Three visible costs sit above the surface of a copier quote. Twelve hidden costs sit below. The buyers who get the renewal economics right are the ones who price all fifteen at the procurement stage rather than discovering the bottom twelve across the contract term.
The standard vendor quote for an office photocopier shows three numbers prominently: the hardware sticker, the monthly lease line, and the cost-per-page rate. A buyer who anchors on those three signs a contract whose actual five-year stack runs 22 to 34 percent higher than the budgeted figure. The gap lives in twelve line items that sit outside the quote and surface across the contract term — sometimes at install, sometimes at the first software-licence invoice three months in, sometimes at year four when the CPI escalator has compounded enough to be visible, and sometimes at month 60 when the return charge lands on the desk.
The twelve hidden lines are not deceptive on the vendor's part. Most copier dealers will mention each one if asked. The asymmetry is that the procurement conversation rarely asks: the buyer focuses on the headline economics because that is what the quote presents, and the vendor focuses on the headline economics because that is what the buyer treats as the decision input. The pre-procurement work below — pricing all fifteen lines, not just the visible three — produces a TCO figure that holds up across the contract term and a procurement conversation that surfaces issues at signing rather than at year three.
The renewal that surprised a 24-person consultancy
A Madrid management consultancy with two tier-three colour MFPs renewed its print contract in late 2023 with budgeted five-year spend of €38,400 — derived from the lease line plus the CPP rate at the office's measured volume. The procurement meeting did not separately price the eight lines below the waterline because the firm's office manager had inherited the previous contract and treated the renewal as a refresh of the same economics.
By month thirty, the firm had absorbed €4,200 in secure-print software licensing it had not budgeted for, €2,800 in finisher consumables tied to booklet-heavy client deliverables that grew between contract years, and €1,460 in off-hours service callouts during quarterly reporting weekends. The CPI escalator had taken the CPP rate from €0.043 to €0.046 across two years, adding another €820 to year-two and year-three spend. The aggregate variance at month 30 sat at €9,280 above the budgeted figure.
The firm completed the contract but used the audit data to restructure the next renewal: secure-print software was priced separately and competed across three vendors; finisher consumables were folded into a tier-up CPP at a known annual cap; the CPI escalator was capped at 1 percent; and a quarterly audit cadence was written into the new agreement. The next five-year spend variance is forecast at under 4 percent of budget.
Year-30 budget variance · two-device tier-3 fleet
+€9,280