Vendor Vetting
10 Questions to Ask Before Buying Refurbished Medical Imaging Equipment
March 30, 2026 · 6 min · Medical Imaging Specialists

Practical considerations, risk points, and what to ask before you buy, service, move, or maintain imaging equipment.
Target Keyword Phrase: questions to ask before buying refurbished medical imaging equipment
Buying refurbished medical imaging equipment is one of the smartest financial decisions a clinic, hospital, or outpatient center can make — but only when it’s done right. A well-refurbished CT, MRI, or PET/CT system can deliver years of reliable, high-quality imaging at a fraction of new equipment cost. A poorly vetted one can drain your budget in downtime, parts, and emergency service calls.
The difference often comes down to the questions you ask before you sign anything.
This checklist is designed for administrators, biomedical engineers, and practice managers evaluating a refurbished imaging system purchase. Use it to protect your investment and identify vendors you can actually trust.
1. What Is the System’s Full Service History?
Before you negotiate price, ask for complete service records. A legitimate refurbishment vendor should be able to provide documentation of:
- All known failures and repairs
- Software and hardware upgrades performed
- Tube replacement history (especially for CT)
- Magnet ramp history and any quench events (MRI)
- Hours of operation or scan count
If a vendor can’t produce service records, that’s a serious red flag. You’re not just buying hardware — you’re inheriting its history.
2. Who Performed the Refurbishment, and What Does It Include?
“Refurbished” means different things to different vendors. Some do a deep, systematic refurbishment — replacing consumables, upgrading components, testing to OEM specs. Others wipe down the gantry and call it a day.
Ask specifically:
- Was the refurbishment done in-house or outsourced?
- What components were replaced versus inspected?
- Was the system tested under clinical load conditions?
- Does the refurbishment meet any documented standard or checklist?
The answer tells you a lot about the vendor’s technical depth and accountability.
3. What Software Version Is Installed, and Can It Be Upgraded?
Imaging software version matters — for protocol compatibility, workflow efficiency, and in some cases, regulatory compliance. Ask:
- What version of acquisition and reconstruction software is currently installed?
- Are upgrades available, and at what cost?
- Is the system compatible with your PACS/RIS environment?
- Are there any known end-of-life software limitations?
A system running outdated software may create integration headaches down the road, especially if you’re connecting to a modern health IT ecosystem.
4. What Is the Tube Condition and Estimated Remaining Life? (CT Buyers)
For CT systems, the X-ray tube is the most expensive consumable component — replacements typically run $40,000–$90,000 or more depending on the platform. Before purchasing, request:
- Current tube heat unit (MHU) capacity relative to original spec
- Estimated scans or hours remaining based on usage history
- Whether tube replacement is included in the sale price or available at a negotiated rate
Some vendors include a tube warranty or a credits program. If the tube is near end of life, factor that into your total cost calculation — or negotiate it down.
5. What Warranty Is Included, and What Does It Cover?
Warranties on refurbished equipment vary wildly. A 90-day parts-only warranty is very different from a 12-month full-coverage agreement. Ask in plain terms:
- What components are covered?
- Does coverage include labor and travel?
- Are there exclusions (tubes, coils, cryogen)?
- Who performs warranty service — the vendor’s own engineers or a third party?
Get the warranty terms in writing before you close. Verbal assurances are worth nothing when a detector module fails six months post-installation.
6. What Happens After the Warranty Expires?
This is where many buyers get caught off guard. The real cost of ownership often shows up in year 2 or 3. Before you buy, ask:
- Do you offer a service contract after the warranty period?
- What are the tiers (full-service, T&M, PM-only) and pricing?
- Can I use a third-party service provider without voiding any agreements?
- What is your average response time for emergency service calls?
A vendor who doesn’t support what they sell — or who disappears after the check clears — is not a partner. It’s a liability.
7. Is Parts Availability Guaranteed for This Platform?
Parts availability is a quiet but critical risk factor, especially for systems that are 10+ years old. Before committing, ask:
- Is this platform still supported by the OEM, or is it legacy/end-of-life?
- Does your company stock parts for this system in-house?
- What is your typical lead time for critical components?
- Are there any known obsolescence issues with this specific configuration?
Vendors who maintain their own parts inventory — rather than hunting the open market after a failure — can dramatically reduce your downtime exposure.
8. What Are the Site and Infrastructure Requirements?
Refurbished imaging systems often come from a different facility type or configuration. Don’t assume your current space is ready. Ask:
- What are the electrical, HVAC, and structural requirements?
- Does the system require a dedicated chiller, or is it air-cooled?
- What are the RF shielding and magnet exclusion zone specs? (MRI)
- Will the vendor provide a site survey and planning drawings?
Surprises during installation are expensive and can delay your go-live by weeks. A good vendor will walk you through site prep before you ever sign a contract.
9. Does the System Come With Its Original FDA 510(k) Clearance?
This is especially relevant for facilities that bill Medicare/Medicaid or participate in accreditation programs. In most cases, refurbished imaging systems sold in the U.S. must retain their original clearance classification. Ask:
- Is this system covered under its original 510(k) clearance?
- Has any modification been made that could affect regulatory status?
- Can you provide documentation to support our accreditation process (ACR, TJC, state licensing)?
This is a compliance question, not just a legal one. Have your compliance or biomedical team review documentation before purchase.
10. Can You Provide References From Other Buyers of This System Type?
The single best way to validate a vendor’s claims is to talk to someone who has already bought from them. Ask for:
- Two or three references from facilities that purchased the same or similar system
- Specific contacts (not just a company name)
- Ideally, references from facilities in similar settings (outpatient clinic, rural hospital, imaging center)
A vendor who balks at providing references is telling you something. A vendor who hands you a list with confidence is demonstrating track record.
Buying Smart Means Asking Hard Questions
Refurbished imaging equipment represents significant capital investment, regardless of the discount off new. The vendors worth working with welcome these questions — because they already have the answers.
Medical Imaging Specialists (MIS) has been buying, refurbishing, and supporting CT, PET/CT, and MRI systems since 2004. Based in Bradenton, Florida, we maintain in-house parts inventory, employ our own field engineers, and back every system we sell with transparent documentation and real warranty support. We serve facilities across the U.S., Caribbean, and Latin America.
If you’re in the market for a refurbished imaging system and want straight answers to all ten of the questions above, contact the MIS team — we’ll walk you through every detail before you ever sign a thing.
Medical Imaging Specialists | Bradenton, FL | Serving the U.S., Caribbean & LATAM since 2004
Related Reading
- Read next: How To Choose Refurbished Medical Imaging Equipment Vendor
- Read next: Refurbished Medical Imaging Equipment Warranty Guide
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