Release Date:Dec 18, 2025
PCBA Copy Cost Estimation is a critical process that calculates the total expenses of cloning a PCBA, helping businesses budget and make informed decisions. Costs vary based on PCB complexity, component availability, production volume, and service scope.
Key cost drivers include:
Reverse Engineering Costs: Depend on PCB layers (2-layer: (300–)800; 16-layer: (1,500–)3,000) and component complexity (BGAs or encrypted firmware add (500–)1,500). Tools like 3D X-rays or AI trace recognition increase costs but speed up work.
Component Sourcing Costs: Standard parts (resistors/capacitors) are cheap ((0.01–)0.50/unit), but obsolete or specialized components (industrial ICs) cost more ((5–)50/unit) and may need qualification ((200–)500). Counterfeit prevention adds 5–10% to component costs.
Prototype Costs: 1–5 prototypes cost (200–)1,000, including PCB fabrication ((50–)300) and assembly ((100–)500). Testing (electrical/functional) adds (50–)200.
Production Costs: Scale reduces per-unit costs. 100 units: (20–)50/unit; 10,000 units: (5–)15/unit. Costs include bulk PCB fabrication ((2–)10/unit), automated assembly ((1–)3/unit), and mass testing ((0.5–)2/unit).
Additional Costs: Compliance testing (EMC/RoHS: (300–)1,000), packaging ((0.5–)2/unit), and post-delivery support ((500–)1,500/year).
Providers use detailed PCBA assessments (layer count, components, volume) to give accurate quotes. Businesses should clarify scope (e.g., firmware extraction included) to avoid hidden costs.