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How much a portable ultrasound costs in Australia

A portable ultrasound machine in Australia typically lands between $5,000 and $30,000, with most clinical buyers spending $10,000 to $25,000. Form factor, probe count, and Doppler capability are the biggest price drivers. The machine is rarely the full cost: extra probes and software can add $5,000–$15,000.

Form factor Typical price AUD, GST inclusive, Australian sponsor Common buyer
Handheld / wireless$5,000 – $10,000POCUS, mobile clinicians, GP point-of-care
Laptop-style portable$10,000 – $25,000GP clinics, allied health, women's health, day surgery
Hand-carried diagnostic$20,000 – $30,000+Hospital POCUS, specialist imaging, advanced cardiac
Used or refurbished$3,500 – $15,000Cost-sensitive practices, first-time buyers, single-room clinics
What buyers tell us
Quotes for the same machine usually land within a $1,500–$3,000 range across Australian sponsors. Where they vary most is what's included: probes (a single replacement probe can cost $2,000–$12,000), software, training days, and extended warranty. Always ask for a fully equipped quote with the probes you actually need.

3 common portable ultrasound setups

Most Australian clinical buyers end up with one of these three setups. If you recognise yours, you've narrowed the field. If not, the sections below help you build the spec from the ground up.

Handheld POCUS
Wireless, smartphone-paired. Bedside, mobile, point-of-care assessment.
$5,000 – $10,000Typical, AUD GST inclusive
Form factorWireless probe + phone or tablet
ProbesDual-head (linear + convex) common
DopplerColour standard, PW on premium
UsePOCUS, mobile vet, ED bedside
Most common
Laptop-style portable
Mid-tier workhorse. Clinic-room, multi-application, full keyboard and screen.
$10,000 – $25,000Typical, AUD GST inclusive
Form factorLaptop chassis with attached probes
Probes2–3 typical (linear, convex, plus one more)
DopplerColour and PW standard
UseGP, allied health, women's health, day surgery
Hand-carried diagnostic
Cart-adjacent capability in portable form. Hospital POCUS and advanced specialist imaging.
$20,000 – $30,000+Typical, AUD GST inclusive
Form factorCompact console, optional trolley
Probes3–4+ including phased array
DopplerFull suite incl. spectral and tissue
UseED, ICU, anaesthesia, cardiology, advanced specialist
All tiers
Every system listed on MedicalSearch is supplied by a verified Australian sponsor with ARTG inclusion, regardless of tier or price band.

POCUS vs diagnostic: how far do you need it to go

Point-of-care ultrasound (POCUS) answers a focused yes/no question at the bedside. Diagnostic-grade ultrasound produces reportable images for clinical interpretation, billing, and referral. The wrong choice is the most expensive mistake first-time buyers make.

  • POCUS: "Is there free fluid? Is the bladder full? Is the gallbladder distended?" Answers a focused clinical question at the moment of decision. Handheld and entry-level laptop systems are designed for this.
  • Diagnostic-grade: reportable, archivable images for formal interpretation, billing under Medicare items, or referral. Requires higher image quality, full measurements, structured reporting, and DICOM export.
  • Where most buyers land: laptop-style mid-tier can do both for many use cases. Handheld units sit in POCUS only. Hand-carried diagnostic systems can replace a cart for many specialist applications.
Capability POCUS-only typical Handheld, entry laptop Diagnostic-grade typical Mid-laptop, hand-carried
Image qualityFunctional, screen-readableHigh-resolution, archivable
DopplerColour, sometimes PWFull suite incl. spectral, tissue Doppler
Measurements and packagesBasic, often lockedFull clinical packages, often modular
DICOM and reportingLimited or via appNative DICOM, structured reporting
Probes supportedUsually 1–2 fixed3–4+ swappable
Before you commit
If you plan to bill scans under Medicare or refer images for formal interpretation, confirm with the sponsor and your billing provider that the system, your training, and your scan type all qualify. Equipment alone doesn't determine billing eligibility.

Handheld, laptop-style, or hand-carried

The setups above show what each tier costs and what it's used for. The decision often comes down to physical workflow: weight, battery life, and how the machine moves through your day. Most buyers who switch in the first year switch because they got this wrong.

Form factor Weight device only Battery continuous scan
Handheld / wireless0.3 – 0.5 kg40 – 60 min typical
Laptop-style portable4 – 8 kg1 – 2 hrs (varies)
Hand-carried diagnostic5 – 10 kg1 – 3 hrs (varies)
Quick check
Map a typical scan day in your head. Does the machine travel between rooms, ride in a car, sit on a desk, or move from ward to ward? The answer rules out at least one form factor before you look at any spec sheet.

Choosing the right probes

Probes are where the money is. Most of the value of an ultrasound system sits in the probes, and most of what wears out is the probes. Getting the probe set right matters as much as getting the machine right.

  • Convex (curvilinear): curved face, deep penetration. Workhorse for abdominal, OB/GYN, and general deep imaging.
  • Linear: flat face, high resolution at shallow depth. Vascular access, MSK, tendons, superficial structures.
  • Phased array (cardiac): small footprint to fit between ribs. Cardiac, lung, transcranial. Sector image.
  • Microconvex: compact curved head. Paediatrics, neonatal, small-animal vet.
  • Endocavity: specialist OB/GYN and urology. Stricter reprocessing (AS/NZS 4187).
Probe type Best for
ConvexAbdominal, OB/GYN, general deep imaging. GP and women's health workhorse.
LinearMSK, tendons, vascular access, superficial. Allied health and physio workhorse.
Phased arrayCardiac, lung, intercostal access. ED, ICU, anaesthesia POCUS.
MicroconvexPaediatric, neonatal, small-animal vet.
EndocavityOB/GYN, urology specialist.
Watch out
Some manufacturers bundle probes at a discount with the original purchase that cost two or three times more if added later. If there's any chance you'll add a probe in the next two years, get the quote with and without it now.

New, refurbished, or used

A well-refurbished portable ultrasound from an Australian sponsor can deliver most of the value of a new system for 30–50% less. The risk lives in the probes (where most depreciation sits) and the service path (whether the seller is the original sponsor or a third party).

Pros of buying refurbished or used
  • Lower upfront cost. Typically 30–50% less than equivalent new spec.
  • Faster availability. Often in stock and ready within 1–3 weeks.
  • Proven track record. The model has been in clinical use, with known performance.
Cons of buying refurbished or used
  • Shorter warranty. Refurbished typically 12 months. New is often 36 months.
  • Probe condition risk. Probes degrade with use; replacements are expensive.
  • Older platform. May miss recent imaging tools, AI assists, or software upgrade eligibility.
What to find out if you're going used or refurbished
Ask for the probe inspection report (resolution against a phantom is standard practice). Ask the age and operating hours. Ask about software-upgrade eligibility. A reputable refurbisher answers all three without hesitation.

Running and ownership costs

The purchase price is around 50–65% of total ownership cost over five years. The rest sits in probes, servicing, software, training, and warranty extension. Portable ultrasound has lower running costs than CT or X-ray, but the all-in figure surprises buyers who only price the headline.

5-year ownership mid-tier laptop-style, $15,000 purchase Typical add-on range
Probe replacement (one over 5 years, common)$2,000 – $12,000
Servicing, warranty extension, training$4,000 – $12,500
Software upgrades or feature unlocks$0 – $10,000
Total 5-year add-on cost$8,000 – $35,000

Over 5 years, a typical $15,000 laptop-style portable used regularly totals $23,000–$50,000 all-in. For practices billing scans, payback is usually well under 12 months at moderate volume.

How it fits into your clinical workflow

A portable ultrasound that doesn't fit how your clinic already works gets used less and resold sooner. Image acquisition is one part; storing, reporting, and sharing the scan is the other. Quote stage is the right time to ask, not after delivery.

  • DICOM and PACS: diagnostic-grade systems should support native DICOM export to your PACS. Handheld and entry-level systems may export via app or cloud only. Confirm the export path matches your PACS before you commit.
  • Reporting: structured reporting with worksheet templates speeds clinical workflow and supports billing documentation. Some systems include this; others require a third-party tool.
  • EMR integration: ask whether scan reports flow into your practice management or hospital EMR (Best Practice, Medical Director, MedTech, Bp Premier, hospital systems). Manual re-keying eats clinical time.
  • Cloud vs local storage: cloud-connected systems make remote review easy; they also raise Privacy Act and data residency questions. Confirm where patient data is stored, how it's encrypted, and who can access it.
  • Ease of use and training: if non-specialists will operate the system, prioritise application presets, AI-assisted measurements, and one-touch workflow. Most sponsors include 1–2 days of operator training; clinical scanning skill is separate and longer to build.
Question to ask every sponsor
"Walk me through how a scan moves from probe to patient record in our setup." If they can't describe the path end-to-end (capture, store, report, bill, archive), expect friction once the system arrives.

ARTG, Medicare, and what compliance means for buyers

Portable ultrasound is a Class IIa medical device under the Therapeutic Goods Administration (TGA). All systems supplied legally in Australia must be on the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG), with an Australian sponsor responsible for ongoing compliance. Grey-market imports without ARTG inclusion exist and are cheaper, but carry real legal and clinical risk.

  • ARTG inclusion: every portable ultrasound legally supplied in Australia must be on the ARTG. The Australian sponsor's name must appear on the device or labelling. Ask for the ARTG inclusion number; it's a public record on the TGA website.
  • Sponsor obligations: the sponsor is responsible for adverse-event reporting, recalls, and ongoing conformity. If the sponsor exits the market, your service path is at risk.
  • Electrical safety (AS/NZS 3200.1 / IEC 60601-1): medical electrical equipment must meet these standards. Annual in-service testing per AS/NZS 3551 is standard practice.
  • Probe reprocessing (AS/NZS 4187): applies to reusable probes, especially endocavity. Compatible disinfectants vary by probe; check before you buy.
  • Medicare billing: MBS ultrasound items have requirements covering operator credentialing, equipment standards, and scan documentation. Equipment is one factor; credentialing and scan type also determine eligibility. Confirm with your billing provider before assuming a scan is billable.
When compliance becomes a deal-breaker
If a quote is materially below market and the system doesn't appear on the ARTG, walk away. The saving disappears the first time a service issue, recall, or audit lands and you have no Australian sponsor to call. Verified sponsors on MedicalSearch carry ARTG inclusion as standard.

What to lock in before talking to suppliers

You don't need to resolve the full spec to start comparing quotes. Lock in three things; leave the rest for the supplier conversation. The most common reason buyers delay an RFQ is feeling under-prepared — this is the floor, not the ceiling.

Lock in before quoting Leave open for the supplier conversation
Use case — GP, allied health, vet, ED/ICU, specialist Probe model and brand — sponsors recommend based on use case
Form factor — handheld, laptop-style, or hand-carried Doppler tier — sponsor advises where colour is enough vs PW required
Budget band — rough range, even if wide ($10k–$20k is fine) Software packages — bundle pricing reveals once spec firms up
New vs refurbished — or open to both Specific models — sponsors shortlist 1–2 from their range
If you're not sure on form factor
Submit anyway. Tell the sponsor what you're scanning and where. A good sponsor narrows it for you in the first reply, faster than you can resolve it alone.

Portable ultrasound questions buyers commonly ask

Quick answers to the most-searched questions about portable ultrasound in Australia.

A well-maintained portable ultrasound typically lasts 7–10 years in clinical service before image quality, software support, or probe availability becomes a limiting factor. Industry guidance suggests planning replacement around the 8-year mark. Probes often need replacing before the machine itself.

Replacement probes typically cost $2,000 to $12,000 depending on type and brand. Drops, kinks, and damaged cables are the most common failure modes. Some sponsors offer probe-protection plans worth pricing into the original quote.

Most Australian clinical settings follow AS/NZS 3551 for in-service management of medical equipment, including annual electrical safety testing and a maintenance log. If you don't have in-house biomedical engineering, most sponsors offer a service contract that bundles testing with software updates, typically $800–$2,500 per year for a portable system.

In-stock units typically deliver within 1–3 weeks. Refurbished is often fastest. Built-to-order configurations with specific probes or software can take 6–12 weeks. Ask each sponsor what's in stock vs ordered before finalising the spec.

Yes, with appropriate training. Modern handheld and laptop-style systems are designed for clinicians who aren't full-time sonographers. AI-assisted measurements, presets, and simplified controls have lowered the operator barrier. Equipment makes good operators faster; it doesn't make untrained users competent.

Most Australian sponsors offer software updates for the supported life of the model, often 5–7 years. Some upgrades are free; major feature unlocks (advanced cardiac, AI tools) can be paid. Ask about update policy and end-of-support timing before you buy.

A portable ultrasound typically retains 30–50% of its purchase price after 5 years if probes are in good condition and software is current. Mainstream OEM brands hold value better than less-known imports. Most residual value sits in the probes. Some Australian sponsors offer trade-in programs against new equipment.

Yes. Most Australian medical equipment can be financed through equipment finance, chattel mortgages, or operating leases over 3–5 year terms. EasyAsset Finance offers tailored finance for buyers on MedicalSearch. Leasing is common for higher-end systems where the practice prefers OPEX treatment over capital outlay.

An ARTG inclusion number confirms the device is legally cleared for supply in Australia under TGA regulations. You can search it at the TGA's public ARTG database at tga.gov.au. Any sponsor quoting you should be able to provide the inclusion number for the specific model on offer.

Ask each sponsor to quote an identical probe set and software configuration so the comparison is like-for-like. If a sponsor bundles extras you don't need, ask for the base price separately. Comparing headline figures across different configurations is the most common reason buyers overpay or underspec.

Why buyers choose MedicalSearch

Helping Australian clinical buyers compare medical equipment suppliers since 2005.

1

See exactly what you're comparing across sponsors

Probe sets, software packages, warranty terms, and training days vary between quotes. Seeing them side by side for portable ultrasound means you're comparing total value, not just headline price.

2

One request, multiple quotes — no chasing

Submit your clinical requirements once. Multiple sponsors come back with quotes directly — no repeating your spec, no coordinating separate conversations, no following up.

3

Every sponsor has ARTG inclusion and Australian service

All suppliers on MedicalSearch are vetted Australian sponsors — ARTG registered, with local service engineers and part availability. No grey-market imports, no overseas-only warranty.

Free for buyers, no obligation. Suppliers pay to list; buyers pay nothing.

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