QUORiON Data Systems is a point-of-sale hardware and software manufacturer based in Erfurt, Germany, building cash registers and touchscreen terminals for shops, restaurants, and a handful of service trades. The company has been operating since 1999, which puts it well past the point where a POS brand either finds its footing or quietly disappears. Most of what it makes is its own: the QUORiON QMP 60 and QMP 6000 cash registers sit alongside Android-based terminals like the QUORiON QTab 9 and the QTouch range (9, 11, and 16 inch models), plus the INViCTUS touchscreen line. That breadth of in-house product is worth noting upfront, because plenty of resellers in this space just rebadge somebody else's box.
Around the registers and terminals, the catalogue fills out with the parts a counter needs: receipt printers, barcode scanners, cash drawers, and customer displays. A retailer or cafe could kit out a till from one source instead of stitching together three suppliers. The software side mirrors that. QUORiON QMP POS software runs the terminals, and there are companion apps for table-side ordering and a customer-facing display. The detail worth dwelling on is the pricing model: the apps and software are sold without monthly subscription fees, which runs against the grain of an industry that has spent the last decade pushing everyone onto recurring billing. For a small bakery or a single-location salon, that one decision changes the math entirely.
Trades it builds for
The sectors named are specific enough to suggest the products were shaped around real workflows rather than a generic pitch. Retail and hospitality are the obvious two, but the list also calls out bakeries, salons, spas, and dry cleaners. Those are not interchangeable. A bakery needs fast weight-and-price entry and quick queue turnover; a dry cleaner needs ticketing and pickup tracking; a restaurant needs table mapping and split checks. A vendor that names all four is usually telling you its software has been bent to fit each, and the separate table-side ordering app supports that reading for the restaurant case.
There is also a fiscal and government-compliance angle. Many European countries mandate certified cash registers with tamper-resistant fiscal logging, and a manufacturer that handles that compliance directly saves a small business from a regulatory headache it has no time for. QUORiON Data Systems leaning into this is consistent with a company that sells across borders. The reach claimed is large: over 650,000 small businesses in more than 70 countries. That is a number to take at face value with the usual caution any self-reported figure deserves, though the multi-country fiscal support at least makes the international footprint plausible.
Reseller network and support
QUORiON Data Systems runs on a reseller model, and the website is built around that. There is a reseller locator to find a local dealer, dedicated support resources for the dealers themselves, software downloads, video tutorials, and a blog. For a buyer, this is a double-edged arrangement. Going through a local reseller usually means hands-on setup and someone nearby when a printer jams during a Saturday rush. The tradeoff is that price and service quality depend heavily on which dealer you land with, so the experience is less uniform than a direct-sales brand. The local reseller becomes the real point of contact, not Erfurt, so vetting that relationship is part of the purchase decision.
On public reputation, QUORiON Data Systems carries a Trustpilot profile with 23 reviews and a Yelp listing tied to the Erfurt location, but no significant rating presence turned up on Google, the BBB, or Facebook. Twenty-three Trustpilot entries is a modest pool for a company claiming hundreds of thousands of users. The likeliest explanation is the reseller structure: end buyers tend to review the dealer they dealt with directly, not the manufacturer two steps up the chain. That gap in public feedback is structural rather than a red flag, but it does mean a prospective buyer has limited third-party signal to draw on when sizing up QUORiON Data Systems before purchase.
Self-published material is generous. The video tutorials and software downloads point to a company comfortable with buyers and dealers configuring hardware themselves, and the blog adds a layer of ongoing communication that a pure spec-sheet site usually skips. QUORiON Data Systems maintains social presence across YouTube, LinkedIn, Twitter, and Facebook, which is expected at this scale.
What stays with me after going through the site is the combination of a deep, self-manufactured product line with the no-subscription stance on software. For a small operator weighing a till purchase, those two facts together distinguish QUORiON Data Systems from the rental-style POS deals that dominate the market, and the fiscal-compliance support extends that appeal well beyond Germany. The reseller dependency is the one variable that remains genuinely open until a buyer investigates locally.
Business address
QUORiON Data Systems
The Leader Building, STE 601, 526 Superior Ave,
Cleveland,
OH
44112
United States
Contact details
Phone: 1-877-442-7944
Fax: 1-877-442-7944