April 29, 2026

How Much Does a Cigarette Manufacturing Machine Cost in 2026?

cigarette making machine cost

Price is the first question every factory buyer asks, and the one that gets the vaguest answer from most sources. Cigarette manufacturing machine cost varies from under $100,000 for an entry-level refurbished maker to over $2 million for a new high-speed flagship system, and a complete production line with packing, overwrapping, and case packing can reach $5 million or more. This guide gives you real 2026 market price ranges for every tier, making machines, packing machines, and complete production lines, along with the factors that drive those prices and what you can realistically budget for different factory configurations in the USA market.

Why Cigarette Machine Prices Are Hard to Find Online

OEM manufacturers like Körber Technologies and the Coesia Group (G.D, Molins, SASIB) do not publish list prices, every transaction is a negotiated commercial deal. The secondary market for refurbished equipment is slightly more transparent, with specialist dealers publishing asking prices for specific machines in stock. What follows are realistic price benchmarks drawn from active USA market listings, industry dealer data, and verified transaction ranges.

Making Machine Prices: By Speed Tier and Brand

The cigarette making machine is the core cost driver in any production line. Price correlates primarily with output speed (cigarettes per minute), brand, generation, and condition.

Entry-Level and Legacy Machines (1,800–4,000 cpm)

Machine Condition Price Range (USD)
Molins Mark 8 (Post 64) Refurbished $60,000 – $120,000
Molins Mark 8D Refurbished $80,000 – $150,000
Molins Mark 9N Refurbished $90,000 – $160,000

 

The Molins Mark 8 series represents the most accessible entry point into industrial cigarette making. A rebuilt Mark 8 Post 64 with Max 3 Multiroll tipper can be sourced in the USA for $60,000 to $120,000. For new entrants with modest output requirements, this tier offers the lowest capital entry into genuine industrial production. See our complete machine guide on Cigarette Making Machines.

Mid-Speed Machines (5,000–7,000 cpm)

Machine Condition Price Range (USD)
Molins Mark 9 with Max S Refurbished $150,000 – $280,000
Molins Mark 9.5 (Lenze Servo) Refurbished $180,000 – $320,000
Hauni Protos 70 Refurbished $200,000 – $380,000
Hauni Protos 70 New (OEM) $600,000 – $900,000
Molins Alto New (OEM) $500,000 – $800,000

 

This is the most active segment of the refurbished market in the USA. Refurbished Molins Mark 9 configurations are regularly available from specialist dealers at $150,000 to $280,000 depending on reconditioning quality. The Hauni Protos 70 at refurbished pricing is similarly accessible at $200,000 to $380,000. New mid-speed OEM machines carry significantly higher pricing reflecting full warranty, OEM commissioning, and current-generation engineering.

High-Speed Machines (8,000–14,000 cpm)

Machine Condition Price Range (USD)
Hauni Protos 80 ER Refurbished (rebuilt) $350,000 – $650,000
Hauni Protos 80 ER New (OEM) $800,000 – $1,200,000
Hauni Protos 90 Refurbished $400,000 – $700,000
Hauni Protos M5 New (OEM) $1,200,000 – $2,000,000+
G.D Double-Rod (10,000–16,000 cpm) New (OEM) $1,500,000 – $2,500,000+

 

The Hauni Protos 80 ER is the most commonly transacted high-speed machine on the USA refurbished market. Rebuilt units typically list at $350,000 to $650,000 as standalone makers. Complete make-pack modules have been listed at $800,000 to $1,200,000 for fully rebuilt 8,000 cpm configurations. The Protos M5 at $1.2 million to $2 million represents the current OEM flagship. For full Protos specs, see our guide to Körber (Hauni) Protos Cigarette Maker.

Packing Machine Prices

A cigarette packing machine is a major second capital expenditure for any production line and its cost must be budgeted alongside the making machine.

Machine Type Condition Price Range (USD)
SASIB 3000 Soft pack (400 ppm) Refurbished $80,000 – $160,000
SASIB 6000 Soft pack (300 ppm) Refurbished $80,000 – $200,000
SASIB 6000HL Hinge-lid (300 ppm) Refurbished $100,000 – $200,000
GD GD-X2NV Hinge-lid (400 ppm) Refurbished $150,000 – $300,000
GD GD-X6 Hinge-lid (600 ppm) Refurbished $250,000 – $450,000
Focke 350 Overwrapper Refurbished $80,000 – $160,000
HLP 225 Hinge-lid (225 ppm) Refurbished $80,000 – $150,000
HLP 250 Hinge-lid (250 ppm) Refurbished $100,000 – $180,000
SASIB 5000 Hard pack (500 ppm) Refurbished $120,000 – $220,000

Complete Production Line Costs

A complete line includes: a cigarette maker, tipper, reservoir system, tray filler, packer, overwrapper, cartoner, and case packer — all matched for compatible speed and format. Here is a realistic budget framework for three factory size tiers.

Entry-Level Production Line (3,000–5,000 cpm)

Making machine (Molins Mark 9 / refurbished) $150,000 – $280,000
Packing machine (SASIB 3000 / HLP refurbished) $80,000 – $160,000
Overwrapper (refurbished) $50,000 – $100,000
Cartoner + case packer (refurbished) $80,000 – $150,000
Installation + commissioning $40,000 – $80,000
Spare parts initial stock $30,000 – $60,000
Total estimated range $430,000 – $830,000

 

Mid-Scale Production Line (7,000–8,000 cpm)

Making machine (Protos 70 or 80 ER / refurbished) $300,000 – $650,000
Packing machine (GD X2NV or SASIB 5000 / refurbished) $150,000 – $300,000
Overwrapper + cellophane system $80,000 – $160,000
Cartoner + case packer $100,000 – $200,000
Installation + commissioning $60,000 – $120,000
Spare parts initial stock $50,000 – $100,000
Total estimated range $740,000 – $1,530,000

 

High-Speed Enterprise Line (10,000+ cpm)

Making machine (Protos M5 or G.D double-rod / new) $1,200,000 – $2,500,000
High-speed packing system (GD X6 or equivalent) $300,000 – $600,000
Overwrapping + secondary packaging $150,000 – $300,000
Cartoner + case packer + palletizer $200,000 – $400,000
Installation + commissioning $100,000 – $200,000
Spare parts initial stock $100,000 – $200,000
Total estimated range $2,050,000 – $4,200,000+

 

These ranges are realistic planning benchmarks for 2026 USA market conditions. Import costs for overseas machinery — freight, customs, port inspection — can add $15,000 to $50,000 to any international purchase.

What Drives the Price of a Cigarette Making Machine?

Speed (cpm) is the single biggest price driver. Every additional 1,000 cpm of output capacity adds meaningful capital cost. A machine running at 8,000 cpm costs roughly twice what an equivalent quality machine at 5,000 cpm costs.

Brand and platform significantly affects pricing. Körber (Hauni) Protos commands a premium over Molins Mark series at equivalent speeds. G.D double-rod platforms carry the highest new-machine prices due to ultra-high output capability. See our Industrial Cigarette Machinery Brands: Complete Manufacturer Guide.

New vs refurbished is typically a 40 to 65 percent price differential at the same speed tier. A refurbished Protos 80 ER at $400,000 to $650,000 does what a new machine does at $800,000 to $1,200,000 — with a shorter warranty and faster delivery. For the full decision framework, see our New vs Refurbished Cigarette Manufacturing Machines guide.

Reconditioning quality affects refurbished pricing significantly. An as-is machine may list at 30 to 40 percent of new pricing; a fully OEM-rebuilt machine with replaced wearing parts and a 12-month warranty may list at 55 to 70 percent of new.

Age and generation affects both price and parts availability. A 2005-era Protos 80 ER will price lower than a 2015-era unit but may carry higher parts and maintenance risk.

Lead time is a hidden cost driver. New OEM machines carry lead times of 6 to 18 months. A factory paying a 20 percent premium for a refurbished machine with a 6-week delivery timeline may be making the more economically rational decision when opportunity cost is factored in.

Format capability affects price at the packing machine level. Machines handling multiple formats — standard, slim, super slim, special packs — command a premium over single-format packers. Our guide covers this: High-Speed vs Mid-Speed Cigarette Manufacturing Machines.

Total Cost of Ownership: Beyond the Purchase Price

The purchase price of a cigarette manufacturing machine is the beginning of the cost equation, not the end.

Spare parts consumption is significant and continuous. Annual spare parts expenditure on a single mid-speed making machine typically runs $20,000 to $60,000 depending on run rate and maintenance discipline.

Energy costs vary by machine generation. Older platforms consume more power per 1,000 cigarettes produced. The Protos M5e uses significantly less energy than earlier Protos generations — a saving that compounds across years of 3-shift operation.

Labor and maintenance costs must be factored in. High-speed machines require more technically skilled maintenance staff. Refurbished machines may require more frequent scheduled maintenance, particularly in the first 12 months.

Downtime cost is the most underestimated cost component. A factory producing 7,000 cpm that experiences 8 hours of unplanned downtime loses approximately 3.36 million cigarettes of production. At commercial production economics, this can represent a cost far exceeding the annual spare parts budget.

How to Get Accurate Pricing for Your Requirements

Before approaching any supplier, define: your required output in cpm, your cigarette formats, your pack format, your required capacity utilization rate, and whether you are open to refurbished or require new equipment. A clear specification produces comparable quotes and prevents scope mismatches that inflate apparent price differences between vendors. For guidance on identifying and vetting suppliers who can provide accurate quotes, see our procurement guide: How to Source Cigarette Machinery Suppliers in the USA.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much does a cigarette making machine cost in 2026?

Prices range from approximately $60,000 for an entry-level refurbished Molins Mark 8 to over $2 million for a new Körber Protos M5 high-speed maker. The most commonly purchased segment — refurbished mid-speed machines in the 5,000 to 8,000 cpm range — typically costs $150,000 to $650,000 depending on brand, age, and reconditioning quality.

What is the price of a Hauni Protos 80 ER cigarette machine?

Rebuilt Hauni Protos 80 ER machines on the USA refurbished market typically list at $350,000 to $650,000 as standalone makers. Complete make-pack line modules built around the Protos 80 ER have been listed at $800,000 to $1,200,000 from specialist USA dealers.

How much does a complete cigarette production line cost?

A complete production line costs approximately $430,000 to $830,000 at entry level (3,000–5,000 cpm refurbished), $740,000 to $1,530,000 at mid-scale (7,000–8,000 cpm refurbished), and $2 million to $4.2 million or more at high-speed enterprise scale (10,000+ cpm new equipment).

Is a refurbished cigarette machine significantly cheaper than new?

Yes — typically 40 to 65 percent cheaper at the same speed tier and brand. A new Protos 80 ER from OEM channels costs $800,000 to $1,200,000. A professionally rebuilt unit of the same machine is available at $350,000 to $650,000. The tradeoff is warranty coverage, delivery time, and technical risk.

What is the cheapest industrial cigarette making machine available?

The most affordable entry point into genuine industrial cigarette production is a refurbished Molins Mark 8 series, available in the USA market for $60,000 to $120,000. These machines produce 1,800 to 3,900 cigarettes per minute — sufficient for smaller factory operations — with an active parts and service ecosystem.

What additional costs should I budget beyond the machine price?

Key additional costs include: installation and commissioning ($40,000 to $120,000), initial spare parts stock ($30,000 to $100,000), operator and maintenance training, import and logistics costs for overseas machines ($15,000 to $50,000), and the ongoing cost of wearing parts replacement ($20,000 to $60,000 per year per machine).

Does machine speed affect price that much?

Yes — speed is the primary price driver after brand. Each step up in cpm output adds proportional cost. Moving from 5,000 cpm to 8,000 cpm on the same platform roughly doubles the machine price. Buyers should choose the speed tier that matches their production requirements to avoid overpaying for unused capacity.