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Embroidery machines / For a business

The best embroidery machine for a small business

The machine that grows a business isn't the most expensive one — it's the one that matches your order volume. Here's where single-needle stops paying, where multi-needle starts, and the numbers behind the decision.

The short version: start on a single-needle (SE2000 or a used PE800) while you validate demand. Once you're changing thread colours all day, move to a 6-needle Brother PR680W or a 10-needle Ricoma EM-1010 — the labour they save is the whole business case.

Single-needle vs multi-needle: the economics


A single-needle machine stops to let you change thread by hand for every colour. A ten-colour left-chest logo is ten manual stops. A multi-needle threads all its needles once and switches automatically mid-design — you load the garment and walk away. At one or two orders a week that convenience isn't worth thousands of dollars. At twenty, it's the difference between a hobby and an hourly wage. Run your own numbers in our per-garment pricing calculator before you commit.

How the business machines compare


MachineFieldBuilt-insPrice (axis $4,000–15,000)Score
Brother PR680W best all-rounder · 6-needle
8×12 in 60 checking 8.7/10
Ricoma EM-1010 most needles per dollar · 10-needle
12.2×8.3 in 200 checking 8.1/10
Brother PR1055X scale-up · 10-needle
8×14 in 140 checking 8.5/10

Multi-needle price axis $4k–$15k. Dealer/street pricing, checked 3 Jul 2026.

Brother or Ricoma?

This is the real fork for most first-time multi-needle buyers. Ricoma gets you ten needles for roughly what a six-needle Brother costs, and buyers consistently praise the onboarding and support. Brother costs more per needle but has the deeper dealer network, easier local servicing and stronger resale. If you value hand-holding and raw capability-per-dollar, Ricoma; if you value a dealer down the road and resale certainty, Brother. Neither is a wrong answer — it depends on how much support you'll want.

What about caps?

Caps are the single most common reason hobbyists go commercial, and they're where single-needle machines fall down — you need a cap driver and cylinder arm that flat-bed machines don't have. Every machine in the table above handles caps with the right hoop; none of the single-needle home machines do. If hats are your plan, you're buying multi-needle from day one.

What business owners report


We read the threads so you don't have to. Each card summarises what owners in that community actually say — follow the link to read the discussion yourself.

r/Machine_Embroidery · single vs multi-needle for business

The turning point owners describe is orders, not ambition: a single-needle is fine until you’re changing thread colours all day. Once volume is steady, a multi-needle pays for itself in saved labour within months.

Read the thread →
Ricoma vs Brother multi-needle owner threads

Ricoma buyers praise getting 10 needles at 6-needle money and the responsive support/training; Brother buyers cite the larger dealer network and resale confidence. The split is real and worth weighing against your own support needs.

Read the thread →

Common questions


What is the best embroidery machine for a home business?

Start on a single-needle (a used Brother PE800 or an SE2000) while you validate demand, then move to a multi-needle once orders are steady. The 6-needle Brother PR680W (8.7/10) is the best all-rounder; the 10-needle Ricoma EM-1010 (8.1/10) is the most capability per dollar.

When should I upgrade from single-needle to multi-needle?

When thread changes become your bottleneck. A ten-colour logo on a single-needle is ten manual stops; a multi-needle switches automatically while you do something else. At one or two orders a week the upgrade isn’t worth thousands; at steady weekly volume it pays for itself in saved labour within months.

Do I need a multi-needle machine to embroider caps?

Effectively yes. Caps need a cap driver and cylinder arm that flat-bed home machines don’t support. Every multi-needle machine we score handles caps with the right attachment; no single-needle home machine does. If hats are the plan, budget for multi-needle from day one.

Is an embroidery business profitable?

It can be — custom work typically supports 50–65% margins — but the maths depends on your machine matching your volume and pricing your time honestly. Run your own numbers in our startup-cost and per-garment pricing calculators before spending anything.

How this verdict was made

Full method →
01 · Specs collected
Manufacturer sheets, manuals, dealer listings.
02 · Owners mined
Reddit, forums, groups — cited, never invented.
03 · Prices tracked
Major retailers, checked monthly.
04 · Verdict scored
Four sub-scores, one stamp. No sponsors.