Bioresonance hardware devices cost EUR 5,000 to EUR 35,000, while browser-based software like ResoField is free. For most home users, software covers the same frequency protocols without the upfront investment.
Bioresonance devices are expensive. Anyone who has looked into buying one knows this. But the gap between professional hardware and free browser-based software raises a genuine question: what do you actually lose by skipping the hardware?
This guide breaks down the real costs, what professional devices provide that software does not, and when each option makes practical sense.
We have owned three different bioresonance devices over the years: a QEST4, a Sulis, and a Mora system. Combined, that represented over 30,000 euros in hardware. Each had strengths, but none did everything we needed. That gap between what the hardware could do and what our practice actually required is what led me to build ResoField.
What Does a Bioresonance Device Cost?
The price range is wide, and the differences between price tiers are significant.
Professional clinical systems sit at the top. The BICOM Optima, developed by Regumed in Germany, costs between €15,000 and €35,000 depending on configuration. The Rayonex PS 1000 and similar full-size Rayonex systems run €20,000 to €30,000. These are instruments designed for trained therapists running a professional practice. Buying one for home use is rare.
Mid-range systems like the Rayonex Polar are more compact, starting around €3,500. They are still professional-grade instruments aimed at practitioners.
Consumer devices bring the price down considerably. The Healy, a wearable from a German company, costs €689 for the entry-level model and up to €4,610 for the highest-tier package with all program modules included. It is the most widely sold bioresonance-adjacent device for home users.
Open-source systems like Spooky2 take a different approach. The hardware kits start around €150 to €500 depending on which components you choose. Spooky2 operates more as a RIFE frequency platform than a bioresonance device in the strict sense, but it is often categorized alongside bioresonance tools by home users.
The practical summary: if you want a device that functions the way professional bioresonance machines do, the entry point is several thousand euros at minimum, and most serious systems cost well over €15,000.
What Do You Get for That Price?
Professional bioresonance devices offer several things that software cannot replicate.
Physical signal delivery. Bioresonance theory holds that the device reads electromagnetic signals from the body through electrodes, processes them, and returns modified signals. This requires a physical connection and dedicated hardware. A software program running in a browser cannot do this.
Clinical build quality. Devices like the BICOM are manufactured to medical device standards, with shielded electronics, calibrated signal generation, and quality controls that consumer electronics do not match.
Manufacturer support and training. Buying a professional bioresonance device typically includes access to training courses, practitioner communities, updated frequency databases, and ongoing technical support. The Regumed BICOM ecosystem, for example, includes regular practitioner seminars and a structured certification path.
Regulatory compliance. Professional devices are registered as medical devices or wellness devices under applicable regulations, which matters for therapists operating in regulated markets.
What professional devices do not automatically provide is clinical evidence of their claimed effects. The underlying mechanism of bioresonance, reading and correcting the body's electromagnetic patterns, has not been validated by peer-reviewed clinical trials. The devices are sophisticated and expensive; the theoretical basis for their effects remains contested.
The cost of ownership
Purchase price is not the full cost. Professional devices require periodic recalibration, software updates (usually subscription-based), and eventual replacement of components like electrodes and connection cables. A €20,000 device may cost several thousand euros per year to maintain and keep current.
What Can Software Do?
Browser-based frequency software handles a different set of tasks, and it handles some of them well.
Protocol tracking and session management. Organizing frequency protocols, logging sessions, and tracking what was used when is work that software does efficiently. Professional bioresonance devices also have this functionality, but so does dedicated frequency software.
RIFE frequency delivery via audio. RIFE frequencies can be played as audio signals through speakers or headphones. This is not the same as electromagnetic delivery via contact electrodes, but for many users it is a workable approach for audible-range frequencies.
Radionics and information-based approaches. Radionics operates through numerical codes and informational patterns rather than physical signal delivery. Software is a natural fit for this modality.
Homeopathic and imprint frequencies. Digital approaches to homeopathy encode remedy frequencies as data. Software can store, organize, and deliver these in ways that match or exceed what hardware-based alternatives provide.
ResoField is a browser-based platform providing free access to RIFE frequency protocols from the CAFL database, bioresonance-style programs, radionics tools, and homeopathic remedy frequencies. No device is required, and it works on any browser-capable device.
Buying a Bioresonance Device: Who Actually Needs One?
The answer depends on how you plan to use it.
Professional therapists with an active practice have a clear case for hardware. If you are running sessions with clients, a professional device provides the physical delivery mechanism that bioresonance theory requires, the clinical credibility that clients expect, and the manufacturer support that keeps a working practice running. For therapists seeing multiple clients per week, the investment can be justified economically and practically.
Home users and hobbyists face a different calculation. The core question is whether the physical signal delivery of a hardware device produces meaningfully different outcomes than audio-based software delivery or protocol tracking. There is no clinical evidence that it does. If your interest is in exploring frequency protocols, tracking sessions, and working with RIFE, radionics, or homeopathic approaches, software covers the functional ground.
The Healy occupies a middle position. At €689 for the base model, it is accessible to motivated home users. It provides physical frequency delivery via a wearable, and its app ecosystem is polished. Whether it delivers meaningfully different results than software is a question its manufacturer does not answer with clinical data.
References
FAQ
How much does a bioresonance device cost?
Professional clinical systems like the BICOM Optima and Rayonex PS 1000 cost €15,000 to €35,000. The Healy, the most accessible consumer option, starts at €689 and reaches €4,610 with all program modules. The Spooky2 open-source system starts around €150 to €500 for hardware kits. For home users, the realistic range is €150 to €5,000 depending on the device and feature set you want.
Can I do bioresonance at home without a device?
You can use browser-based software to work with frequency protocols, RIFE databases, radionics tools, and bioresonance-style programs without any dedicated hardware. What you cannot replicate is the physical electromagnetic signal delivery that dedicated bioresonance devices provide. Whether that physical delivery component is necessary for the results you want is a question worth thinking about before spending thousands of euros.
What is the difference between a bioresonance device and software?
A bioresonance device physically connects to the body via electrodes and, in theory, reads and modifies the body's electromagnetic signals. Software delivers frequencies through audio output or serves as a protocol management tool. Software cannot replicate the physical connection component, but it can handle many of the practical tasks: protocol selection, session tracking, RIFE frequency delivery via audio, radionics, and homeopathic frequency access. ResoField provides these functions free of charge in any browser.
Where can I buy a bioresonance device?
Professional systems like the BICOM and Rayonex are sold through authorized distributors and typically require therapist training as part of the purchase process. The Healy is sold through the Healy World direct sales network. Spooky2 ships internationally from its online store. Before purchasing any device, it is worth spending time with free software tools to understand which frequency approaches you want to work with, and whether hardware delivery is something you need.
Marvin Carter
Marvin Carter is a software developer and self-taught homeopathy practitioner who founded ResoField in 2025. Together with his wife, who runs a resonance therapy practice, he has 7+ years of hands-on experience and 100+ clients treated. With personal experience using devices like QEST4, Sulis, and Mora, he bridges the gap between IT and holistic health.