2026 price bands
| Tier | Price (approx.) | What you get |
|---|---|---|
| Entry | €15,000–25,000 | Shorter range, basic colour — interiors, real estate, BIM |
| Mid-range | €30,000–55,000 | Longer range, good RGB, solid accuracy — most pro work |
| Survey-grade | €60,000–90,000+ | Long range, best colour, tightest accuracy, support |
What drives the price
- Range — long-range LiDAR (~120 m) costs more than short-range.
- Accuracy — tighter relative accuracy commands a premium.
- RGB colour — panoramic colourisation adds cost but huge client value.
- Software — registration, mesh and BIM tools are often a separate licence.
Cheaper routes
You do not always need top tier. Entry units handle interiors and BIM well. Used scanners from upgrading firms can cut cost sharply — check sensor hours and calibration. Renting is ideal for occasional jobs or to test a model on your own sites before buying. See the buyer's guide to match a tier to your work.
Total cost of ownership
The scanner is the start. Add software (sometimes annual), training, control/correction for georeferencing, batteries and support. Factoring these in up front avoids a nasty surprise after purchase.
Questions fréquentes
How much does a handheld SLAM scanner cost?
In 2026, entry handheld SLAM scanners cost about €15,000–25,000, mid-range units €30,000–55,000, and survey-grade systems €60,000–90,000 or more, before software, training and support.
What is the cheapest SLAM scanner?
Entry-level handheld SLAM units start around €15,000–25,000. Buying used or renting can lower the effective cost further, which is sensible for occasional use or testing.
Is a used SLAM scanner worth it?
Often yes — firms upgrade regularly, so good used units appear. Check sensor hours, calibration status and that software/licences transfer before buying.
What are the hidden costs of a SLAM scanner?
Beyond the hardware, budget for processing software (sometimes annual), training, georeferencing control or correction services, spare batteries and support contracts.