A photocopier return on investment calculator for finance teams

Photocopier procurement rarely makes the boardroom agenda, yet a five year fleet contract often exceeds the cost of mid sized server refresh cycles. This calculator gives finance teams a defensible way to compare a current setup against a proposed replacement, with monthly savings, payback period and a three year cumulative position presented in figures rather than vendor narrative.

Why finance teams need a dedicated photocopier ROI model

Most copier proposals arrive bundled into a managed print services pitch, with a flat monthly figure that combines hardware lease, click charges, service, consumables and sometimes paper. The headline number looks tidy. The trouble is that the components move at different rates, on different contracts, and a single line on a finance dashboard hides where the money goes. A finance team needs a model that separates these elements and projects them across the device lifecycle.

Procurement teams often present total cost of ownership figures. ROI is a different question. ROI asks whether the capital and operating outlay of a switch generates returns greater than keeping the current device running. Phrased that way, the decision turns on three numbers: how much the new arrangement saves each month, how much it costs to switch, and how long the new device is expected to remain in service before another refresh.

Photocopier ROI calculator

All figures in euros. The calculator updates as you type. Hover over a field if the label looks ambiguous.

Current device, monthly costs
Proposed device, monthly costs
Current monthly run cost
€0
Proposed monthly run cost
€0
Monthly saving
€0
Payback period
0 mo
3 year net position
€0
Savings minus switching cost
Lifecycle ROI
0%
Net return / switching cost

How to fill in each field

The calculator is only as good as the inputs you give it. Each field below maps to a line on a finance ledger or a clause in a service contract, and most can be pulled from twelve months of invoices.

Lease or amortised purchase per month

If the device is leased, this is the gross monthly lease cost net of VAT. If the device was bought outright, divide the purchase price by the depreciation schedule applied in your accounts, usually 36 or 60 months. Including an amortised figure keeps the comparison fair when one option is a lease and the other a capital purchase.

Service contract per month

A managed print service contract usually rolls click charges and maintenance into one bill. If your invoice does that, split the line: the click portion goes into the cost per page fields below, and the service portion stays here. A clean separation prevents the same cost being counted twice.

Mono and colour cost per page

The contracted click rate, in euros per page. Some contracts use thousandths of a euro, others use fractions of a cent. Convert everything to euros to keep the calculation consistent. Where a contract is inclusive of toner, the click charge already covers consumables. Where toner is bought separately, add an estimated consumables cost per page to the click rate before entering it here.

Mono and colour pages per month

Pull a twelve month meter history and average it. A single month skews the result, particularly if it falls in a quiet trading period or coincides with a marketing push. If meter data is not available, multiply employee headcount by the European office average of around 15 to 18 pages per employee per day, then by 20 working days.

One off switching cost

Includes installation, removal of the old device, network configuration, basic user training and any early termination fees on the existing contract. Procurement sometimes treats this as a sunk cost and excludes it from the comparison. For ROI purposes it sits in the numerator: the saving has to recover this outlay before the project generates a net return.

Expected useful life

The number of months the proposed device will remain in service before another refresh. Lease terms in Spain commonly run to 60 months. A shorter horizon raises the bar the project must clear. A longer horizon flatters the figures, so default to the contracted term.

How to interpret the output

The calculator produces six numbers. Each answers a different question and feeds a different decision.

OutputQuestion it answersThreshold to look for
Current monthly run costWhat does the existing device cost to operate, fully loaded?Reconcile against ledger; deviation above 5% means an input is wrong.
Proposed monthly run costWhat will the new device cost on the same fully loaded basis?Compare against the vendor quote line by line.
Monthly savingHow much falls to the bottom line every month?Negative means the proposal costs more, reconsider before signing.
Payback periodWhen does the switch pay back its one off cost?Under 24 months is a strong case; over 36 months invites scrutiny.
3 year net positionCumulative euros saved over a standard finance horizon.Use this figure for board sign off, not the headline saving.
Lifecycle ROIReturn as a percentage of the switching outlay.Anything above 200% over a 5 year term is defensible.
Note on payback period. If the proposed monthly run cost is higher than the current one, payback never arrives and the field shows a dash. That is a signal the project is justified on grounds other than direct cost, such as security, sustainability or service quality, and those grounds need to stand on their own.

Worked example

Consider a 45 person consultancy in Barcelona running a four year old A3 colour MFP. Twelve months of meters show an average of 6,500 mono and 1,800 colour pages per month. The current lease is 180 euros a month, service is 65 euros, and contracted click rates are 0.012 euros mono and 0.078 euros colour. Fully loaded, the device costs around 384 euros a month.

A replacement quote arrives offering a newer machine at 160 euros lease and 48 euros service, with click rates of 0.0085 mono and 0.055 colour. Switching costs come to 450 euros once exit fees and a half day of staff training are factored in. The lease term is 60 months.

Plugged into the calculator, the proposed setup runs at around 314 euros a month, saving 70 euros monthly. Payback arrives in roughly seven months. Over three years the project nets close to 2,070 euros after recovering the switching cost. Over the full 60 month term the lifecycle ROI lands near 833%. A finance team would approve this on the numbers alone.

Common pitfalls when running the figures

Several errors recur in finance team copier reviews, and most of them inflate the projected saving. Knowing where the model breaks helps the team challenge a vendor proposal before signing.

Mixing inclusive and exclusive click rates

The current contract may bundle toner into the click charge while the new quote prices toner separately. Failing to normalise these turns a flat comparison into an unfavourable one for the incumbent device. Always restate both sides on the same basis before entering values.

Ignoring volume tiers

Some click rates step up once the device exceeds a contracted page band. If actual volume is consistently above the band, the effective rate is higher than the headline figure. Apply the blended rate, not the entry tier, when filling in the calculator.

Treating the switching cost as immaterial

Early termination penalties on the incumbent contract can run to several months of fees. If the project is justified by a small monthly saving, an under estimated switching cost can push payback beyond the new lease term, eroding the case entirely.

Skipping the sensitivity check

The default values in the calculator are illustrative. Before taking a figure to the board, vary the volume assumptions by plus and minus 20% and confirm the project still clears the threshold. If the case only holds at the optimistic end, treat the recommendation with caution.

A note on lease versus purchase. Amortising a capital purchase across 60 months puts it on a comparable footing with a 60 month lease for ROI purposes. It does not capture the financing cost of tying up cash, the residual value at end of life, or the off balance sheet treatment of an operating lease. Where the financing structure is itself part of the decision, run a separate weighted average cost of capital comparison alongside this calculator.

What the calculator does not capture

Three considerations sit outside the model and should be assessed separately. The first is energy consumption, which on a high duty A3 colour device can amount to 60 to 90 euros a year and shifts the operating cost line by a small but persistent amount. The second is downtime risk: an older device with rising fault counts imposes hidden cost on staff time and missed deadlines, which rarely appears on the ledger but materialises in productivity reports. The third is security posture, where firmware patching, hard drive encryption and audit logging on a newer device may carry a value to the organisation that exceeds the monthly saving.

Finance teams typically handle these by adding a qualitative section to the recommendation memo, with the ROI calculator output as the headline figure and the wider considerations recorded as supporting evidence. The board then has a single number to defend, with the texture behind it documented.

Using the output in a procurement decision

A clean ROI output supports three procurement conversations. Internally it gives the finance team a defensible position when challenging IT or operations on a preferred vendor. Externally it gives procurement a basis for asking the incumbent to match or beat the proposal before contract end, which often recovers the saving without the disruption of a switch. With the board, the lifecycle ROI figure provides the headline that approval committees expect for any commitment running beyond two years.

For organisations running more than one device, the calculator should be applied per device class rather than at fleet level. A floor of A4 mono workhorses and a single A3 colour finisher behave differently, and averaging across them produces a figure that fits neither.

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