Many buyers focus solely on the initial price tag of an automatic packaging machine, only to discover later that operating costs are bleeding their margins. This guide provides a framework for calculating Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) and Return on Investment (ROI) so you can make a financially sound decision.
Components of Total Cost of Ownership
TCO = Purchase Price + Installation + Energy + Maintenance + Consumables (film waste) + Downtime + Training + Disposal. Over 5 years, purchase price typically accounts for only 15–25% of TCO.
1. Energy Costs
Calculate: Machine power (kW) x operating hours/year x electricity rate. Example: A 3kW machine running 4,000 hours/year at $0.12/kWh costs $1,440/year in electricity. A competitor’s 5kW machine costs $2,400/year – an extra $960 annually. Over 5 years, that’s $4,800 more.
2. Maintenance and Spare Parts
Ask the supplier for a 5-year spare parts list with prices. Common wear parts: seal bands, heating elements, belts, bearings, and sensors. Budget 5–10% of machine price annually for preventive maintenance. Machines with proprietary parts (only from the OEM) are riskier – compare with machines using off-the-shelf industrial components.
3. Film Waste
Every machine wastes film during start-up, splices, and rejects. A typical VFFS machine wastes 2–4% of film. A poorly designed machine might waste 8%. If your annual film cost is $100,000, reducing waste from 8% to 3% saves $5,000/year. Pay attention to the machine’s film tension control and splice detector.
4. Downtime Cost
Calculate lost production cost per hour. Example: Your line produces $5,000 of product value per hour. If Machine A has 98% uptime (2% downtime) and Machine B has 95% uptime (5% downtime), Machine B loses 3% more hours. Over 4,000 hours, that’s 120 extra downtime hours x $5,000 = $600,000 loss per year – far exceeding any purchase price difference.
ROI Calculation Example (Real Case)
Current manual packaging: 10 operators, each $30,000/year = $300,000 labor. Packing speed 20 packs/minute, 30% waste due to human error.
Proposed automatic machine: $80,000 purchase + $5,000 installation. Needs 1 operator ($30,000/year). Speed 60 packs/minute, waste 2%. Annual film savings: $15,000 (assuming $50,000 film spend reduced from 30% waste to 2%).
Annual savings: Labor $270,000 + Film $15,000 = $285,000. Less additional maintenance/energy ($6,000) = $279,000 net saving. Payback period: $85,000 / $279,000 = 0.3 years (3.7 months). 5-year ROI: 1,540%.
Hidden Costs to Include
- Operator training (2–5 days of production downtime)
- Floor reinforcement or utility upgrades (compressed air, electrical)
- Integration with existing conveyor/checkweigher
- Software license renewals for HMI/PLC
- Emergency service contracts (response time guarantees)
How to Get Accurate TCO Data from Suppliers
Ask each potential supplier to fill out a standardized TCO worksheet that includes: average power consumption (kWh/1,000 packs), average film waste percentage, recommended preventive maintenance schedule with part costs, and mean time between failures (MTBF) in hours. Suppliers with efficient machines will be happy to provide this data.
Using TCO analysis, you may find that a $100,000 machine is cheaper over 5 years than a $60,000 machine because of lower energy and waste. Always calculate TCO before comparing price tags.
