I’ll be straight with you. I review products for a living, and “personalised” usually makes me wince – it’s often a thin gimmick that costs more for less. So I went into CaseCompany expecting to write a polite shrug of a review. Instead I ended up ordering three cases, badgering two friends into trying it, and rewriting my opinion. This is the long, honest version of what I found, flaws and all.
The premise is simple. You pick your exact phone, choose a case build, and design the back – photo, text, pattern, collage, or one of their ready-made looks. The whole thing is made to order and shipped from the Netherlands. If you want to poke around while you read, open the CaseCompany studio in another tab and we’ll go properly deep.
The 30-second verdict
A custom case is worth it if your design is good and your case build matches your life. The print quality is genuinely high; the fit is model-specific and snug.
Use a bright, high-resolution image, pick tough if you’re a dropper, and treat the on-screen preview as gospel – it’s accurate.
First, why custom at all?
Here’s the honest reasoning. A phone case is the accessory you touch most and choose least. We grab whatever’s on the shelf, hate it quietly, and replace it when it cracks. Custom flips that. You spend ten minutes once, and you get something that’s actually yours for the next year or two. Framed like that, the small premium starts to make sense.
And the numbers back the brand up a bit. A 9.3 out of 10 customer score across tens of thousands of reviews, with 94% saying they’d recommend it. That’s not nothing for a category full of tat. Curious what people are actually buying? The bestseller designs are a good temperature check.

The case builds, compared honestly
This is the decision that makes or breaks your happiness, so I tested across the main builds. The short story: there isn’t a “best” one, there’s a best one for you. A slim printed case feels lovely but offers less protection. A tough build shrugs off drops but adds bulk. A transparent base shows your design and your phone’s colour through the sides. Here’s how I’d steer you.
| Build | Protection | Feel | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Soft / flexible | Moderate | Slim, grippy | Everyday, easy on-off |
| Tough / shockproof | High | Chunkier, reassuring | Droppers and commuters |
| Clear base | Moderate | Light, see-through sides | Showing the design and phone |
My picks after living with all three: tough for daily chaos, soft if you value a slim pocket, clear if your design leans photographic. I genuinely use a different one depending on the week. See the builds available for your exact model on the case types page and feel the difference.
Print quality: the part I doubted most
This was my big question going in. Cheap custom printing fades, smudges, or comes out washed-looking. CaseCompany’s didn’t. The colours landed saturated, the detail held up, and the print wraps to the very edge instead of stopping short with an ugly border. On a bold graphic it looks crisp; on a good photo it looks almost glossy. I was, reluctantly, impressed.

The caveat – and it’s a real one – is that the print can only be as good as your file. Feed it a low-resolution screenshot and it will faithfully reproduce a low-resolution screenshot. That’s physics, not a flaw. Browse a few of the design styles below to see what the printer can do when it’s fed properly.
Swipe through the design styles →
Sizing and fit: model-specific, and it matters
Because each case is cut for one device, fit was excellent on all three I ordered – the buttons lined up, the camera cutout was exact, the ports were clear. But that precision cuts both ways. Choose the wrong model in the dropdown and you’ll get a beautifully made case for a phone you don’t own. So slow down at that first step and confirm your model number.
The fit is only as good as the model you select. Get that one dropdown right and everything else just works.
If you’re upgrading phones soon, it’s worth waiting until the new one’s in your hand before ordering. A custom case is tied to a specific body, and that’s the trade-off for the snug fit. Ready to lock in the right one? Select your exact model here before you design.
Gifting: where it quietly shines
Here’s the use case I didn’t expect to love. A custom case is a brilliant, affordable gift – a photo of someone’s kids, their pet, an inside joke. It feels thoughtful without costing a fortune, and the made-to-order printing means it lands looking premium. Just confirm the recipient’s phone model first, because you can’t fudge that. The same goes for the matching ring holders, MacBook and iPad cases, which make a neat little set.

The verdict, with the one real flaw
What won me over
Genuinely high print quality, model-exact fit, a builder that’s actually fun, strong reviews, and a brilliant gifting angle across phones, MacBooks and iPads.
The one honest flaw
It’s tied to one phone model and one image file. Upgrade your phone or feed it a poor photo, and the magic evaporates. Garbage in, garbage out.
So is a custom phone case worth it? For me, a clear yes – with conditions. Bring a good image, match the build to your habits, and double-check your model, and you’ll get something that genuinely beats anything on a shop shelf. Cut corners on those three things and you’ll be lukewarm about it. That’s the whole truth.
I went in a sceptic and came out with three cases I actually like. That doesn’t happen often in this job. If you’ve been carrying a tired generic case and quietly resenting it, this is the easy fix. Design your own at CaseCompany and do it properly the first time.



