Laser Marking Blog | Jimani Blog

Should You Outsource Laser Marking or Buy Your Own System?

Written by Jim Earman | 6/9/26 5:45 PM

You have parts that need a permanent mark and a decision to make: send them out to a laser job shop, or buy a marking system and bring the work in-house. The honest answer is that it depends on your volume and how steady that volume is. Outsource when the work is sporadic, low-volume, prototype, or custom — when a machine would sit idle most of the month. Buy a system when your marking is steady and predictable enough that your in-house cost per part drops below what a job shop charges. Below that simple rule sit a few details that move the math: applications engineering, fulfillment logistics, and the option of doing both. This post walks through each one.

Quick Answer

Outsource laser marking when your marking needs are low-volume, irregular, prototype-based, custom, or still changing. Buy a laser marking system when the work is steady enough that your in-house cost per part, including equipment, labor, maintenance, floor space, and idle time, drops below the job shop price. Many manufacturers do both: they own a system for routine marking and use a job shop for unusual materials, difficult geometries, oversized parts, or volume spikes.

In this article
Job shop marking lets you put parts through a calibrated system without owning one.

When should you outsource laser marking instead of buying a system?

The clearest signal that outsourcing makes sense is intermittent demand. A laser marker you own costs the same whether it runs eight hours a day or eight hours a month. If your marking shows up in bursts — a prototype run here, a small custom batch there — you are paying to own a machine that earns its keep only a fraction of the time.

A handful of situations point squarely toward a job shop:

  • Prototype and product-development parts, where the design is still moving
  • Early or short-run production before volume justifies equipment
  • Small-volume runs and custom one-off products
  • Lean operations that do not want to add a non-core process
  • Limited capital, or a startup testing a product before committing

There is usually a quantity-cost calculation underneath all of these. Below a certain volume, the cost to mark each part at a job shop stays lower than the all-in cost of buying, staffing, and maintaining a system to do the same work yourself.

Jimani has run a contract marking job shop since 1990 alongside building its own systems, so the same shop that could sell you a machine will tell you when buying one does not pencil out.

How do you decide between a job shop and buying laser equipment?

Job shops generally bill by a shop rate, not by the value of your part. At Jimani that rate runs $60 to $100 per hour depending on the work, and the cost of marking a part has nothing to do with what the part is worth. What drives the per-part number is how many parts move through the marker in an hour, and that comes down to how much information has to be marked and how long each part takes to handle.

Handling matters more than most buyers expect. In a lot of jobs, the time spent unpacking, locating a part on a fixture, marking it, and repacking it exceeds the marking time itself. That same handling reality follows the work in-house — owning the laser does not eliminate it. So the comparison is not “job shop price versus free,” it is job shop price versus your fully loaded cost per part once a machine, an operator, and idle time are all in the column.

If you want to work the numbers from the ownership side, our guide on buying a laser marking system lays out what a steered-beam fiber system actually includes and where the cost lives.

Does marking expertise factor into the buy-vs-outsource decision?

The three primary fiber-laser techniques are not interchangeable, and choosing wrong wastes parts. Ablation removes a surface coating — anodize off aluminum, for example — with depths measured in microns. Engraving cuts deeper into metal, measured in thousandths of an inch, and some applications such as firearms marking carry a depth specification. Stain marking heats stainless steel or titanium until a non-penetrating dark oxide layer forms, which is why it shows up so often on medical instruments that cannot tolerate inks or surface damage.

Part shape adds another layer. As a rule of thumb, you can mark roughly 60 degrees around the circumference of a 1-inch-diameter part without rotating it; beyond that, the part has to turn under the beam, which means a rotary and software that controls it. Hard anodize, heat-sensitive plastics, and stepped surfaces each have their own quirks. None of this is mysterious, but it takes repetitions to get right — repetitions a job shop already has and a new owner has to accumulate on their own parts.

Jimani uses the same systems it builds, every day, across thousands of customer parts. That feedback loop between the manufacturing side and the job shop floor is exactly the know-how a buyer is choosing whether to develop in-house or rent by the job.

What fulfillment costs should you weigh before outsourcing?

For small, light parts that arrive bulk-packed, shipping is rarely the deciding factor. The picture changes with weight and size. A heavy or awkward part can cost as much to ship round-trip as it costs to mark, and that freight belongs in the comparison against in-house marking, where the part never leaves the building.

It works the other way too. If a job shop can handle secondary marking, light assembly, or other processing in the same pass, you may consolidate steps you were managing across multiple vendors. Ask what the shop can take off your plate beyond the mark itself, and weigh lead time the same way — a few days of turnaround is fine for steady reorders and a problem for a line that is waiting.

These are the questions Jimani works through with customers before quoting: does the part need to be packaged and shipped, is there secondary processing the shop could handle, and is freight a real cost given the part’s weight or size.

Can you own a laser system and still use a job shop?

Buy-versus-outsource is not always an either/or. A shop that marks the same nameplate by the thousand has a clear case for owning a system, yet still benefits from sending out the one job a quarter that needs a rotary, a larger field, or a material the in-house operator has never run. Owning the routine work and outsourcing the exceptions keeps the machine busy on what it does well without forcing you to engineer every edge case yourself.

Because Jimani both builds Hybrid fiber laser systems and runs a job shop, it is set up to support either path — or both at once.

Not sure which way the math points?

If you are weighing in-house against outsourced, send us a sample and a volume estimate. We will mark it, send it back, and tell you what we would do — even when the answer is not “buy a laser.” See our laser job shop services or contact us to get started.