Quick Answer

Nautilus Hyosung is the second-largest ATM manufacturer in the United States. Their top retail models for independent operators are the Halo II (starting around $2,495 to $2,800 new), the Force MX2800SE (starting around $3,200 to $4,200 new), and the NH2700CE (discontinued new but widely available used at $1,500 to $2,200). The Halo II is the best-selling retail ATM in the industry and the right starting point for most first-time buyers.

Nautilus Hyosung makes the best-selling retail ATM in the United States. That is not a marketing claim from a dealer. It is something that every experienced operator, every ATM technician, and every parts supplier will confirm independently. The Halo II has been the top-selling machine in the industry for years, and for good reason: it is reliable, well-supported, easy to service, and priced where independent operators can actually afford it.

If you are looking to buy a Hyosung ATM, this guide covers every current model worth considering, what they cost new and used, how they compare to each other, where to buy them, and what to check before you hand over money. It also covers the NH2700CE and NH1800SE, machines that are no longer manufactured but still widely deployed and available on the used market.


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#2 in the U.S.
Hyosung is the second-largest ATM manufacturer in the United States, behind NCR

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$2,495+
Starting price for a new Hyosung Halo II from authorized dealers

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1 to 2 years
Standard warranty on new Hyosung retail ATMs from authorized dealers

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Parts available
Hyosung parts widely available but generally more expensive than Genmega equivalents


About Nautilus Hyosung

Hyosung, Inc. is a South Korean conglomerate that entered the ATM market and grew aggressively in the early 2000s. By 2002, just two years after launching their U.S. operations, they had imported over 30,000 ATM machines into the American market. Their U.S. division, Hyosung Americas (formerly Nautilus Hyosung America Inc.), is headquartered in Irving, Texas.

Hyosung holds the number two position in the U.S. ATM market, second only to NCR. They serve both the financial institution market with bank-grade products and the independent operator market with the retail ATM lineup this guide focuses on. Their research and development investment is substantial, and the result shows in machines that tend to look more polished and modern than many competitors at the same price point.

The retail product line for independent operators centers on three current machines: the Halo II, the Force MX2800SE, and newer additions like the Hero. For buyers considering used equipment, the NH2700CE and NH1800SE are still relevant because hundreds of thousands of them remain in operation, creating a deep parts and service ecosystem.


Hyosung ATM Models: Complete Lineup for 2026

Hyosung Halo II (NH-2600SE): The Standard Choice

The Halo II is the machine most buyers mean when they say “Hyosung ATM.” It is the best-selling retail ATM in the United States by most industry measures, trusted by independent operators from solo barbershop placements to multi-machine routes. The design is modern, the LED-lit keypad bezel is distinctive, and the 10.1-inch screen makes it one of the most customer-friendly machines in its price range.

Specification Detail
Screen 10.1-inch color LCD with touch function keys
Height 54.2 to 56.3 inches (varies slightly by configuration)
Width 15.7 inches
Depth 22.8 to 23.4 inches
Weight 200 to 265 lbs depending on configuration
Cash cassette Standard 1,000-note removable. Upgradable to 2,000-note or dual-cassette configurations.
Card reader EMV Level 1 and 2 compliant. NFC contactless optional.
Keypad PCI 3.0 compliant EPP. LED-lit with customizable colors.
Safe UL 291 Business Hours safe with enhanced break-in protection
Connectivity TCP/IP Ethernet standard. Wireless optional (DPL or OptConnect module).
Receipt 2-inch thermal printer standard. Digital QR-code receipt option available.
Security TLS transmission encryption. Electronic lock standard. Anti-skimming optional.
Price (new) $2,495 to $2,800 depending on dealer and configuration

The Halo II’s LED-lit bezel is the most visible differentiator. The light ring around the keypad rotates through colors and draws attention in dimly lit locations like bars and nightclubs. For convenience stores and hotels, the modern styling signals a higher-quality machine to customers who might otherwise hesitate. This aesthetic investment translates directly to more transactions per day.

Parts compatibility across the Hyosung retail family is a genuine practical advantage. When you need a CDU, a keypad, or a card reader, the same parts work across the Halo, Halo II, and other Hyosung models, which simplifies inventory management for operators running multiple machines.

Hyosung Force (MX2800SE): The Step-Up Model

The Force replaced the NH2700CE as Hyosung’s mid-tier retail ATM. It takes everything the Halo II offers and adds a larger screen, integrated topper with brightness control, a vault light for easier servicing, and a built-in wireless mounting bracket for the cellular modem.

Specification Detail
Screen 12.1-inch TFT LCD with privacy filter option. Larger than the Halo II.
Dimensions 56.4″ tall x 15.7″ wide x 23.0″ deep. 286.6 lbs.
Cash cassette 1,000-note standard. 2,000-note upgradable. Up to three cassettes.
Safe UL 291 Business Hours standard. Level 1 safe upgrade available.
Vault light Internal vault light. A practical upgrade that the Halo II does not have.
Connectivity TCP/IP, wireless, and dial-up. Built-in mounting bracket for wireless router.
Topper Integrated LED topper with brightness control. Built-in rather than add-on.
Price (new) $3,200 to $4,200 depending on configuration and dealer

The Force is the right choice when the Halo II feels like it is missing something specific: a bigger screen for high-traffic locations where customers may be in a rush, a Level 1 safe for locations with theft concerns, or the vault light for operators who service their own machines and appreciate not needing a flashlight every time they load cash. The price premium over the Halo II is roughly $700 to $1,400 depending on configuration, which justifies itself in the right location but is unnecessary overhead for a low-volume bar or small retail shop.

NH2700CE: The Legacy Workhorse (Used Market Only)

The NH2700CE is discontinued from new production. Its official replacement is the Force. But hundreds of thousands of 2700CE machines are still in operation across the United States, parts remain available, and used units in good condition are plentiful. For operators who want to enter the ATM business at the lowest possible cost with a proven machine and existing service infrastructure, the 2700CE is worth understanding.

Specification Detail
Screen 10.1-inch color TFT with touch function keys
Cassettes Up to three removable cassettes. Higher capacity than the standard Halo II configuration.
Status Discontinued from new production. Widely available used.
EMV compliance EMV upgrade kits available. Most units sold by reputable dealers have already been upgraded.
Price (used, tested) $1,500 to $2,200 from reputable dealers with 90-day warranty
Parts availability Good. Deep ecosystem from years of widespread deployment. Prices higher than Genmega equivalents.

The 2700CE was the machine that cemented Hyosung’s dominance in the U.S. retail ATM market. It introduced dynamic advertising, multi-cassette capability, and a user interface that felt modern for its time. National ATM Systems describes the 2700CE as “a workhorse of the ATM industry known for its reliability, ease of use, and visual appeal.” That reputation holds up. Well-maintained used units from reputable dealers with verified EMV upgrades and a 90-day warranty are legitimate starting points for budget-conscious buyers.

NH1800SE: Legacy Entry Model (Used Only)

The NH1800SE was Hyosung’s entry-level retail ATM before the Halo II took over that position. It is also discontinued. More importantly, some NH1800SE units cannot be upgraded to EMV compliance, which means they cannot connect to major ATM processing networks. Before buying any used NH1800SE, confirm with the seller that it has been successfully EMV upgraded and is currently processing live transactions. If it cannot be confirmed, pass on it entirely and buy a Halo II instead.


Hyosung ATM Prices: New vs. Used

Model New Price Used Price Warranty (New) Status
Halo II (NH-2600SE) $2,495 to $2,800 $1,600 to $2,200 1 to 2 years Current
Force (MX2800SE) $3,200 to $4,200 $2,000 to $3,000 1 to 2 years Current
NH2700CE No longer available new $1,500 to $2,200 90 days (used only) Discontinued
NH1800SE No longer available new $800 to $1,500 As-is or 30 to 90 days Legacy / Caution
On Used ATM Pricing
Used Hyosung prices vary significantly depending on whether the unit has been refurbished, whether EMV has been verified, and what warranty the seller offers. A $1,500 NH2700CE from a reputable dealer with a 90-day warranty and documented EMV compliance is a reasonable buy. A $900 NH2700CE from a Craigslist listing with no documentation and no warranty is a gamble that often costs more in repair and compliance work than the savings justify.

Hyosung vs. Genmega: Which Should You Buy?

This is the question every first-time buyer eventually asks, and the honest answer is that both are excellent machines at similar price points. Industry insiders describe the competition as Chevy versus Ford. The choice comes down to specific needs, not objective superiority.

Factor Hyosung Halo II Genmega G2500
Starting price (new) $2,495 to $2,800 $2,395 to $2,600
Screen size 10.1 inches standard 8 inches standard (10.4-inch upgrade available)
Design appeal Modern with LED bezel. Preferred for hotels, dispensaries, upscale retail. Classic utilitarian design. Preferred for bars, nightclubs, unattended locations.
Cabinet construction ABS plastic outer cabinet. Lighter overall. Steel cabinet. Heavier and more resistant to vandalism.
Parts cost Higher. Hyosung parts typically cost more than Genmega equivalents. Lower. Parts readily available and priced competitively.
Parts availability Good. Deep ecosystem, but not all parts available for direct purchase. Excellent. Most parts available immediately from multiple suppliers.
NFC contactless Optional. Available as add-on. Optional. Available as upgrade kit.
Shipping lead time Some models ship in weeks. Can have longer lead times than Genmega. Typically ships within days from multiple U.S. warehouse locations.
Best for Clean retail environments, hotels, dispensaries, locations where aesthetics drive transactions High-security locations, bars, nightclubs, unattended outdoor deployments

The Halo II wins for style. The G2500 wins for parts cost, cabinet durability, and delivery speed. If you are placing an ATM in a hotel lobby, an upscale dispensary, or a high-traffic retail store where the machine’s appearance influences whether customers use it, the Halo II’s LED bezel and larger screen justify the slight price premium. If you are placing an ATM in a bar at midnight in a neighborhood where vandalism is a realistic concern, the G2500’s steel cabinet takes a beating better than the Halo II’s ABS plastic housing.


Best Locations for a Hyosung ATM

Hyosung machines, particularly the Halo II, are especially well-suited to locations where the machine’s appearance is part of the customer experience:

Location Type Why Hyosung Works Well Recommended Model
Hotel lobby Modern design fits upscale environments. LED lighting is visible and professional. Halo II or Force
Cannabis dispensary Clean appearance builds customer trust. NFC option adds modern payment capability. Halo II with NFC
Convenience store The Halo II was designed for c-stores. Intuitive interface reduces customer confusion. Halo II
Nightclub or bar LED bezel visibility in low-light environments. Works well in any bar setting. Halo II (Genmega G2500 also worth considering for vandalism resistance)
Laundromat Cash-preferred location. Compact footprint fits tight utility spaces. Halo II
High-traffic retail Force MX2800SE handles higher transaction volumes with multi-cassette options. Force MX2800SE
Event venue / festival Mobile setup with wireless modem. Halo II supports wireless connectivity as optional add-on. Halo II with wireless modem

Where to Buy a Hyosung ATM

Buy from an authorized Hyosung dealer. Unauthorized resellers may offer lower prices but cannot guarantee compliance documentation, warranty validity, or proper machine configuration. Here is how the buying channels compare:

Source Price Level Reliability Best For
Authorized ATM dealers (National ATM Systems, ATMTrader, ATM Depot, Ocean ATM, BestATMStore) Mid to high High New and used machines with proper warranty and support
Direct from Hyosung Americas (for financial institutions) High High Multi-unit buyers and financial institution deployments
eBay (established ATM sellers) Low Medium Used machines only. Vet seller history carefully. No post-sale support.
Craigslist / local classifieds Very low Low Parts sourcing only. High risk of non-compliant, undocumented, or stolen equipment.

Most reputable dealers include free shipping, programming to your processing settings, receipt paper, and phone support in the purchase price. The programming is particularly important: a Hyosung ATM configured incorrectly will not connect to the processing network, and fixing a misconfigured machine remotely or on-site adds costs and delays that wipe out any price advantage from buying from a lower-quality source.


What to Check Before Buying a Used Hyosung ATM

Used Hyosung machines are widely available and can represent excellent value. The key is knowing what to verify. Run through each of these before sending money:

  • EMV compliance confirmed in writing: Ask the seller to confirm the machine is EMV Level 1 and 2 compliant with the current card reader installed. If they cannot confirm it, assume it is not and budget for an upgrade kit ($159 to $399).
  • PCI keypad status: Hyosung keypads have a PCI compliance expiry date. Ask for the keypad model number and verify it is still on the PCI SSC approved device list before purchasing. An expired keypad cannot be used on a live network.
  • Recent transaction history: A machine that has been processing live transactions recently is far more likely to be functional than one that has been sitting in a warehouse. Ask when it last processed a transaction.
  • Warranty terms: Reputable used ATM dealers offer 30 to 90-day warranties. “As-is” sales with no warranty are a red flag, particularly for mechanical components like the cash dispenser.
  • Removable cassette included: Confirm the sale includes a removable cassette. Some sellers strip the cassette from the machine before selling. A cassette costs $40 to $280 to replace and is required for normal operation.
  • Keys for vault and cassette: The machine should come with keys to both the vault door and the cassette. Replacement keys require proof of ownership and take time to obtain. A machine without keys is a service call waiting to happen.
  • Clean ownership documentation: Never buy a used ATM without documentation confirming legitimate ownership. Stolen ATMs appear on the used market, and purchasing one creates legal liability regardless of whether you knew it was stolen.

Setting Up a Hyosung ATM: What Happens After Delivery

Buying the machine is only the first step. Before your Hyosung ATM processes its first transaction, you need three more things in place:

1
ATM processing agreement

Your ATM needs a processing relationship to connect to the banking network and settle transactions. Most authorized Hyosung dealers either include processing setup or have preferred processing partners. Monthly processing fees typically run $15 to $30. Processing setup configures your machine’s terminal ID, encryption keys, and surcharge settings. Do not attempt to configure this yourself without guidance from your processor.

2
Internet or wireless connectivity

Your Halo II connects via ethernet (the location’s internet connection) or via a 4G wireless modem. The wireless modem runs $150 to $350 as a one-time hardware cost plus $15 to $40 monthly for the SIM plan. If your location has reliable internet, ethernet is simpler and cheaper. If you need flexibility in machine placement, go wireless.

3
Vault cash

You need to load the machine with your own cash. A 1,000-note cassette in $20 bills holds $20,000. Most operators start with $3,000 to $8,000 in vault cash and reload as transaction volume demands it. The vault cash is working capital, not a cost: every dollar dispensed is electronically returned to your bank account within 24 to 48 hours via ACH, and you keep the surcharge fee from each transaction as profit.


Frequently Asked Questions

What is a Nautilus Hyosung ATM?

Nautilus Hyosung, now operating as Hyosung Americas, is a South Korean ATM manufacturer with U.S. headquarters in Irving, Texas. They are the second-largest ATM manufacturer in the United States by market share and produce ATMs for both financial institutions and independent operators. Their retail line, led by the Halo II, is widely used by independent ATM businesses across the country.

Is the Hyosung Halo II a good ATM?

Yes. The Halo II has been the best-selling retail ATM in the industry for several years. Its 10.1-inch screen, LED-lit bezel, intuitive operator interface, and EMV compliance make it a strong choice for most retail locations. Parts compatibility across the Hyosung retail family is a practical advantage for operators running multiple machines. It is priced competitively against the Genmega G2500, its closest competitor.

How much does a Hyosung ATM cost?

New Halo II machines from authorized dealers start at approximately $2,495 to $2,800 depending on configuration and dealer. The Force MX2800SE runs $3,200 to $4,200 new. Used NH2700CE machines from reputable dealers with 90-day warranties are available in the $1,500 to $2,200 range. Add vault cash ($3,000 to $8,000), processing setup, and optional wireless connectivity for a complete picture of startup costs.

Where can I buy a Hyosung ATM?

Buy from an authorized dealer. Reputable options include National ATM Systems, ATMTrader, ATM Depot, Ocean ATM, BestATMStore, and several others. Buying from an authorized dealer ensures the machine ships with proper EMV configuration, a valid warranty, and programming assistance. Buying from eBay or Craigslist saves money but eliminates all of those assurances and puts compliance verification on you.

What is the difference between the Halo II and the Force?

The Force MX2800SE is the step-up model above the Halo II. Key upgrades include a 12.1-inch screen (versus 10.1), an integrated LED topper with brightness control, an internal vault light for easier servicing, and a built-in mounting bracket for a wireless router. The Force also supports a Level 1 safe upgrade for higher security. For most first-time operators in standard retail locations, the Halo II is sufficient. The Force is worth the extra $700 to $1,400 when a bigger screen or the vault light add meaningful operational value.

Is the Hyosung NH2700CE still worth buying?

A well-maintained NH2700CE from a reputable dealer with verified EMV compliance, a current PCI keypad, and a 90-day warranty is a legitimate budget option. The machine is discontinued from new production but parts remain available. The risk is in buying without proper verification. Confirm EMV compliance, keypad PCI status, and recent transaction history before purchasing any used 2700CE.

How does Hyosung compare to Genmega?

Hyosung has a more modern aesthetic and larger screens at base configuration, while Genmega offers a heavier steel cabinet, lower parts costs, faster shipping, and more readily available parts. Both are excellent and both are used by thousands of successful independent operators. Hyosung tends to dominate in environments where aesthetics matter (hotels, dispensaries), while Genmega’s steel cabinet makes it preferable in higher-risk locations like unattended outdoor deployments or bars with a history of vandalism.


The Bottom Line

If you are buying your first ATM and leaning toward Hyosung, the Halo II is almost certainly the right machine. It is the best-selling retail ATM in the country for a reason: it works reliably, it looks professional, customers find it intuitive, and the parts ecosystem gives you a long service life. The price point is competitive with its closest rival, the Genmega G2500, and most authorized dealers will include programming, shipping, and processing setup as part of the package.

The Force is worth considering if you anticipate high transaction volume or if a 12-inch screen matters for your location. The used NH2700CE is worth considering if you need to minimize upfront capital and you buy it from a reputable dealer who will document compliance and stand behind it with a warranty.

What no Hyosung ATM will do by itself is make money. The machine is the tool. Surcharge revenue comes from finding the right location with the right foot traffic and keeping the machine stocked, connected, and serviced. If you are still working through that side of the decision, the guides below cover location strategy, startup costs, and what the ATM business actually looks like from the inside.

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