Refurbished vs New Dental Equipment: A Cost-Benefit Analysis
When does refurbished save you real money? When should you pay the premium for new? Run the numbers on total cost of ownership for CBCT, chairs, and milling machines.
"Refurbished is always cheaper" is too simple. "New is always safer" is also too simple. The right answer depends on the equipment category, your clinic's case volume, and your service access. Here's the honest breakdown.
CBCT imaging equipment
| Factor | New (e.g., Vatech PaX-i3D) | Refurbished (same unit) |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase price | $75k–95k | $22k–35k |
| Warranty | 2–3 years OEM | 6–12 months from exporter |
| Expected service life | 12–15 years | 8–12 years (depending on age at purchase) |
| Image quality (same model) | Identical | Identical |
| Software currency | Latest OEM | Usually latest major, may miss minor updates |
| Financing availability | Common, 3–7 year terms | Cash or short-term only |
Verdict: Refurbished CBCT is one of the highest-ROI decisions in dentistry. A 3-year-old PaX-i3D produces images indistinguishable from a brand-new one — and costs 60% less. If your case volume supports a CBCT at all, refurbished is almost always the right call.
Dental chairs
Dental chairs are the opposite — refurbished is rarely worth it. Reasons:
- • Chairs wear mechanically (hinges, upholstery, water lines) and the wear is hard to reverse.
- • New chairs from Chinese factories ship at $2,500–5,000 — the price gap vs refurbished is small.
- • Hygiene matters — patients prefer visibly new operatories.
Verdict: Buy new chairs. The savings don't justify the drawbacks.
Intraoral scanners
Digital impression technology moves fast. A 2019 scanner is already meaningfully behind a 2024 one in capture speed, tip ergonomics, and cloud/AI integration. Refurbished scanners trade at a steep discount — but so does their useful life.
Verdict: Consider refurbished only if price-constrained AND your planned use is modest (occasional crowns). For implant workflows or ortho treatment plans, new is the better choice.
CAD/CAM milling machines
5-axis milling machines are mechanical — spindles, rails, tool changers all wear. A used unit with 10,000+ hours on the spindle is a service headache waiting to happen.
Verdict: Buy new milling machines, especially from Chinese factories where new pricing is already aggressive ($8–15k).
Dental microscopes
Optical components don't age — a 10-year-old Zeiss microscope is optically identical to a new one. Refurbished microscopes retain exceptional value, provided the optics haven't been damaged.
Verdict: Refurbished makes sense, especially for mid-tier optical systems.
3D printers
LCD resin 3D printers are consumables-driven — the LCD screen has a ~2,000-hour lifespan and is a wear component. Refurbished printers may have limited remaining screen life. New is relatively cheap ($1,500–4,000).
Verdict: Buy new. Small price gap, significant reliability advantage.
Summary table
- ✓ CBCT: Refurbished — big savings, minimal tradeoff
- ✓ Microscope: Refurbished — optics don't age
- ✗ Chair: New — small gap, hygiene matters
- ✗ Scanner: New — tech moves fast
- ✗ Milling: New — mechanical wear
- ✗ 3D Printer: New — LCD is a wear part
Have a specific unit in mind?
Tell us which model you want and your destination port — we'll quote FOB or CIF with a video demo of the actual unit in our warehouse.