A standard office MFP becomes a coin or card operated public copier by adding a payment device that intercepts print or copy commands and releases them after payment. The payment device installs alongside the MFP, typically takes 2 hours to configure, and turns a 5,000 euro office MFP into a 25,000 euro a year revenue source in the right location.
Two technology categories handle the payment side. Coin acceptors take physical coins (typical denominations 0.05 to 2.00 euros), count them, and signal the MFP to release the job. Card readers accept contactless or chip cards (debit, credit, or pre charged loyalty cards) and process payment through the issuer network. Modern installations typically use both, with the card reader carrying most volume.
Not all MFPs accept external payment device integration. Confirm compatibility before purchase. Most modern MFPs from Canon, Ricoh, Xerox, Konica and Sharp support common payment device brands.
Three brands dominate the European market. ITC and ISI for coin operated devices. ELO and Equitrac for card based systems. Auzix and Papercut for software based payment integration. The choice depends on payment mix expected and budget.
The device mounts on the MFP or beside it on a small bracket. Power cable to wall socket. Data cable to MFP (usually USB or specific connector). Coin or card slot accessible to the customer.
The MFP must be set to require authentication before any job. Open the admin web interface. Enable Job Accounting or User Accounting mode. The device now refuses unauthenticated jobs.
Configure prices in the payment device admin interface. Typical settings: A4 mono 0.10 euros, A4 colour 0.50 euros, A3 mono 0.20 euros, A3 colour 1.00 euros. Adjust to local market.
For card readers, integrate with a Spanish payment acquirer (Redsys, Adyen, Stripe). The acquirer agreement covers card processing fees, typically 1.0 to 1.8% per transaction.
Run test transactions on each payment method. Confirm the MFP releases the job after payment. Print a visible price list and post next to the device showing all prices in euros.
Coin payment has steadily declined in Spanish self service photocopy as contactless cards and mobile payment have become universal. New installations in 2026 typically install card reader as primary payment, with a coin acceptor as secondary for customers without cards. Pure coin only installations now mainly serve specific institutional contexts (prisons, schools where students cannot have cards).
The shift matters for transaction economics. Card payment carries a per transaction fee (typically 0.05 to 0.15 euros) that does not exist on coin. For very small transactions (a single A4 copy at 0.10 euros), the card fee can exceed the margin. Many installations enforce a minimum card transaction (1 euro) to manage this.
| Location type | A4 mono | A4 colour | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| University library | 0.05€ | 0.20€ | Subsidised by institution |
| Public library | 0.10€ | 0.30€ | Cost recovery pricing |
| Courthouse adjacent shop | 0.15€ | 0.80€ | Premium location pricing |
| Independent copy shop | 0.10€ | 0.50€ | Market standard |
| Hospital reception | 0.10€ | 0.40€ | Convenience pricing |
| Petrol station | 0.20€ | 1.00€ | Premium for accessibility |
Coin operated devices accumulate physical cash that needs collection. Three considerations affect operations. Coin acceptors have hopper capacity (typically 500 to 1,500 coins) that requires regular emptying. Coin theft is a risk in unstaffed locations; secure cash boxes and limited collection windows help. Banking the coins involves trip to a bank or use of a coin counting service, both producing handling cost.
Coin acceptors run 600 to 1,200 euros for entry level units. Card readers integrated with MFPs run 800 to 2,000 euros. Software based payment systems (Papercut, Equitrac integrations) run 1,500 to 4,000 euros plus monthly licence fees. The hardware pays back inside the first 2 to 4 months at typical usage volumes.
Payment devices maintain transaction logs accessible through the admin interface. Daily reports show transaction counts, total revenue, breakdown by payment method, and any failed transactions. For accounting purposes, the daily report feeds into the shop's till reconciliation alongside coin counting (if applicable).
Three operational issues recur. Card payment timeouts where the customer's bank takes too long to respond, frustrating the customer and locking the device briefly. Coin acceptor jams where a damaged coin gets stuck and prevents further use. Network connectivity issues where the card payment system loses connection to the acquirer, blocking all card transactions until restored. Each has documented fix procedures from the payment device vendor.