Buyer's Desk
How to Calculate ROI on a Refurbished CT or MRI Scanner
April 21, 2026 · 7 min · Medical Imaging Specialists

Practical considerations, risk points, and what to ask before you buy, service, move, or maintain imaging equipment.
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Buying a refurbished CT or MRI scanner is a significant capital investment — but it’s also one of the most profitable decisions a clinic, hospital, or imaging center can make. The key is knowing how to calculate your return on investment (ROI) before you sign a purchase agreement.
Unlike new systems that carry price tags of $1 million to $3 million or more, refurbished imaging equipment typically costs 40–60% less while delivering the same clinical performance. That price difference doesn’t just save money — it compresses your break-even timeline and amplifies your returns.
Here’s how to run the numbers so you can buy with confidence.
What Goes Into an ROI Calculation for Medical Imaging Equipment?
At its core, ROI for a CT or MRI scanner is straightforward:
ROI = (Net Revenue from the System – Total Cost of Ownership) / Total Cost of Ownership × 100
But the inputs require careful attention. You need to account for both the full cost of owning the system and the realistic revenue it will generate over its useful life.
The Cost Side
Your total cost of ownership includes more than the purchase price. Make sure you factor in:
- Acquisition cost — The purchase price of the refurbished system, including any negotiated warranty or bundled service.
- Shipping, rigging, and installation — De-installation from the previous site, crating, freight, and professional installation at your facility. Budget $50,000–$150,000 depending on modality and distance.
- Site preparation — Electrical upgrades, HVAC modifications, RF shielding (for MRI), structural reinforcement, and radiation shielding (for CT). This can range from $30,000 for a straightforward CT install to $250,000+ for a full MRI suite build-out.
- Annual service costs — Whether you purchase a full-service contract or manage time-and-materials (T&M) repairs, plan for $80,000–$200,000 per year for CT and $100,000–$300,000 per year for MRI, depending on the system and coverage level.
- Consumables and replacement parts — CT X-ray tubes ($60,000–$150,000 every 3–5 years), MRI cryogen refills, injector supplies, and routine replacement components.
- Staffing — Technologist salaries, radiologist reading fees (if outsourced), and front-office staff for scheduling and billing.
- Financing costs — If you’re financing the purchase, include interest payments in your total cost calculation.
The Revenue Side
Revenue depends on your volume, payer mix, and the procedures you’ll perform. Key variables include:
- Procedures per day — A busy outpatient CT scanner might perform 15–25 scans per day. MRI throughput is typically lower, around 8–15 exams per day, due to longer scan times.
- Reimbursement per procedure — Medicare reimbursement for a CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis with contrast runs approximately $200–$300 at the technical component. Private insurance reimbursement is often 1.5–3x higher. MRI reimbursements tend to be higher per exam, with brain MRIs reimbursing $250–$500+ for the technical component.
- Operating days per year — Most outpatient centers operate 250–260 days per year. Hospitals may scan 365 days.
- Utilization rate — New programs may start at 40–50% capacity and grow. Established centers often run at 70–85% utilization.
Running the Numbers: A Refurbished CT Scanner Example
Let’s walk through a realistic scenario for an outpatient imaging center purchasing a refurbished 64-slice CT scanner.
Costs (Year 1):
- Refurbished 64-slice CT purchase: $250,000
- Shipping and installation: $75,000
- Site preparation: $50,000
- Full-service contract: $100,000/year
- Staffing (1 tech + admin share): $90,000/year
- Year 1 total: $565,000
Costs (Years 2–5):
- Service contract: $100,000/year
- Staffing: $90,000/year
- Tube replacement (Year 4): $100,000
- Years 2–5 total: $860,000
5-year total cost: ~$1,425,000
Revenue:
- 15 scans/day × 250 days = 3,750 scans/year
- Average blended reimbursement (technical component): $275/scan
- Annual revenue: $1,031,250
- 5-year revenue: ~$5,156,000
5-Year ROI: ($5,156,000 – $1,425,000) / $1,425,000 × 100 = 262%
Break-even point: approximately 17 months.
Now compare that to a new 64-slice CT at $750,000–$1,000,000. The acquisition cost alone pushes your break-even timeline out by 6–12 months, and the revenue generated is identical — the scanner produces the same images and supports the same billing codes.
How Refurbished Equipment Amplifies ROI
The math makes it clear: refurbished imaging equipment doesn’t just save money upfront. It structurally improves your ROI in three ways.
1. Lower entry cost compresses break-even. When your capital outlay is 40–60% less, you start generating positive returns faster. For many facilities, a refurbished CT scanner pays for itself within 12–18 months rather than 24–30 months for a new system.
2. Same revenue-generating capability. A refurbished GE LightSpeed VCT or Siemens SOMATOM Definition produces the same diagnostic images as when it left the factory. Reimbursement rates are tied to the procedure, not the age of the equipment.
3. Capital preserved for growth. The $500,000+ you save by choosing refurbished can fund a second modality, facility expansion, marketing to drive patient volume, or simply stay in reserve for operating expenses. More available capital means more flexibility to grow revenue.
Factors That Can Make or Break Your ROI
Even with favorable economics, some variables can significantly shift your returns:
- Volume is king. A scanner sitting idle doesn’t generate revenue. Before purchasing, validate your referral base, patient demographics, and marketing plan. A realistic ramp-up projection is essential.
- Payer mix matters. Facilities in markets with a higher percentage of commercially insured patients will see stronger reimbursements. Heavy Medicare/Medicaid populations mean tighter margins per scan.
- Service costs can erode returns. An unreliable system with frequent downtime costs you in two ways: repair bills and lost revenue from canceled scans. This is why buying from a reputable refurbisher with strong warranty and service support is critical.
- Parts availability impacts long-term viability. End-of-life systems with scarce parts face escalating maintenance costs. Choose systems with healthy parts ecosystems and long remaining support windows.
- Don’t ignore the soft costs. Staff turnover, billing inefficiencies, and slow credentialing with insurance companies can all delay your revenue ramp. Plan for a 3–6 month ramp period when projecting first-year revenue.
How to Strengthen Your ROI Before You Buy
Smart buyers don’t just calculate ROI — they engineer it. Here are practical steps to maximize your return:
- Choose the right system for your volume and clinical needs. Don’t overbuy. A 64-slice CT handles the vast majority of outpatient work. You don’t need 128 or 256 slices unless your clinical program specifically demands it.
- Negotiate bundled service. Many refurbished equipment vendors offer first-year service contracts bundled with the purchase. This locks in your Year 1 service costs and reduces surprises.
- Buy from a vendor who also provides service. When your equipment supplier is also your service provider, they have a vested interest in keeping your system running. Alignment matters.
- Plan your site prep early. Delays in construction or permitting push back your go-live date and delay revenue. Start site planning before the system ships.
- Build your referral pipeline before installation. Physician outreach, insurance credentialing, and community marketing should all begin months before your scanner is operational.
The Bottom Line
Refurbished CT and MRI scanners deliver compelling ROI for clinics, outpatient centers, and hospitals that do their homework. Lower acquisition costs, identical clinical capability, and compressed break-even timelines make refurbished equipment one of the strongest capital investments in healthcare.
The key is running honest numbers — realistic volume projections, complete cost accounting, and a clear-eyed view of your market.
Medical Imaging Specialists helps buyers do exactly that. As a full-service refurbished imaging equipment company based in Bradenton, Florida, we sell, install, and service CT, MRI, and PET/CT systems for facilities across the US, Caribbean, and Latin America. Whether you’re opening a new imaging center or replacing an aging scanner, our team can help you find the right system, plan your installation, and support you with parts and service for the long haul.
Ready to run the numbers on a refurbished imaging system? Contact Medical Imaging Specialists to discuss your project and get a no-obligation quote.
Related Reading
- Read next: Refurbished Imaging Equipment Total Cost Of Ownership
- Read next: Financing Refurbished Medical Imaging Equipment
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