The Short Answer
A single digital signage screen can cost as little as €100–€150 to set up (one-time) and €4–€6 per month to run. A 10-screen deployment for a retail chain or restaurant group can be fully operational for under €1,500 upfront and €50–€60 per month.
These numbers might sound low compared to what you’ve seen elsewhere. That’s because the digital signage industry has a pricing problem: many providers bundle expensive proprietary hardware with overpriced software subscriptions, pushing costs to €200–€500 per screen just to get started, plus €10–€20 per screen per month in software fees.
The reality is that in 2026, affordable hardware exists, cloud software has matured, and you don’t need to overpay. Let’s break it all down.
The Four Costs of Digital Signage
Every digital signage deployment has four cost categories. Some are one-time, some are recurring. Understanding all four is the key to accurate budgeting.
1. The Screen (TV or Monitor)
You probably already have screens, or you can buy them affordably. Digital signage doesn’t require special “commercial displays” for most use cases.
Consumer TVs work great for indoor environments with standard operating hours. A 43-inch Full HD TV costs €200–€350. A 55-inch 4K TV costs €350–€550. These are prices you’d find at any electronics retailer.
Commercial displays (€800–€3,000+) are only justified if you need: screens running 24/7 in high-brightness environments, outdoor or semi-outdoor installations, portrait-orientation mounting with proper ventilation, or extended warranties (3–5 years).
For most businesses — restaurants, retail stores, offices, gyms, hotels, schools — a standard consumer TV is perfectly fine. Many of our customers have been running consumer TVs for years without issues.
Pro tip: With 1Play and Raspberry Pi, portrait (vertical) orientation works on any TV — the rotation is handled by the software, not by the display. All you need is a portrait-compatible VESA mount.
2. The Player (Media Player Hardware)
This is where the biggest cost difference occurs. Traditional digital signage players — proprietary boxes from signage companies — cost €200–€500 each. Some vendors sell pre-configured players for €300–€800.
A Raspberry Pi 5 costs around €60–€70. That’s the complete player hardware. The Raspberry Pi 5 (4GB RAM) supports 4K video playback with hardware acceleration, built-in Wi-Fi, and delivers more than enough performance for any digital signage workload. It’s the recommended choice for all new deployments.
Beyond the Pi itself, you need a microSD card (16GB Class 10, around €8–€12), an official power supply (€10–€15), an HDMI cable (€5–€10), and optionally a case (€5–€15).
Total player hardware cost: approximately €70–€110 per screen.
Compare that to €300–€800 for a proprietary player, and you’ll see why Raspberry Pi has become the most popular hardware choice for digital signage worldwide.
3. The Software (Cloud Management Platform)
Software is the recurring cost. It’s what lets you upload content, create playlists, schedule what plays when, and manage all your screens from one dashboard.
Industry pricing ranges wildly, from €8 to €20+ per screen per month. Some platforms charge extra for features like scheduling, proof-of-play reports, or video wall support. Others lock you into annual contracts.
With 1Play, the software cost structure is different:
Standard price: €0.19 per screen per day (€5.70/month).
With volume discounts: as low as €0.13 per screen per day (€3.90/month).
All features included at every price tier — no “premium” upsells for scheduling, proof-of-play, video walls, or offline playback.
The key differentiator is the prepaid, pay-per-day billing model. You buy days in advance, and the system deducts one day per active screen per day. This matters a lot for total cost, and we’ll explain why in the billing section below.
4. Content (What You Display)
Content is the cost people most often forget to budget for. You can have the best hardware and software in the world, but if your content looks amateur, your signage will hurt more than it helps.
The free approach: Many businesses create their own content using tools like Canva, Google Slides, or PowerPoint. Export as images or videos, upload to your signage dashboard, done. This works surprisingly well for menu boards, announcements, promotions, and informational displays.
The professional approach: Hiring a designer to create branded templates costs €200–€500 one-time. Once you have templates, updating content (new prices, new promotions, seasonal changes) takes minutes and costs nothing.
Video content: If you need professional video (product showcases, brand stories, video wall content), budget €500–€2,000+ per video depending on complexity. For video walls with very high resolutions (4K, 8K, or beyond), production costs increase accordingly.
The practical approach for most businesses: Start with free tools. Create simple, clean content. Upgrade to professional templates once you’ve validated that digital signage works for your business. Most of our customers never need expensive content production — clean images with clear text outperform flashy videos in most retail and restaurant environments.
Total Cost Scenarios
Let’s put it all together with real numbers for common deployment sizes.
Scenario 1: Single Screen (Café Menu Board)
You want one screen behind the counter showing your menu, daily specials, and promotions.
One-time costs:
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| 43-inch TV | ~€250 |
| Raspberry Pi 5 kit (Pi + SD card + power supply + HDMI + case) | ~€100 |
| VESA mount or stand | ~€20–€40 |
| Total one-time | ~€370–€390 |
If you already have a TV, the one-time cost drops to approximately €100–€140.
Monthly costs: 1Play software — €5.70/month. Electricity — negligible (the Raspberry Pi uses about 5W, less than a light bulb).
Annual total: approximately €440–€460 first year, €70/year ongoing.
Scenario 2: 5 Screens (Restaurant or Small Retail)
Five screens across your location: two menu boards, one promotions display, one behind-the-bar screen, one in the window.
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| 5 TVs (mix of 43″ and 55″) | ~€1,500 |
| 5 Raspberry Pi 5 kits | ~€500 |
| Mounting hardware | ~€150 |
| Total one-time | ~€2,150 |
If you reuse existing TVs, the one-time cost is approximately €650.
Monthly costs: 1Play software (5 screens × €5.70) — €28.50/month.
Annual total: approximately €2,500 first year, €342/year ongoing.
Scenario 3: 20 Screens (Retail Chain or Hotel)
Twenty screens across multiple locations: storefronts, lobbies, meeting rooms, back-of-house.
| Item | Cost |
|---|---|
| 20 TVs | ~€5,000–€7,000 |
| 20 Raspberry Pi 5 kits | ~€2,000 |
| Mounting and cabling | ~€600 |
| Total one-time | ~€7,600–€9,600 |
Monthly costs: 1Play software (20 screens × €5.10 at PRO tier) — €102/month.
Annual total: approximately €8,800–€10,800 first year, €1,224/year ongoing.
Scenario 4: 100 Screens (Enterprise or Franchise)
A hundred screens across dozens of locations nationwide.
One-time costs: Hardware varies widely based on existing infrastructure. Budget approximately €10,000–€15,000 for Pi kits, SD cards, cables, and cases. Screens and mounting are site-dependent.
Monthly costs: 1Play software (100 screens × €4.50 at Ultimate tier) — €450/month.
Annual software cost: €5,400. Compare this to the industry average of €10,000–€24,000/year for 100 screens.
Why Billing Model Matters More Than Sticker Price
Most digital signage platforms charge monthly or annual subscriptions. You pay the same whether your screens are active 30 days or 3 days that month. This seems fine until you consider these real-world situations:
Seasonal businesses. A beach bar runs screens from May to September — 5 months. With a standard annual subscription, you pay for 12 months. With 1Play’s prepaid system, you pay for approximately 150 days instead of 365. That’s a 59% savings on software costs.
Event and trade show companies. You need 15 screens for a 4-day exhibition. With monthly billing, you pay for a full month per screen. With day-based billing, you pay for 4 days per screen. Fifteen screens × 4 days × €0.19 = €11.40 total. The same deployment on a monthly platform would cost €120–€300.
Retail with variable store hours. Some stores close for renovation, relocation, or off-season. Deactivate those screens and stop paying immediately. Reactivate when you reopen. No cancellation fees, no reactivation fees, no contract negotiation.
Testing and pilots. Want to test digital signage in 3 locations before rolling out to 50? Run a 2-week pilot. Pay for 14 days per screen. If it works, scale up. If not, you’ve spent less than one month’s subscription elsewhere.
This flexibility is why we built 1Play around prepaid, day-based billing. You should never pay for screens that aren’t working for your business.
Hidden Costs to Watch Out For
When evaluating any digital signage solution, ask about these commonly hidden costs:
Feature gating. Some platforms advertise a low base price but charge extra for scheduling, proof-of-play reporting, video wall support, or multi-user access. With 1Play, every feature is included at every price tier.
Hardware lock-in. Some providers require you to buy their proprietary player hardware at €200–€500 per unit. With Raspberry Pi, you buy standard hardware from any retailer worldwide. If your player breaks, replace it for €65, not €400.
Content storage limits. Check if there are caps on how much media you can store or how many playlists you can create. 1Play’s storage is limited only by your SD card size (most customers use 16GB cards, which is more than enough).
Minimum commitments. Annual contracts with auto-renewal can trap you into paying for a service you’ve outgrown or no longer need. 1Play has no contracts and no minimum commitment.
Setup and training fees. Some enterprise platforms charge for onboarding, training, or “professional services.” 1Play is designed to be self-service — most customers go from unboxing to displaying content in under 30 minutes.
How to Start for Free
The best way to understand the true cost of digital signage is to try it yourself. Here’s how to get started with zero financial risk:
Step 1: Get a Raspberry Pi 5 from your local electronics store or online.
Step 2: Create a free 1Play account at media.1play.tv. No credit card required. You get 30 days free to test everything.
Step 3: Follow the simple DIY setup to flash the 1Play image onto your SD card. It takes about 10 minutes.
Step 4: Connect the Pi to your TV, add it to your dashboard, upload your first images or videos, and you’re live.
If after 30 days you decide digital signage works for your business, your first order can be as small as you need. Buy 30 days for one screen (€5.70) and grow from there.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Raspberry Pi reliable enough for commercial digital signage?
Yes. Raspberry Pi has been used in commercial digital signage for over a decade. The Raspberry Pi 5 is particularly robust, with no moving parts, minimal heat generation, and very low failure rates. 1Play has been running on Raspberry Pi hardware since 2016, and our customers report defect rates close to zero in real-world environments including retail stores, public spaces, and industrial settings.
What’s the cheapest way to set up digital signage?
The most affordable setup is a Raspberry Pi 5 (approximately €65), a 16GB SD card (approximately €10), an HDMI cable (approximately €5), and a power supply (approximately €12) — approximately €92 in total player hardware. If you already have a TV, that’s your only upfront cost. Software starts at €5.70/month with 1Play, with a 30-day free trial to start.
Do I need a commercial display or can I use a regular TV?
For most indoor applications, a regular consumer TV works perfectly. Commercial displays are only necessary for 24/7 operation, outdoor use, or extremely high-brightness environments. Many businesses successfully run digital signage on standard TVs for years.
Can I manage screens in multiple locations from one place?
Yes. Cloud-based digital signage platforms like 1Play let you manage unlimited screens and locations from one web dashboard, accessible from any device. Upload content once, distribute it to any combination of screens instantly.
What happens if my internet goes down?
With 1Play, content is cached locally on the Raspberry Pi’s SD card. If the internet drops, your screens continue displaying the last synced playlist seamlessly. When connectivity returns, any updates sync automatically. Your screens can run offline for up to 30 days.
How much electricity does a Raspberry Pi use?
A Raspberry Pi 5 uses approximately 5–8 watts under typical signage workload. That’s less than an LED light bulb. At average European electricity prices, running a Pi 24/7 costs roughly €1–€2 per month. The TV itself will be your main electricity cost.
Can I display my content in portrait (vertical) orientation?
Yes. 1Play supports both landscape and portrait orientations, including for video walls. Portrait mode is popular for retail window displays, wayfinding, and social media-style content.
Digital signage is one of the highest-ROI investments a business can make in its physical presence. The technology has never been more affordable or easier to deploy. If you’ve been waiting for the right time to start, 2026 is it.
Start your free 30-day trial — no credit card, no commitment, no risk.