $49
Game Mat EU sits at four because the company ships out of Prague, but their national-carrier handoff to the US has been the most reliable EU-to-US delivery we’ve seen so far. The set is made of 2mm non-slip mousepad material that’s waterproof, and the print is scratch- and fade-resistant, which is perfect for a footprint that will be under bases every game.
Pre-orders are open now with a July 1, 2026, ship date. The set matches the standard 16-footprint pattern, and the mousepad material gives you the soft-edged feel many players want under their terrain without paying neoprene-mat money. At $49, this lands middle of the pack on cost, too.
So, for anyone who hasn’t ordered from Game Mat in the US before, the national-carrier route is why we rank this one ahead of the bottom slot.
#6: Green Stuff World Pre-Painted Foldable Terrain Pack €125
Green Stuff World rounds out the list at five, because Spain shipping is the slowest route on this list. The pack itself is the most “painted” option on the list, with power towers, generators, defensive barricades, plasma walls, communications towers, walls, and foldable buildings all printed in color and shipped flat.
The logistics are the catch sometimes, as shipping from Spain to the US runs slower and pricier than national-carrier routes, and the package is about 3.8 kilograms, which doesn’t help the freight cost.
For anyone willing to wait three to four weeks, this is a great-looking, fully foldable product.
Final Thoughts on the Best 11th Edition Terrain Footprints
The real story with 11th Edition Warhammer 40k terrain footprints isn’t just who got a set out first. It’s that standardized layouts are about to change how fast players can build legal tables, how stores prep events, and how often “is this ruin in the right spot?” eats up the first 10 minutes of a game.
That makes these footprint sets more than launch-week accessories. They’re likely to become the default table kit for many clubs, RTTs, and garagehammer groups that want games to start easily and stay consistent. FLG, Squad Marks, and J15 are the easy US-first picks if speed matters, while Lighter Creative, Game Mat EU and Green Stuff World make more sense if you’re planning ahead and don’t mind the longer shipping times.
As 11th Edition events start settling into a rhythm, expect the more popular terrain products to be the ones with easy to store options that are accurate, pre-painted and quick to arrive. Good-looking terrain is great, but terrain that keeps the game moving, while being easy to use, is what’ll actually survive the edition.
For the bigger picture on what GW’s own 11th Edition product mix looks like alongside the third-party rush, here’s GW’s own 11th Edition terrain set.
🔗 Related Reads:
- FLG’s $45-off Battlefield Ready Bundle
- Squad Marks’ three-material footprint sets
- FLG’s standalone footprint bases
- The new 11th Edition terrain rules
- Squad Marks’ conversion guide
- Best Tabletop Gaming Mats Ranked for 40k, AoS, and More
- GW’s own 11th Edition terrain set
- The pre-painted terrain debate
Which 11th Edition terrain footprint or set is actually landing on your table first for your launch-day games?









