Global Laryngoscope Blades and Handles Market Trends and Insights
Rising Airway Management Demand From Respiratory Disease Burden
The laryngoscope blades and handles market is seeing durable procedure support from the rising burden of chronic respiratory disease across both developed and emerging care systems. WHO and the European Respiratory Society reported in June 2025 that 81.7 million people in the WHO European Region were living with chronic respiratory diseases, with 6.8 million new diagnoses each year and COPD accounting for 80% of related deaths. The same publication also placed the cost of underdiagnosis above USD 20 billion annually, which points to a large pool of patients who may still present late and require acute airway support rather than early outpatient management. In South-East Asia, the burden is even more important for future volume because WHO reported in 2025 that chronic respiratory diseases were responsible for nearly 12% of all deaths, which keeps emergency and critical care intubation demand structurally elevated in systems that still have uneven ICU access. Much of that installed base still relies on conventional reusable stainless-steel systems, so the first major upgrade path is likely to come from lower-cost video platforms rather than premium monitor-heavy solutions. The projected 23% global rise in COPD between 2020 and 2050 extends this demand base for many years and gives the laryngoscope blades and handles market a rare level of long-range clinical visibility.Shift Toward Single-Use Blades to Reduce Cross-Contamination Risk
The laryngoscope blades and handles market is moving toward single-use procurement because contamination concerns are no longer limited to the blade surface alone. Flexicare reported clinical data in 2025 showing that 86% of reusable laryngoscope handles remained bacterially positive after standard wipe disinfection, while APSF noted that single-use equipment removes the operational complexity tied to reprocessing steps. This matters because hospital buyers are now treating the handle as a contamination vector with equal importance, which changes a category that was once dominated by reusable hardware. The migration of disposability from blades into handles is changing the revenue mix, since the premium is shifting from a one-time capital item toward recurring procedure-linked consumption. Ambu’s June 2026 expansion of the Recircle program to include bioplastic SureSight blades shows that suppliers are now trying to solve infection control and sustainability together rather than forcing customers to choose one over the other. That combined value proposition is likely to matter more in European public tenders, where environmental scoring is starting to influence award outcomes alongside traditional clinical and cost criteria.High Acquisition Cost of Advanced Video and Fiber-Optic Systems
The laryngoscope blades and handles market still faces a clear adoption limit in hospitals that cannot absorb the upfront cost of advanced video and fiber-optic systems. The gap between a basic reusable fiber-optic handle and a proprietary video-enabled setup remains large, and the recurring cost of single-use video blades at USD 15 to USD 80 per procedure adds pressure for facilities that work under strict consumables budgets. This cost barrier matters even when the clinical case for video is strong, because many procurement teams still evaluate airway devices through immediate payback rather than broad care quality metrics. Suppliers are responding with more modular formats that reduce per-case expense and lower entry barriers without removing the benefits of visualization. Verathon’s ClearFit design is one example of that response, because it spreads the video component across multiple single-use cover options and supports a more flexible cost profile for fast-turn care settings. Until similar price-performance models become common, the laryngoscope blades and handles market will continue to see slower conversion in South America, the Middle East and Africa, and non-urban Asia-Pacific accounts.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- Adoption of Video-Assisted and Fiber-Optic Systems in Difficult Airway Care
- Expansion of Emergency, Ambulatory, and Pre-Hospital Airway Workflows
- Reprocessing Burden and Sterilization Compliance for Reusable Systems
Segment Analysis
Laryngoscope blades held 65.31% of the laryngoscope blades and handles market share in 2025, which shows that volume is still centered on the consumable side of the category. This position reflects the global installed base of direct laryngoscopy workflows across operating rooms, emergency departments, and intensive care units. Macintosh and Miller designs continue to account for most routine purchasing because they are familiar, broadly compatible, and clinically embedded in everyday intubation practice. Specialized and video-compatible blades are growing faster inside the blades category, but they are still building from a smaller installed base than conventional direct-view products. In practical terms, the laryngoscope blades and handles market still depends on blade turnover for immediate revenue, even as technology upgrades start shifting more value into handles.Laryngoscope handles are forecast to grow at a 9.38% CAGR through 2031, which makes them the fastest-growing product sub-segment in the laryngoscope blades and handles market. That growth is tied to the move away from passive battery-operated designs and toward active video-enabled configurations that support imaging, connectivity, and broader care-setting use. ISO 7376-2-2025 gave the category a more formal technical framework for video laryngoscopes in September 2025, which helps reduce specification uncertainty during procurement reviews. Ambu’s SureSight Mobile, introduced in December 2025, reflects the standalone path with an integrated screen-and-handle format meant for emergency and unplanned intubation, while SureSight Connect represents a more platform-led approach within the same product family. This points to a split future where monitor-linked systems remain strong in structured operating room environments, while self-contained handles gain share in emergency, transport, and space-constrained settings.
Stainless steel blades and handles commanded 55.24% of demand in 2025, which kept this material base at the center of the laryngoscope blades and handles market. Hospitals continue to rely on steel because it offers high torsional stiffness, dependable dimensional stability, repeated autoclave compatibility, and established fiber-optic coupling performance. Those qualities still matter most in high-throughput operating rooms and reuse-heavy ICU settings, where a stable clinical feel and durable construction remain important to clinicians. Plastic and polymer designs, by contrast, are more closely tied to single-use procurement where lower per-unit cost and easy disposal matter more than long service life. This split means steel remains the default in settings built around reuse, while polymers remain the practical option in facilities that prioritize turnover speed and simpler logistics.
Hybrid and composite material systems are projected to advance at an 8.52% CAGR through 2031, which makes them the fastest-moving material category in the laryngoscope blades and handles market. Their appeal comes from a combination of lower weight, better ergonomic possibilities, and the ability to support single-use formats without fully giving up structural performance. HEINE’s XP disposable blade series shows how suppliers are trying to narrow the performance gap by matching the geometry of reusable stainless-steel products in torsionally stiff polymer composite form. Ambu’s shift into second-generation bioplastic feedstock across SureSight handles and blades adds a separate sustainability angle, which matters as environmental filters gain weight in hospital tenders. China’s T/CITS 370-2025 group standard for video laryngoscopes also helps shape local performance expectations, which is important because material choices will increasingly be judged against both global and domestic compliance benchmarks. Taken together, these changes suggest that composites are not replacing steel across the board, but they are becoming central to the forward product portfolio.
Complete Report Scope:
- By Product Type
- Blades
- Macintosh Blades
- Miller Blades
- Straight Blades
- Specialized and Video-Compatible Blades
- Handles
- Standard Handles
- Reusable Handles
- Disposable Handles
- Video-Enabled Handles
- Blades
- By Material
- Stainless Steel Blades and Handles
- Plastic and Polymer-Based Blades and Handles
- Hybrid and Composite Material Systems
- By Usage
- Adult Use
- Pediatric Use
- Neonatal and Difficult Airway Use
- By End User
- Hospitals
- Ambulatory Surgical Centers
- Emergency Medical Services
- Specialty Clinics
- By Geography
- North America
- United States
- Canada
- Mexico
- Europe
- Germany
- United Kingdom
- France
- Italy
- Spain
- Rest of Europe
- Asia-Pacific
- China
- Japan
- India
- Australia
- South Korea
- Rest of Asia-Pacific
- Middle East and Africa
- GCC
- South Africa
- Rest of Middle East and Africa
- South America
- Brazil
- Argentina
- Rest of South America
- North America
Geography Analysis
North America accounted for 39.22% share of the laryngoscope blades and handles market size in 2025, which kept it as the largest regional contributor. The region benefits from high surgical volumes, mature critical care infrastructure, and consistent replacement demand across hospital and emergency care settings. Baxter’s decision to discontinue all Welch Allyn laryngoscope blade and handle lines, effective March 31, 2026, created a near-term opening in institutional accounts that other suppliers are now contesting. Europe remained the second-largest region, with Germany, France, the UK, and Italy acting as the main volume centers for the laryngoscope blades and handles market. Ambu received CE Mark for its full SureSight portfolio in April 2026, which supports a phased rollout across Europe and increases pressure on legacy reusable-device positions. European public tenders are also giving more weight to environmental compliance, which favors suppliers that can document recyclable materials or take-back pathways. Germany remains especially active in single-use laryngoscope procurement, which reflects the region’s willingness to pair infection control with operational convenience in acute care pathways.Asia-Pacific is forecast to expand at a 9.15% CAGR through 2031, which makes it the fastest-growing regional block in the laryngoscope blades and handles market. China is pushing growth through hospital modernization, and procurement activity across provincial hospitals shows that compatible single-use blades are increasingly being bought against an existing base of video handles. That pattern matters because it signals a move from initial installation into repeat blade demand, which is more supportive of recurring revenue. India still presents a longer registration path for new entrants in higher-risk devices, but major public hospital networks and medical college systems keep the market commercially attractive because of their procedure volume. Japan adds a different growth profile, since its aging population sustains high per-capita intubation need and supports replacement demand for better-visualization systems rather than only first-time purchases.
The Middle East and Africa and South America together account for the remaining regional demand, but growth varies widely by infrastructure quality and procurement capacity. GCC countries are expanding hospital capacity and continue to favor premium international brands, especially in private care networks where video-assisted systems carry strong clinical and brand value. South Africa’s private hospital groups and Brazil’s tertiary care centers remain the highest-value anchors in their respective sub-regions, while many other accounts still rely on reusable fiber-optic handles paired with disposable or lower-cost blades. EMS expansion across these regions is also supporting demand for rugged, portable, and shelf-stable handle configurations that can be deployed quickly outside a full hospital environment.
List of Companies Covered in this Report:
- Ambu
- Dahlhausen Medical
- Flexicare Medical
- Hartwell Medical LLC
- HEINE Optotechnik GmbH and Co. KG
- HENKE-SASS WOLF GmbH
- Karl Storz
- Medline Industries
- Medtronic
- Olympus
- Penlon Limited
- PROACT Medical Ltd
- RICHARD WOLF GmbH
- Rudolf Riester
- Smiths Group
- SunMed LLC
- Teleflex
- Verathon
- Vyaire Medical
- Vygon
Additional Benefits:
- The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
- 3 months of analyst support
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Ambu A/S
- Dahlhausen Medical
- Flexicare Medical Limited
- Hartwell Medical LLC
- HEINE Optotechnik GmbH and Co. KG
- HENKE-SASS WOLF GmbH
- KARL STORZ SE and Co. KG
- Medline Industries, Inc.
- Medtronic plc
- Olympus Corporation
- Penlon Limited
- PROACT Medical Ltd
- RICHARD WOLF GmbH
- Rudolf Riester GmbH
- Smiths Group plc
- SunMed LLC
- Teleflex Incorporated
- Verathon Inc.
- Vyaire Medical, Inc.
- Vygon SA

