Livben Listings

Buying a brand-new industrial machine is not just about finding “unused equipment.” The real advantage comes from choosing the right capacity, the right technical specification, and the right commercial terms (warranty, commissioning, delivery, service). A new-machine investment directly impacts output speed, product quality, energy consumption, and your long-term maintenance plan. On Livben, you can explore new machines for sale across industries, compare specs side by side, and contact sellers directly to request a quote.

This page is a practical hub for both sides: buyers who want to evaluate new machines correctly, and sellers who want a conversion-focused page that helps their listings rank and perform better. You’ll find a clear selection framework, pricing logic, warranty/service checkpoints, and listing best practices aligned with real search intent.

Quick navigation: Find listings · Buyer checklist · Pricing & TCO · Top categories · For sellers · FAQ

Start on Livben: Showcase · Categories · Stores · Post an Ad


Why companies choose brand-new machines

When businesses invest in new industrial equipment, the goals are usually the same: consistent quality, reduced downtime risk, improved energy efficiency, and predictable maintenance. With new machines, component wear is minimal, documentation is typically complete, and spare-part/service planning is easier to forecast.

That said, “the most expensive machine is the best” is rarely true. The smarter approach is to evaluate ROI and match the equipment to your actual site conditions (power, space, operators, process requirements). The sections below help you make a clean, criteria-based decision.


How to discover brand-new machine listings on Livben

Start with Showcase to see the newest listings, then narrow down by machine type using Categories. If you want to compare sellers and inventory sources, browse Stores.

While browsing new machines, look for signals like new / unused / boxed / under warranty, and build a shortlist around: capacity + utilities + footprint + delivery/commissioning scope. If a listing doesn’t state these clearly, request them before comparing price.

If you’re also comparing used/refurbished alternatives, use: Machine Seeker (search & evaluation framework built for industrial buyers).

If you’re a seller and want to publish a listing: Post an Ad. For a step-by-step guide: How to post a machine listing. For beginner-friendly basics: Add a listing. For posting limits/packages: FAQ.


15 critical checks when buying a brand-new machine

Use this checklist to reduce surprise costs and move from “price searching” to a true total cost of ownership comparison:

  1. Capacity: Does the machine meet your real production target (units/min, kg/h, tonnage, flow rate)?
  2. Power & utilities: kW/HP, voltage/phase, compressed air, hydraulic/pneumatic compatibility—are you ready on-site?
  3. Footprint & access: Door clearance, ceiling height, floor load limits—does it fit and can it be moved in?
  4. Process compatibility: Can it integrate with your existing line standards and workflow?
  5. Automation level: PLC, sensors, safety systems, traceability options—what’s included vs. optional?
  6. Warranty terms: Duration, scope, consumables/exclusions—are they clearly defined?
  7. Service coverage: Response time, maintenance plans, service packages—what’s the real SLA?
  8. Spare parts: Lead time and cost for critical components.
  9. Delivery conditions: Freight, insurance, lifting/forklift requirements—who is responsible?
  10. Installation & commissioning: Who performs it, how long it takes, what’s included?
  11. Training: Operator training and maintenance-team training availability.
  12. Documentation: Manual, electrical drawings, maintenance schedule—complete and delivered?
  13. Energy consumption: Efficiency metrics, inverter/servo options, expected running costs.
  14. Safety & compliance: Emergency stops, guarding, barriers, CE/compliance requirements.
  15. Total cost: Machine + commissioning + consumables + maintenance + energy + line adaptation.

How to evaluate prices for new machines

Pricing in new machines for sale varies by brand/model, capacity, automation package, warranty scope, service plan, and optional modules. Two machines can look similar on paper, yet differ significantly in control system quality, stability, precision, energy usage, and spare-part costs.

A reliable comparison method is simple: First, group machines that meet the same production target. Then compare them across five areas: (1) warranty & service, (2) options & included accessories, (3) installation/commissioning, (4) energy consumption, (5) delivery terms. Until these are clear, “cheap vs. expensive” is often misleading.


Most searched categories for brand-new machines

Buyers typically concentrate around these groups. If you’re selling in one of them, complete technical specs and clear media will improve both visibility and conversion.

CNC, turning, milling & machining

For new CNC and machining equipment, buyers expect axis travels, spindle speed, tool magazine capacity, control unit details, servo systems, and accuracy/tolerance values. When these are clearly listed, qualification is faster and messages are higher quality.

Press brakes, shears, presses & sheet metal

Tonnage, stroke, bed size, bending capacity, safety equipment, and automation options drive decisions. Safety standards and included options should be highlighted clearly.

Compressors, dryers, filters & utilities

Flow rate, pressure, variable-speed drive, dryer capacity, and filtration level are core. Energy-efficiency notes often increase conversion in this category.

Generators & power equipment

kVA rating, alternator, ATS, enclosure insulation, and service plan matter most—warranty and service network are decisive here.

Packaging, filling, labeling & production lines

Units/min output, product compatibility (powder/liquid/granule), PLC/automation, format sets, and service support are key. A short 30–60 second demo video can significantly improve performance for higher-budget equipment.

Forklifts & warehouse equipment

Capacity, mast type, battery/charging infrastructure (for electric models), maintenance plan, and warranty scope should be clearly stated.


For sellers: how to build a high-performing new-machine listing

To rank better and convert faster, your listing must do two things: provide clear information for humans and align naturally with search intent. Avoid keyword stuffing—focus on structured specs, transparent terms, and strong media.

SEO-friendly title structure

  • New + Machine type + Key spec + Model/Year
  • Example: “New 3-Axis CNC Vertical Machining Center – 2025”
  • Example: “New 250 Ton Hydraulic Press – Warranty Included”
  • Example: “New Screw Compressor – 10 Bar – With Dryer”

Professional listing content plan

  1. Short overview: What the machine does and who it’s ideal for.
  2. Specification block: capacity, power, dimensions, control/automation.
  3. Warranty & service: scope and duration in plain language.
  4. Options: accessories, package contents, add-on modules.
  5. Delivery & commissioning: lead time, on-site support, training.
  6. Pricing format: tax notes, negotiation, trade-in, payment/financing.
  7. Contact promise: response hours + what info you need for a fast quote.

Photo & video standards

For new machines, media should communicate “detail and trust,” not just “boxed.” Show overall angles, control panel, nameplate, critical components, and included options. If possible, add a short video walkthrough—especially for high-value equipment.

Helpful guides: Livben Listings (Pro Guide) · Post a machine listing · Add a listing · Post an Ad


For buyers: fast quote request template

Use this message to get clearer offers faster: “I’m requesting a quote for your brand-new machine listing. My target output is [units/min or kg/h]. Utilities: [voltage/phase / air line]. Location: [city/country]. Please share delivered + installed price (if available), warranty scope, service coverage, and estimated lead time.”


Warranty, service, and maintenance: what to clarify

Warranty duration matters, but scope matters more: consumable exclusions, user-error coverage, service response times, and periodic maintenance requirements are key decision factors. When sellers provide a clear maintenance schedule (filters/oil, checkpoints, recommended intervals), onboarding is faster for the operating team.

Installation & commissioning: site readiness matters

Many new machines are not “plug-and-play.” Site preparation may be required: floor leveling, anchoring, power lines, compressed air, cooling/ventilation, safety barriers, and layout planning. Sellers should state commissioning scope clearly; buyers should request a site-readiness checklist before finalizing the purchase.


Process safety reminder

Written terms protect both sides. It’s recommended not to proceed before delivery, commissioning, warranty scope, and payment terms are clear. For rules: Terms & Conditions, for returns/disputes: Returns & Dispute Resolution, for privacy: Data Protection & Privacy, for cookies: Cookie Policy, and for support: Contact.


FAQ

What information must a brand-new machine listing include?

Brand/model, capacity, power/utility requirements, dimensions, control/automation details, warranty scope, delivery/commissioning terms, and clear photos are the essentials. When these are complete, buyers decide faster and inquiries are more qualified.

What matters more: price or service?

Over the long run, service coverage and spare-part availability reduce downtime risk. Evaluate beyond list price and compare total cost of ownership.

How do I publish a listing on Livben?

Use Post an Ad to publish. For best practices, follow Add a listing and How to post a machine listing.

Where should I start browsing new machines on Livben?

Start from Showcase for the newest listings, then use Categories to narrow by machine type and specs.

How many photos should a new-machine listing have?

Aim for 7–12: overall angles, control panel, nameplate/serial label, critical components, and included accessories. A short video walkthrough can improve buyer confidence.