Here's what control cabinets cost in 2026, based on actual market data:
| Configuration | Price Range/USD | Typical Setup |
|---|---|---|
| Basic | 950–2,200 | Domestic PLC + carbon steel enclosure |
| Mid-Range | 2,200–7,300 | Schneider PLC + standard I/O |
| High-End Custom | 7,300–29,000+ | Redundant systems + complex process control |
Prices converted from RMB at 6.85 exchange rate. Actual quotes vary by region and specifications.
This is where most of your money goes. A S7-1500 PLC costs 3-4x more than a comparable domestic brand. The same applies to HMIs, breakers, and contactors.
International brands ( Schneider, ABB): Higher upfront cost, proven stability, better global support.
Domestic brands (Inovance, Xinjie, Delta): 40-60% lower cost, improving quality, shorter lead times in Asia.
Our take: For critical processes or exports, stick with Tier-1 brands. For standard machinery, domestic PLCs work fine and save budget.
Simple on/off control with 20-30 I/O points? That's entry-level pricing.
Complex analog loops, PID control, motion control with 500+ points? Expect 3-5x the cost. The PLC module itself jumps from 200to1,500+, and programming time triples.
| Material | Use Case | Price Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Carbon steel | Standard indoor | Baseline |
| 304 Stainless | Food/pharma/corrosive | +25-35% |
| 316 Stainless | Marine/chemical | +40-50% |
IP rating matters too. Moving from IP54 (dust protected) to IP65 (jet washable) adds 15-30% to enclosure costs.
Programming, HMI design, commissioning. This typically runs 20-35% of total project cost.
Complex process control? Engineering can hit 50% of the budget. Simple relay logic? Maybe 15%.
Chinese PLCs (Inovance, Xinjie, HollySys) have improved significantly. For standard applications, they perform reliably at 40-60% lower cost.
Hybrid approach (what we often recommend): Domestic cabinet build + Schneider core components. Cuts 18-25% versus fully imported while keeping reliability where it counts.
Price alone doesn't win projects anymore. Response speed and commissioning expertise matter more.
What to look for in a supplier:
Don't over-engineer. A packaging line doesn't need a SIL3-rated safety PLC. A chemical plant absolutely does.
Basic rule: If failure stops production but won't hurt anyone, mid-range works. If failure causes safety hazards or massive downtime, go high-end.
| Cost Factor | What to Check |
|---|---|
| Energy consumption | Efficient contactors and drives save money over 5-10 years |
| Spare parts availability | Obsolete PLCs mean expensive eBay hunts later |
| Programming software | Some brands charge annual license fees |
| Maintenance access | Can your team troubleshoot it, or is every issue a service call? |
Ask suppliers for:
Anyone can quote. Few can deliver consistently.
The PLC cabinet market in 2026 has three clear tiers:
Our recommendation: Start with your actual requirements. Define I/O count, environmental conditions, and uptime requirements first. Then get quotes based on those specs, not on vague "automation system" descriptions.