Deciding on PCB batch sizing and the right order quantity impacts your project’s cost, timeline, and risk. Ordering too few wastes setup costs. Ordering too many ties up capital in inventory that may become obsolete after a design revision. This guide provides a framework for choosing the right quantity at each stage of your product development, from prototype to production.
Table of Contents
- PCB Manufacturing Cost Structure
- Prototype Quantities: 5 to 10 PCBs
- Pilot Run: 20 to 100 PCBs
- Production: 100 to 5,000+ PCBs
- Cost Per Unit Curves
- Panel Utilisation and Cost Optimisation
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Conclusion
PCB Manufacturing Cost Structure
PCB manufacturing has significant fixed costs (tooling, setup, film generation, quality checks) and lower variable costs (material, plating, routing per board). This means the first 5 boards absorb most of the setup cost, making the per-unit price high. As quantity increases, the setup cost is distributed across more boards, reducing the per-unit price. Beyond a certain quantity (typically 100 to 500 for standard 2-layer boards), the per-unit cost plateaus as variable costs dominate.
Prototype Quantities: 5 to 10 PCBs
For initial prototyping, order 5 to 10 boards. This quantity is sufficient to assemble and test 2 to 3 units while keeping spares for rework or revised assembly. Chinese PCB services like JLCPCB and PCBWay offer 5 boards for Rs 100 to Rs 300 (plus shipping) for standard 2-layer boards under 100x100mm, making very small prototype runs extremely affordable.
At prototype stage, expect design changes after testing. Do not order large quantities until the design is verified. The cost of 5 unused boards from a flawed design is trivial. The cost of 500 unused boards is not.
Pilot Run: 20 to 100 PCBs
After the prototype validates the design, a pilot run of 20 to 100 boards tests the assembly process, identifies manufacturing issues, and produces initial units for field testing or beta customers. At this quantity, per-unit cost drops significantly from prototype pricing, typically 40 to 60 percent lower than the 5-board price.
The pilot run also reveals assembly issues that do not appear with hand-assembled prototypes: component spacing too tight for pick-and-place machines, solder paste stencil alignment problems, or thermal issues during reflow soldering. Fix these issues before committing to production quantities.
Production: 100 to 5,000+ PCBs
Production orders benefit from full panel utilisation, automated processes, and volume material pricing. The per-unit cost for 500 boards is typically 70 to 80 percent lower than the 5-board prototype price. For orders above 1,000, consider Indian PCB manufacturers (like Technotronics, Sierra, or Rush PCB) for faster delivery and easier communication compared to overseas manufacturers.
At production volumes, additional cost-saving opportunities include panelisation (fitting multiple boards on a single manufacturing panel), combining orders with other products to fill panel space, and negotiating volume discounts with the manufacturer for recurring orders.
Cost Per Unit Curves
A typical 2-layer, 50x50mm PCB cost curve in India shows the following approximate per-unit prices. At 5 boards: Rs 40 to Rs 60 each. At 10 boards: Rs 25 to Rs 40 each. At 50 boards: Rs 12 to Rs 20 each. At 100 boards: Rs 8 to Rs 15 each. At 500 boards: Rs 5 to Rs 10 each. At 1,000+ boards: Rs 3 to Rs 7 each. The sharpest price drop occurs between 5 and 100 units. Beyond 500 units, the curve flattens significantly.
Panel Utilisation and Cost Optimisation
PCB manufacturers produce boards on standard panels (typically 400x500mm or 457x610mm for Chinese manufacturers). Your individual boards are arranged on this panel and routed out after manufacturing. If your board dimensions fit poorly on the panel (leaving large unused areas), you pay for wasted panel space.
Optimise by designing boards at dimensions that divide evenly into the panel size. A 50x50mm board fits 80 units on a 400x500mm panel. A 55x55mm board fits only 63 units on the same panel, a 21 percent utilisation loss. When possible, adjust your board dimensions slightly to improve panel utilisation and reduce cost.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I order extra boards beyond what I need?
Yes. Order 10 to 20 percent extra to account for assembly failures, testing rejects, and spares. The marginal cost of extra boards at production quantities is minimal compared to the cost of re-ordering a small batch for replacements.
Is it cheaper to order from China or India?
For prototype quantities (5 to 50), Chinese manufacturers (JLCPCB, PCBWay) are significantly cheaper. For production quantities (500+), Indian manufacturers become competitive when you factor in faster delivery, no customs hassles, and easier communication. For critical production, Indian manufacturers also offer better quality control oversight.
How long should I wait between prototype and production ordering?
Allow at least 2 to 4 weeks of testing with assembled prototypes before ordering production quantities. This testing period reveals design issues that are not apparent from schematic review or visual inspection alone. Electrical testing under real operating conditions is essential.
Conclusion
Match your PCB order quantity to your development stage. Order 5 for prototypes, 20 to 100 for pilot runs, and 500+ for production. The cost-per-unit curve rewards larger quantities but design stability rewards patience. Get the design right at small quantities before scaling up to avoid expensive mistakes at production volumes.
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