Budget Planning

The Machine Vision Budget Planning Guide

A practical tool for engineers and managers planning a machine vision investment. Scope your project, understand every cost line, and build a budget you can take to your finance team, all before you talk to a single supplier.

How to Use This Guide

Plan before you price

This guide is designed to help you plan and budget for a machine vision project before you start talking to suppliers. It covers the questions you need to answer, the components you need to budget for, the hidden costs that catch people out, and a worksheet you can fill in to build an internal business case.


If you have already read our pricing page, this guide takes the next step: turning those ranges into a practical project budget.

This is not a quote

The cost ranges given here are indicative and based on typical projects we have seen over 18 years of supplying machine vision systems across the UK and Europe. Your actual costs will depend on your specific application, and we would always recommend a feasibility conversation before committing to a budget.

Step 1

Project Scoping Questions

Before you can budget accurately, you need to answer these questions. If you cannot answer them yet, that is useful information too. It tells you where you need feasibility work before committing to hardware.

The Inspection Task

  • What are you inspecting? Defects, dimensions, presence or absence, text, barcodes, labels
  • What is the smallest feature or defect you need to detect, in mm or µm?
  • What is the field of view the camera needs to see in one image?
  • What pass or fail criteria will the system apply?
  • How many inspection points per part or product?

Speed and Throughput

  • What is the line speed or cycle time?
  • How many parts per minute need to be inspected?
  • Is this continuous motion on a conveyor, or triggered with a stationary part?
  • What is the maximum acceptable inspection time per part?

Environment

  • What is the operating temperature range?
  • Is there vibration, dust, or moisture?
  • Is this a washdown environment?
  • What ambient lighting conditions exist, and can they be controlled?
  • Is there space for a camera, lens, and lighting at the required working distance?

Integration

  • Does the system need to communicate with a PLC or line controller?
  • What I/O do you need? Digital outputs, Ethernet/IP, Profinet, serial
  • Does the system need to reject parts or just flag them?
  • Will there be multiple cameras or a single camera?
  • Does the system need to store images for traceability?

People and Support

  • Who will operate the system day to day?
  • Who will maintain and troubleshoot it?
  • Do you have in-house machine vision expertise?
  • Will you need training for operators and engineers?
  • Do you need ongoing support from the supplier?
Step 2

Component Budget Ranges

These ranges are based on typical UK and European pricing for industrial-grade machine vision components. Budget options exist below these ranges, and specialist applications can exceed them. Use these as a planning baseline.

£500 – £5,000

Area Scan Camera

Price driven by resolution, speed, and interface. GigE cameras at the lower end, high-speed CoaXPress at the upper.

£1,500 – £15,000

Line Scan Camera

Resolution from 1K to 16K and interface are the main cost drivers. CoaXPress models at the higher end.

£3,000 – £20,000

3D Camera

Structured light, laser triangulation, and time-of-flight each cover different price and performance ranges.

£1,000 – £5,000

Smart Camera

All-in-one units with built-in processing. Lower total system cost but less flexibility.

£100 – £1,500

Lens, Fixed Focal Length

C-mount lenses for most applications. Precision optics for demanding tasks sit at the higher end.

£500 – £5,000

Lens, Telecentric

Required for dimensional measurement where perspective distortion is unacceptable.

£200 – £3,000

Lighting, LED

Bar lights, ring lights, dome lights, backlights. Geometry and wavelength drive the specification.

£500 – £5,000

Frame Grabber

Only needed for CoaXPress or Camera Link cameras. GigE and USB cameras connect directly.

£1,000 – £5,000

Industrial PC

Fanless, real-time I/O, rated for industrial environments. Consumer PCs are not suitable.

£1,000 – £10,000+

Software Platform

Per-seat or per-system licensing. Zebra Aurora, Matrox MIL, and HALCON are common commercial platforms.

£200 – £2,000

Mounting and Enclosures

Often overlooked. Custom brackets, IP-rated enclosures, cable management.

£100 – £500

Cabling and Connectors

Industrial-grade cables, connectors, and any extension or junction hardware.

Step 3

Hidden Costs Checklist

These are the costs that rarely appear on the initial component quote but will appear in your project budget. Missing them is one of the most common reasons machine vision projects exceed their planned spend.

Engineering and specification

£2,000 – £10,000+

System design, feasibility testing, lighting evaluation, software configuration. This is the work that determines whether the system will actually work. Skipping it to save money is the most expensive decision you can make.

Integration and commissioning

£1,000 – £10,000+

PLC integration, I/O wiring, network configuration, production line interfacing. Depends heavily on the complexity of the existing automation.

Training

£500 – £3,000

Operator training and engineer training. A system that nobody knows how to maintain is a system that will stop working.

Ongoing support

£1,000 – £5,000 per year

Annual support contracts, software maintenance, remote troubleshooting. Factor this into total cost of ownership.

Spare parts

£500 – £2,000

A spare camera, lighting unit, and key cables. If a camera fails on a Friday afternoon, how long can your line be down?

Development and R&D time

Internal cost

Your own engineers' time spent specifying, testing, integrating, and debugging. This is real cost even if it does not appear on a purchase order.

Environmental protection

£200 – £2,000

IP-rated enclosures, air purge systems, cooling solutions, protective windows. Often discovered after installation, not before.

Network infrastructure

£500 – £3,000

Dedicated network switches, cable runs, and any upgrades needed to support high-bandwidth cameras.

Step 4

Interactive Budget Worksheet

Fill in an estimated cost for each line item based on the ranges above. Totals update automatically, giving you a realistic planning figure to take to your finance team or management for approval. Use the print button to save a copy for your business case.

Hardware
Subtotal: Hardware£0
Software
Subtotal: Software£0
Services
Subtotal: Services£0
Internal Costs
Subtotal: Internal Costs£0
Ongoing, Annual
Subtotal: Annual Costs£0
Total Project Budget
£0
Total Annual Running Cost
£0
Step 5

Where to Invest and Where to Save

Not all components carry equal weight in determining system performance. Here is a practical guide to where premium investment pays off and where budget options are acceptable.

Lighting
Invest more

Almost always. Lighting quality determines image quality, and image quality determines everything else. The difference between cheap and good lighting is often a few hundred pounds, but the downstream impact on algorithm complexity and reliability is enormous.

Acceptable to save

Only when the inspection task is trivial and ambient conditions are fully controlled, which is rare in production.

Lenses
Invest more

For measurement applications and any system where optical distortion matters. A good lens with a budget camera will outperform a good camera with a budget lens.

Acceptable to save

For simple presence or absence checks or barcode reading where optical precision is less critical.

Camera
Invest more

When speed, resolution, or sensor quality is genuinely the limiting factor. High-speed lines and tight tolerances justify premium cameras.

Acceptable to save

When the resolution and frame rate requirements are comfortably within the capabilities of a mid-range camera. Over-specifying the camera is one of the most common ways to waste budget.

Software
Invest more

When you need long-term maintainability, commercial support, and the ability for non-specialists to modify applications. The cost of free open-source software often exceeds commercial platforms once you factor in internal development and support time.

Acceptable to save

When you have strong internal software capability and are building a system you will maintain entirely in-house.

Industrial PC
Invest more

When the system runs in a harsh environment with temperature, dust, or vibration challenges, or when real-time I/O is critical.

Acceptable to save

Rarely. Consumer PCs in industrial environments are a false economy. The cost difference is small relative to the downtime risk.

Engineering services
Invest more

For your first vision project, for complex applications, and whenever you are not 100% confident in your specification. The cost of a feasibility study is a fraction of the cost of buying the wrong system.

Acceptable to save

When you have proven internal expertise and are replicating a system design that has already been validated.

The principle: invest in image quality through the camera, lens, and lighting, and you save on the software side. A system built on a good image is simpler to develop, easier to maintain, and more reliable in production. A system built on a poor image will need constant software workarounds for the life of the installation.
Step 6

Next Steps

Once you have completed the scoping questions and budget worksheet, you have a solid foundation for moving forward.

Confident in your specification?

Contact Clearview's engineering team with your completed scoping questions and budget estimate. We can validate your specification, flag any gaps, and provide a detailed quotation based on your requirements.

Talk to an expert →

Not sure about the specification?

That is exactly what ClearviewFormula is designed for. Our four-stage methodology takes you from initial requirements through feasibility testing in our Insights Lab to a validated system recommendation. It eliminates the guesswork.

Book a feasibility study →

Building an internal business case?

Use the budget worksheet as the financial backbone. Pair it with the cost of the current process: manual inspection labour, defect escape rates, compliance risk. Most machine vision systems pay for themselves within 6 to 18 months.

Review our pricing guide →
Get in Touch

Ready to validate your budget?

Clearview's engineering team is available for a no-obligation initial conversation to help scope your project and validate your numbers.

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