# New vs Refurbished Medical Equipment: Pros, Cons, & Real Costs
When you’re outfitting a medical practice, one of the biggest
decisions you’ll face is whether to buy new or refurbished
equipment.
I’m Dr. Michael Klein. I’ve practiced & ran many health care clinics and
now run Premier Used Medical, a refurbished medical equipment
supplier helping doctors, nurse practitioners, and med spa
owners save money. I’ve seen both sides of this decision —
and I’ll be honest about both.
Here’s the real comparison.
## The Quick Answer
**Buy new** if: cost isn’t a major concern, you need
the absolute newest features, or you’re getting
manufacturer-direct group pricing
**Buy refurbished** if: you want to save 40-60% with
comparable performance, you’re in startup mode, or
you’re outfitting more than one room
Most private practices, med spas, and startup clinics will
save **$15,000-$50,000** by going refurbished — and they
won’t notice a difference in patient care.
## What Does “Refurbished” Actually Mean?
Here’s where buyers get confused.
**Refurbished** medical equipment is NOT:
❌ Used equipment sold “as-is”
❌ Old equipment with a wipe-down
❌ Whatever someone found in a hospital basement
**Refurbished** medical equipment IS:
✅ Tested for full mechanical and electrical function
✅ Cleaned thoroughly inside and out
✅ Reupholstered when needed
✅ Repaired with OEM or equivalent parts
✅ Inspected before being listed for sale
✅ Photos & Videos Provided of Equipment as Needed.
The quality varies HUGELY between vendors. Which is why the
biggest pro/con difference isn’t really new vs refurbished —
it’s good vendor vs bad vendor. More on that below.
## The Pros of Buying NEW Medical Equipment
### ✅ Pro: Latest features and technology
Brand-new exam tables and vital monitors sometimes have updated
features (newer programmable settings, integrated software,
modern aesthetics).
### ✅ Pro: Full manufacturer warranty
A new Midmark or Welch Allyn product comes with a multi-year factory warranty. However Many Customers report very little help when they actually need it.
### ✅ Pro: Predictable lifespan
You know it’s brand-new and the lifespan starts at zero.
## The Cons of Buying NEW Medical Equipment
### ❌ Con: Steep depreciation
A new exam table loses 30-40% of its value the moment it’s
delivered, just like a new car. If you ever resell or trade
in, you’ll feel that hit hard.
### ❌ Con: 6-12 week lead times
Many new medical equipment orders take months to arrive. If
you’re trying to open a practice fast, that’s a problem.
### ❌ Con: Massive impact on startup costs
The single biggest reason new practices end up
underfunded: equipment overspending. Going all-new can easily
add $30,000-$50,000 to your startup budget.
## The Pros of Buying REFURBISHED Medical Equipment
### ✅ Pro: 40-60% savings
This is the headline. A new Midmark 625 exam table can run
$11,500. A professionally refurbished one runs less than half of that—
same brand, same model, often indistinguishable.
### ✅ Pro: Faster delivery
Refurbished inventory is in stock and ships fast. Most of our
orders ship within a week.
### ✅ Pro: Eco-friendly
You’re keeping working equipment out of landfills.
### ✅ Pro: Tax advantages
Most refurbished equipment qualifies for IRS Section 179
expensing AND can stack with the ADA Section 44 tax credit.
### ✅ Pro: Less depreciation hit
If you ever resell, refurbished equipment holds its value
much better proportionally.
## The Cons of Buying REFURBISHED Medical Equipment
### ❌ Con: Quality varies wildly between vendors
This is the BIG one. Some sellers do real refurbishment.
Others slap a coat of paint on something that’s about to fail.
You have to vet your vendor carefully (see below).
### ❌ Con: Harder to find specific configurations
If you need a very specific color, accessory, or upgrade,
refurbished inventory is whatever’s available right now.
## How to Vet a Refurbished Equipment Vendor
If you decide to go refurbished, here’s exactly how to make
sure you’re not getting burned:
### 1. Ask for photos and videos of YOUR specific item
Not stock photos. Not “representative samples.” Your actual
item before it ships. If they refuse, walk away.
### 2. Ask about the refurbishment process
What was tested? Was the upholstery
redone? Get specifics.
### 3. Read their reviews
Look at Google reviews, Better Business Bureau, and the
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