How much does digital signage cost? +
Per-screen, all-in. Indoor commercial displays from 32–98 inches run $3,200 to $19,600 per screen — that's the panel, mount, media player, professional install, on-site training, network setup, and the first year of our Dashboard software in one number. High-brightness storefront window displays from 46–75 inches run $3,850 to $14,000 per screen with the same all-in scope. Multi-store rollouts get volume pricing, and we'll match any signed competitive quote on comparable scope.
What is digital signage software pricing on a software-only basis? +
Twenty dollars per screen per month, annual billing, when you bring compatible commercial displays or run our Dashboard on a CrownTV media player you already own. That covers the cloud CMS, scheduling, content templates, multi-tier permissions, real-time monitoring, and fleet-wide updates. Most operators pick the turnkey bundle (one number, all ten line items) but software-only is fully supported and used by clients with existing fleets.
What's included in the per-screen price? +
Every package covers ten line items in one number: the commercial display, the mount, our media player, professional installation by licensed and insured technicians, on-site training, white-glove delivery, post-install cleanup, clean electrical extension to the nearest outlet, network setup on every device, full system testing, and the first year of our Dashboard software. Nothing surfaces later as a change order. No platform fee. No mystery margin.
How much does a digital menu board cost? +
Most digital menu boards run on a 43-inch or 55-inch indoor commercial display, which lands $3,400–$4,300 per screen all-in. A four-screen QSR menu setup is typically $14,000–$17,000 turnkey, synchronized via one media player and an HDMI splitter. Drive-thru or window-facing menus on a 46-inch sun-readable display run $3,850–$4,200 per screen because the kit needs 2,500-plus nits to fight glare.
How much does a video wall cost? +
Video walls scale with size and configuration. A 2×2 video wall built from four 55-inch panels runs roughly $16,000–$17,200 all-in. A 3×3 from nine panels is $36,000–$38,700. Hybrid flagship configurations (98-inch + 85-inch panels in a single canvas — the Victoria's Secret Fifth Avenue spec) range $40,000–$120,000 depending on layout, structural mounting, and content production scope. Every video-wall quote is bespoke.
Do you offer volume pricing for multi-store rollouts? +
Yes. Rollouts of 5-plus locations qualify for volume pricing — typically 8–15 percent off the per-screen list, depending on rollout size and timeline. L'Occitane runs us across 150-plus stores on volume terms; CBD Kratom shipped 55-plus stores in under 10 days using a standardized high-brightness storefront kit. Multi-store quotes are bundled per location and phased against your construction calendar.
Why is digital signage more expensive than a regular TV plus a stick? +
Three reasons. (1) Commercial-grade panels are rated for 16/7 or 24/7 duty cycles with anti-burn-in technology and a commercial manufacturer warranty — consumer TVs are rated for 6–8 hours and start failing in 12–18 months under always-on signage duty. (2) The all-in number includes professional install with a licensed crew, content QA on first power-up, and network commissioning — none of which a stick gives you. (3) Year-one software is included; with the DIY approach you assemble a CMS subscription, mounts, cables, electrical, training, and a content workflow on your own time. The price difference is the difference between parts and a working system.
What about ongoing managed services after the first year? +
Year-two-plus is per-location flat-rate managed services, scoped to your fleet. That covers content scheduling on your behalf if marketing is short-staffed, quarterly preventative checks (hardware, network, software, content audit), 24/7 device monitoring, and a 48-hour replacement-player ship-out for any failed device. Software renewal is the same $20 per screen per month, held flat for the installed base since 2022. See /services/managed/ for the full package.