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Intraoperative Ultrasound System
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How to use this page

How this page helps you choose the right intraoperative ultrasound system

Choosing the right intraoperative ultrasound system comes down to a handful of decisions. Here we walk you through the ones that matter most to help you make a choice that meets your needs and your budget, without any expensive surprises after delivery. When you're ready, use our popular Get Quotes option to connect with verified Australian suppliers so you can compare quotes and buy with confidence.

Common setups

Three common intraoperative ultrasound system setups

Neurosurgery and spine
Brain and spinal cord work through burr holes and small incisions, where access is tight.
$18,000 - $40,000Per probe, indicative, ex GST
Probe typeSmall linear or end-fire
Frequency7 - 15 MHz
AccessBurr hole, craniotomy
ImagingB-mode, Doppler
Most common
General and hepatobiliary
Open liver, pancreas, and biliary surgery. Tumour staging, margin checks, and ablation guidance.
$15,000 - $38,000Per probe, indicative, ex GST
Probe typeT-shaped or side-fire
Frequency5 - 10 MHz
AccessOpen, direct on organ
ImagingB-mode, Doppler, contrast
Laparoscopic and MIS
Minimally invasive work. A flexible-tip probe on a long shaft passed through a trocar.
$20,000 - $45,000Per probe, indicative, ex GST
Probe typeFlexible-tip linear
Frequency5 - 10 MHz
AccessThrough 10 - 12mm trocar
ImagingB-mode, Doppler

Cost breakdown

What an intraoperative ultrasound system costs

What you pay depends most on whether you are adding an intraoperative probe to a system you already run, buying a refurbished surgical platform, or specifying a new dedicated system. A single probe is the smallest spend and a new console-and-probe platform the largest. The prices below are indicative and benchmark-derived, before GST, so treat them as a planning range rather than a quote.

Purchase routeIndicative price AUD, before GST, benchmark-derivedWhat changes the price
Intraoperative probe (added to a compatible system)$15,000 - $45,000Probe type, frequency, contrast capability, connector match
Refurbished surgical ultrasound system$25,000 - $70,000Age, hours, included probes, remaining warranty
New dedicated platform (console and probe)$70,000 - $180,000+Console tier, probe count, contrast and Doppler, service contract
Additional probes$15,000 - $45,000 eachArticulating laparoscopic probes cost more than open probes
What changes the price most
The probe set changes the price as hard as the console. Contrast-enhanced imaging (CE-IOUS), Doppler, and a multi-year service contract all add to it, and an articulating laparoscopic probe costs more than an open T-shaped one. Ask each supplier to quote the console, each probe, and the service contract as separate line items so you can compare like for like.

System or probe

Dedicated intraoperative ultrasound system or probes for your existing platform

This is the decision that shapes every quote. You either buy a dedicated surgical system, or add an intraoperative ultrasound probe to a console you already run. Settle which route you are on before you compare anything else.

Probes for your existing system Lower cost
Lowest cost when compatible
Adding an intraoperative probe to a console you already run avoids buying a whole platform.
Connector and software must match
The probe has to match your console's vendor, connector, and software version. Confirm this before you quote.
Limited by the host console
Image processing, contrast, and Doppler are only as strong as the existing system allows.
Dedicated surgical system Full capability
Built for the operating room
Surgical platforms are designed around sterile workflow, theatre mounting, and the probe shapes surgeons use.
Full imaging capability
Strong B-mode, Doppler, and contrast (CE-IOUS) on a console matched to surgical probes.
Higher cost, longer service life
More to buy, but the route most theatres take when ultrasound is core to the surgery.
Confirm compatibility first
If you lean toward probes, give each supplier your console make, model, software version, and free connector ports. An intraoperative probe that does not match your platform is the most common wasted spend, so confirm fit before you commit to anything.

Reprocessing

How the intraoperative ultrasound probe is cleaned between cases

A probe used in surgery has to be sterile or covered for each case, and how you achieve that changes both your workflow and your per-case cost. You either run a sterile cover over a standard probe, or reprocess a probe validated for disinfection or sterilisation. Settle this with your sterilising department before you choose a probe.

Sterile probe cover Lower probe cost
A cover for every case
A sterile single-use sheath goes over a standard probe; the probe itself is not sterilised.
Per-case consumable cost
You pay for a cover each procedure, which adds up across a busy operating list.
Watch for cover failure
A torn cover risks contamination, so snug covers and careful technique matter.
Sterilizable probe Higher probe cost
Reprocessed between cases
The probe is cleaned and high-level disinfected or sterilised to your protocol.
Must suit your sterilising department
Confirm the probe is validated for the disinfection or sterilisation your central sterile services department (CSSD) runs.
Fewer consumables, slower turnaround
Lower per-case cost, but reprocessing time can limit how many cases you fit in a day.
Ask the supplier
Get the probe's validated reprocessing method and the disinfectants or sterilisers it is approved for, plus the cost of covers if you go the sheath route. Match both to what your sterilising department can actually run before you commit to a probe.

New vs used

Used and refurbished intraoperative ultrasound systems

A well-kept used or refurbished intraoperative ultrasound system can deliver most of the value of a new one for less. In medical capital equipment the wear that matters is the probe condition and the remaining service support, not just the system's age or hours.

Buy used or refurbished Lower cost
Lower upfront cost
A refurbished system or used probe often sits well below new, freeing budget for extra probes or a service contract.
Probe condition is the real risk
Probes are the wear item. Check for cable, lens, and element faults, not just the system hours.
Refurbisher warranty matters
A dealer-refurbished system with a warranty and service history gives much of the reliability of new for less.
Confirm parts and support
Make sure parts and service are still available for the model, since support can end before the hardware does.
Buy new Lower risk
Full warranty and current probes
Current probe technology, contrast and Doppler, and a manufacturer warranty on the costliest parts.
Spec it to your surgery
Choose the console tier and probe set around your procedures, rather than working around what a used unit has.
Longest finance terms
New systems attract the longest finance terms, so the monthly repayment can land lower than the price gap suggests.
Always ask on used
Get the probe test results for cable, lens, and element integrity, the system hours, a recent service history, and written confirmation that parts and service are still supported for the model. A cheap system with a failing probe is not cheap.

Ownership costs

What an intraoperative ultrasound system costs to run and own

Purchase price is only part of what you spend over the life of the system. The rest is the service contract, probe replacement, and per-case consumables. The probe is the wear item, not the console, which is why probe choice drives the running cost.

Cost areaWhat to expectWhat changes the cost
Service or warranty contract$5,000 - $20,000 per yearConsole tier, probe count, response time
Probe replacement (wear item)$15,000 - $45,000 per probeArticulating probes cost most; handling and usage
Reprocessing per caseCover cost or staff timeSheath route versus sterilizable probe; case volume
Capability upgradesVaries by platformAdding contrast (CE-IOUS) or measurement packages
Probes are the cost over time
On an intraoperative ultrasound system the probe is the wear item, not the console. Build probe replacement and a service contract into your multi-year cost, and weigh sheath consumables against a sterilizable probe for your case volume before you settle on a route.

Decide before you quote

What to decide before you request intraoperative ultrasound quotes

Get these requirements clear upfront and suppliers can provide accurate intraoperative ultrasound system quotes the first time, rather than making assumptions.

1System or probe: whether you need a dedicated surgical system or an intraoperative probe for a console you already run. If a probe, give the make, model, and software version.
2Surgical application: the procedures the system supports, whether neuro, hepatobiliary, laparoscopic, or vascular, which sets the probe shapes and frequencies.
3Probe set: which probes you need now and which can come later. Articulating laparoscopic probes cost the most, so price them separately.
4Reprocessing method: sterile covers or a sterilizable probe, matched to what your sterilising department can run.
5Budget basis: whether you are comparing on purchase price or monthly finance, so suppliers quote the structure that fits your budget cycle.
The one-line version
System or probe, surgical application, the probe set, your reprocessing method, and your budget basis. Send those five and your quotes will be worth comparing.

Finance options

Finance options for your intraoperative ultrasound system

A dedicated intraoperative ultrasound system is a large upfront cost, and probes add to it. To spread that into a monthly repayment, many buyers look at equipment finance alongside the quote comparison. What finance looks like for your business comes down to the answers below.

Finance questionWhat it helps you decideWhy it matters
What could the monthly repayment be? Whether the machine fits your monthly cash flow before committing to a quote. Most intraoperative ultrasound systems sit in a price range where the monthly repayment is easier to weigh against throughput than the upfront cost alone.
Am I likely to get approved? Whether your business, trading history, and the machine's value are financeable. MedicalSearch finance works across a panel of lenders, which can improve the chance of finding a suitable approval pathway.
Which finance structure suits the purchase? Whether to compare options such as chattel mortgage, lease, rental, or low-deposit finance. The right structure can affect ownership, monthly cost, cash flow, and how quickly you can move ahead.

Finance calculator

Estimate my repayment

Adjust the sliders to estimate your intraoperative ultrasound system repayments. Speak with our team for an exact quote based on your profile.

Loan amount $90,000
Loan term 5 years
Interest rate 7.50% p.a.
Repayment frequency
Estimated repayment
$1,803
per month
Loan amount$90,000
Total interest$18,180
Total repayable$108,180
Number of repayments60
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Common questions

Intraoperative ultrasound questions buyers commonly ask

Quick answers to the most-searched questions about intraoperative ultrasound systems and how MedicalSearch works.

Why use MedicalSearch to buy an intraoperative ultrasound system?

MedicalSearch helps you compare multiple reputable Australian suppliers with a single enquiry, saving you time and effort. Instead of contacting suppliers individually, you can compare suitable devices, technology, compliance requirements, service support, and ongoing consumables in one place. This helps you find the right system for your treatments while avoiding costly mistakes and making a more informed purchasing decision.

How much does an intraoperative ultrasound system cost?

As an indicative, benchmark-derived guide before GST: an intraoperative probe added to a compatible system runs $15,000 to $45,000, a refurbished surgical ultrasound system $25,000 to $70,000, and a new dedicated platform with console and probe $70,000 to $180,000+. Additional probes cost $15,000 to $45,000 each. The probe set and contrast capability change the price as much as the console.

Is it worth buying a used intraoperative ultrasound system?

It can be, if the probes check out and the model is still supported. A refurbished system or used probe often sits well below new. The real risk is the probe, not the console, since the probe is the wear item. Ask for probe test results covering cable, lens, and element integrity, a service history, and written confirmation that parts and service are still available for the model.

What is the difference between an intraoperative ultrasound system and a standard ultrasound machine?

An intraoperative ultrasound system uses high-frequency probes placed directly on the organ during surgery, with probe shapes built for the operating field, such as T-shaped, side-fire, and flexible-tip laparoscopic probes. Because the probe touches tissue directly, it can run at higher frequencies than a standard external probe, giving sharper near-field detail. The system is also designed around sterile workflow, with probe covers or reprocessing built into the way it is used.

Do I need a dedicated system, or can I add a probe to my existing ultrasound?

Either can work. If your existing console supports an intraoperative probe, adding one is the lower-cost route, but the probe has to match your vendor, connector, and software version, and your imaging is limited by that console. A dedicated surgical system costs more and is built around the operating room, with full B-mode, Doppler, and contrast on a console matched to surgical probes. Confirm compatibility before you choose the probe route.

What probe do I need for my surgery?

It depends on the procedure and the access. Neurosurgery and spine work tends to use small linear or end-fire probes at 7 to 15 MHz for burr holes and small incisions. Open liver, pancreas, and biliary surgery suits T-shaped or side-fire probes at 5 to 10 MHz. Laparoscopic work needs a flexible-tip probe on a long shaft that passes through a trocar. Tell each supplier your main procedures so they quote the right probe set.

How are intraoperative ultrasound probes cleaned between cases?

Two ways. You either run a sterile single-use cover over a standard probe, which adds a per-case consumable cost, or you reprocess a probe that is validated for high-level disinfection or sterilisation. If you go the reprocessing route, confirm the probe is approved for the method your sterilising department runs, and remember that reprocessing time can limit how many cases you fit in a day. Match the method to your department before you choose the probe.

Does an intraoperative ultrasound system need to be on the ARTG?

Yes. An intraoperative ultrasound system is a medical device, and unless exempt, medical devices must be included in the Australian Register of Therapeutic Goods (ARTG) to be legally supplied in Australia. Ask the supplier for the ARTG inclusion, and on a used or refurbished system confirm the model and probes are still covered. This is worth checking before you commit, whatever route you take.

How long does finance pre-approval take?

Equipment finance pre-approval is usually quick, often within 1-2 business days once you provide basic practice and financial details. Pre-approval lets you compare quotes knowing your monthly cost and borrowing capacity, without committing to a purchase.

What do I need to apply for equipment finance?

For most equipment finance under a set threshold, lenders ask for limited paperwork: your practice ABN and trading history, recent bank statements, and details of the system being financed. Larger amounts can need business financials or tax returns. MedicalSearch finance works across a panel of lenders, so the exact requirements vary by amount and lender.

Why MedicalSearch

Why buyers choose MedicalSearch

Helping Australian healthcare buyers compare suppliers since 2011.

Compare quotes in one place
Comparing quotes side by side helps you avoid the wrong architecture, an incompatible probe, or a system you cannot service locally.
Stop repeating your requirements
One request saves repeating your surgical application, probe set, console compatibility, and reprocessing needs to each supplier separately.
Reach reputable Australian suppliers
Compare suppliers who can match the probe to your procedure and support service and reprocessing, not just sell the cheapest console.
Free for buyers, no obligation. Suppliers pay to list; buyers pay nothing.

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