PUBLISHER: iData Research Inc. | PRODUCT CODE: 1847201
PUBLISHER: iData Research Inc. | PRODUCT CODE: 1847201
Please contact us using the inquiry form for pricing information.
The U.S. video and integrated operating room (OR) equipment market was valued at just under $4.2 billion in 2024. It is forecast to grow at a compound annual growth rate of 7.3 percent to reach nearly $6.9 billion by 2031.
This report covers integrated OR equipment, integrated OR management software, hybrid OR components, hybrid OR imaging systems, surgical displays and PACS monitors, surgical lighting, surgical booms, surgical tables, surgical headlights, surgical camera systems, image management devices, surgical light sources, and combination consoles. It quantifies unit sales, average selling prices (ASPs), market size, growth trends, and company shares, and analyzes procedure volumes, market drivers and limiters, recent mergers and acquisitions, and product portfolios. Forecasts extend to 2031, with historical data to 2021.
U.S. surgical providers are investing in digitally integrated rooms to improve efficiency and case throughput. Integrated ORs consolidate audiovisual control, device routing, and documentation in a single workflow. They offer a lower total cost than building hybrid ORs while still delivering major gains in coordination and turnover time. Hybrid OR projects continue where advanced imaging is essential, but many hospitals and ambulatory surgery centers are prioritizing integrated OR upgrades to handle rising case volumes and to standardize minimally invasive surgery (MIS) workflows. At the same time, the market is being reshaped by the conversion from HD to 4K camera systems, the rise of 3D and 8-megapixel surgical displays, and growing use of telemedicine and remote collaboration.
Market Overview
Operating rooms are capital-intensive environments where time, image quality, and coordination determine both clinical and financial outcomes. The move toward integrated ORs reflects a practical balance between performance and budget. Integration platforms consolidate touch-screen control of sources, routing matrices, video streaming, recording, and EMR-connected documentation. This reduces clutter, shortens staff training, and supports protocol-driven care across specialties.
Hybrid ORs combine surgical capabilities with fixed imaging, such as angiography, CT, or MRI. They enable complex endovascular, cardiac, and neuro procedures. However, they require major structural work, radiation shielding, and specialized staffing. For many facilities, the upgrade path begins with integrated OR projects in general surgery, orthopedics, spine, urology, gynecology, ENT, and robotic programs. Hybrid suites are prioritized for centers with high volumes of image-guided interventions.
Across both integrated and hybrid environments, providers are refreshing surgical camera systems and display fleets. The shift from HD to 4K continues as surgeons seek finer detail for dissection planes, vessel identification, and suture placement. 3D systems retain a focused role in advanced laparoscopy, while 8-megapixel UHD displays support multi-window views for complex cases. Parallel upgrades occur in image management, combination consoles, and light sources, with LED platforms replacing older illumination to reduce heat and power use.
The supply landscape is broad. Leading firms provide end-to-end integration from room design to installation, while others focus on imaging, displays, lighting, booms, and tables. Hospitals and ASCs often prefer wider portfolios that simplify procurement, ensure compatibility, and unlock volume-based discounts. This purchasing behavior encourages suppliers to expand into adjacent categories and to provide lifecycle services such as training, uptime guarantees, cybersecurity support, and remote monitoring.
Market Drivers
New technologies and deeper integration
Integration is now standard in new OR builds and many renovations. Facilities expect seamless routing, single-user interfaces, wireless casting in the room, standardized presets, and video capture that feeds quality and training programs. The rise of telemedicine and remote proctoring creates demand for secure streaming with minimal latency. As these expectations become widespread, hospitals look to keep rooms current with the latest software and hardware baselines, which supports recurring investment.
Increasing number of procedures
Surgical volumes have risen due to population growth, aging, obesity, and broader indications for MIS and image-guided surgery. Higher case counts pressure facilities to maximize on-time starts, turnover speed, and case throughput. Integrated control, better visualization, and ergonomic layouts help teams reduce errors and delays. As programs for orthopedics, robotics, and same-day surgery expand, demand grows for standardized integrated rooms that allow staff to move between cases and specialties without equipment learning curves.
Conversion to 4K camera systems
The move from HD to 4K surgical cameras is a central growth engine. 4K offers four times the pixel resolution of HD, enabling clearer tissue planes, better zoom performance, and improved confidence in MIS. For many specialties, 4K is now the default specification for new towers. Since 4K systems command a premium over HD, their adoption raises average selling prices and lifts overall market value, even where unit growth is steady.
Digital documentation and data use
Hospitals are formalizing programs for video capture, case review, and education. Image management devices and combination consoles support recording, tagging, and storing procedural content. These assets are used for credentialing, risk management, training, and cross-site standardization. As documentation becomes part of policy, facilities invest in stable capture workflows integrated with PACS and EMR.
ASC expansion
Ambulatory surgery centers continue to grow, especially in orthopedics, GI, ENT, urology, and general surgery. ASCs value compact, cost-conscious integration that still supports high image quality. Vendors offering ASC-tailored bundles for displays, cameras, light sources, and basic integration are gaining traction, expanding the market beyond large hospital systems.
Market Limiters
Higher upfront prices and budget constraints
While advanced integration and imaging improve outcomes and workflow, higher ASPs can restrict adoption. Hybrid ORs in particular require significant capital outlays, often exceeding $2 million for implementation alone, not including construction costs or staffing. Budget-constrained hospitals and smaller ASCs may phase upgrades over several fiscal years or delay projects.
Entry of new competitors and portfolio expansion
As the market matures, more companies are entering segments such as integrated OR platforms, image routing, and surgical headlights. Non-medical AV firms are adapting enterprise video technologies to healthcare. This intensifies competition and can push ASPs lower in categories where features converge. Hospitals that favor single-vendor sourcing for compatibility and service contracts may still solicit multi-bid tenders, which keeps pricing pressure high.
Refurbished equipment
Some non-computerized capital like standard surgical lighting and basic surgical tables can be refurbished at lower cost. This limits new unit sales in value-driven accounts. Conversely, products that rely on processing speed, video codecs, and secure networking are less suitable for refurbishment, so integrated OR cores and high-end imaging are less affected. Even so, the availability of refurbished options can delay full-room refresh cycles.
Installation complexity and downtime
Room closures for construction, wiring, and validation create scheduling challenges. Facilities attempt to coordinate installations with broader renovations, but the risk of downtime and overruns can slow purchasing decisions. Vendors who streamline installation and provide project management and after-hours cutovers have an advantage.
Market Coverage and Data Scope
Markets Covered and Segmentation
Integrated Operating Room
Integrated Operating Room Management Software
Hybrid Operating Room
Hybrid Operating Room Imaging System
Display and Monitors
Surgical Lighting
Surgical Boom
Surgical Table
Surgical Headlight
Surgical Camera System
Image Management Device
Surgical Light Source
Combination Console
Each category includes market value, units, ASPs, and forecast growth with segment-level drivers, limiters, and competitive context.
Competitive Analysis
Stryker led the U.S. video endoscopy and OR equipment market in 2025. The company's strongest positions remain in integrated OR platforms and room control, where long-standing customer relationships and a large installed base support repeat upgrades. Stryker has also advanced in surgical imaging, gaining share in surgical displays, image management, and combination consoles. Its approach pairs 4K camera systems and displays with scalable integration software, giving hospitals and ASCs a single roadmap for video, routing, and documentation.
Karl Storz ranked second. The company expanded through targeted acquisitions and continued to grow its share in combination consoles, driven by the IMAGE 1 S System(TM) platform. Karl Storz remains a major supplier of camera systems and endoscopic visualization, with a strong presence in laparoscopy, urology, ENT, and neurosurgery. Its portfolio depth and modular upgrade path appeal to sites that want to refresh imaging first and add integration features over time.
STERIS was the third-leading competitor, offering solutions across many segments. The firm gained share in the hybrid operating room market and saw strong growth with the Harmony iQ(TM) integration system. STERIS pairs integration with surgical lighting, booms, tables, and room infrastructure, which helps facilities standardize on a single vendor during construction or large renovations. Its service network and experience in capital planning are key differentiators for enterprise-scale projects.
Other participants are active in specific niches, including enterprise AV entrants that focus on routing and collaboration, specialty monitor suppliers, and lighting and table manufacturers that compete on reliability and service. While competition is intensifying, accounts with multi-year standardization plans often prioritize compatibility, service coverage, and training, which favors vendors with broader portfolios and proven execution.
Technology and Practice Trends
Geography
This edition covers the United States.
Where are the largest and fastest-growing opportunities across integrated ORs, hybrid suites, surgical cameras, and displays.
How the conversion to 4K and the spread of image management will shift budget priority across hospitals and ASCs.
Which vendors are positioned to win multi-room standardization deals and how Stryker, Karl Storz, and STERIS compare.
How pricing pressure, refurbished options, and new entrants will affect ASPs and contract terms.
What role telemedicine, remote proctoring, and analytics will play in future RFPs and specification checklists.
How to plan phased upgrade paths that align capital, construction windows, and staff training while minimizing downtime.
What risks could slow adoption, including budget constraints, installation complexity, and cybersecurity requirements.
The U.S. Video and Integrated OR Equipment Market Report from iData Research answers these questions with procedure-aware modeling, company share analysis, and pricing detail. Use it to size demand by category, build room-by-room refresh plans, optimize portfolio mix, and develop bids that match the evolving standards of integrated and hybrid operating rooms.
Table Of Contents
List Of Figures
List Of Charts
U.S. Video And Integrated Operating Room Equipment Market Overview
Competitive Analysis
Market Developments
Market Trends
Market Segmentation
Key Report Updates
Version History
Research Methodology
Impact Of Global Tariffs
U.S. Video And Integrated Operating Room Equipment Market Overview
Integrated Operating Room Market
Integrated Operating Room Management Software Market
Hybrid Operating Room Market
Hybrid Operating Room Imaging System Market
Surgical Display And Pacs Monitor Market
Surgical Lighting Market
Surgical Boom Market
Surgical Table Market
Surgical Headlight Market
Surgical Camera System Market
Image Management Market
Surgical Light Sources Market
Combination Console Market
Please contact us using the inquiry form for pricing information.