Top 10 Hobby Oscilloscopes in 2027 β Best Overall + Best Value
Direct Answer
The Rigol DHO924S is the π Best Overall hobby oscilloscope of 2027 β a 250 MHz, 4-channel, 12-bit bench scope at $1,599 that punches into pro territory with 4 GSa/s sampling, 50 Mpts memory, a built-in 25 MHz AWG, and serial decode for I2C, SPI, UART, and CAN baked in.
The π Best Value pick is the Rigol DS1054Z at $349, still the most hacked scope on the planet β unlock the 100 MHz bandwidth and every option with a free community key and you have a 4-channel lab scope for under $400. This list serves hobbyists, repair techs, and electronics engineers who want real bench capability without paying Keysight-flagship money in 2027.
How We Ranked the Top 10 Hobby Oscilloscopes in 2027
We weighted bandwidth-to-price ratio, sample rate headroom, memory depth, vertical resolution (8-bit vs 12-bit), built-in protocol decoding, AWG bundle value, form factor, and β critically β the hacking and firmware-update community behind each brand. Sources include EEVblog (Dave Jones) reviews and forum threads, Hackaday teardowns, the r/AskElectronics and r/ECE buyer threads, Mike's Electric Stuff, w2aew's YouTube benchmarks, PicoScope's own white papers, and manufacturer datasheets from Rigol, Siglent, Tektronix, Keysight, Owon, Hantek, and Pico Technology.
We also factored in probe quality out of the box, warranty length, and how easy each scope is to script over USB, LAN, or WiFi for automated test rigs.
Weighting:
- Bandwidth + sample rate (25%) β the Nyquist headroom that defines what signals you can actually trust.
- Vertical resolution + memory depth (20%) β 12-bit ADCs and deep memory separate hobby toys from real instruments.
- Decode + math + AWG (15%) β I2C/SPI/UART/CAN decoding and a built-in arbitrary waveform generator save hundreds in add-ons.
- Build, display, and connectivity (15%) β a crisp 10.1" touchscreen with USB + LAN + WiFi beats a fuzzy 7" panel every time.
- Community + firmware hackability (15%) β Rigol and Siglent earn massive bonus points; Tek and Keysight earn it on reliability.
- Price (10%) β value matters, but a $259 scope that lies to you is no bargain.
1. Rigol DHO924S π BEST OVERALL
Price: $1,599 | Best for: The hobbyist or engineer who wants pro-grade specs at one-third the Tektronix price.
The DHO924S is the scope that broke the bench-tier price ceiling. You get 250 MHz bandwidth, 4 analog channels, 12-bit vertical resolution, 4 GSa/s sample rate, and 50 Mpts of standard memory β specs that cost $5,000+ from Tektronix or Keysight. The 10.1" capacitive touchscreen is genuinely responsive, and the built-in 25 MHz AWG means you don't need a separate signal generator on your bench.
Serial decode for I2C, SPI, UART, CAN, LIN, and FlexRay is included, math FFT is fast, and USB Host/Device + LAN + optional WiFi make remote scripting trivial. Probes ship as standard 350 MHz passive PVP3150s, and the 3-year warranty beats most competitors.
- Pros: 12-bit ADC with real ENOB above 10, gorgeous UI, deep 50 Mpts memory, mature firmware, generous community on EEVblog.
- Con: At 3.4 kg it's not portable, and the AWG output amplitude maxes at 5 Vpp into 50 ohms.
Verdict: the new king of hobby benches under $2K.
2. Siglent SDS1104X-E
Price: $479 | Best for: The maker who wants 4 channels, decent bandwidth, and rock-solid firmware on a budget.
The SDS1104X-E has been the community workhorse since 2018 and 2027 firmware has only made it sharper. 100 MHz across 4 channels, 1 GSa/s shared sample rate, 14 Mpts memory, 8-bit vertical, and the famous SPO (Super-Phosphor) display that catches glitches an entry Rigol misses.
I2C, SPI, UART, CAN, and LIN decode are unlocked free via a community-known option key, and the 256-level intensity grading rivals scopes twice the price. WebVNC remote control over Ethernet is a killer feature for headless test rigs.
- Pros: 4 channels at $479, free protocol decode unlock, history/sequence acquisition mode, 7" 800x480 display, USB + LAN standard.
- Con: Only 8-bit resolution β fine for digital + power work, mediocre for low-level analog.
Verdict: the smartest $479 you can spend on a 4-channel bench scope.
3. Tektronix TBS2102B
Price: $999 | Best for: The engineer or educator who wants Tek build quality and 10-year reliability above all else.
The TBS2102B is Tek's entry bench scope β 100 MHz, 2 channels, 2 GSa/s, 5 Mpts memory, 8-bit, and that legendary Tektronix front panel with real knobs that survive a decade of student abuse. Decode is optional (I2C, SPI, RS-232/UART) as a paid bundle, and there's no built-in AWG, but you get the 9" WVGA display, HelpEverywhere context-aware coaching, and a 5-year warranty standard.
USB host + device + LAN with a free TekScope PC app.
- Pros: Bulletproof build, best-in-class trigger system, easy menus, 5-year warranty.
- Con: Only 2 channels and 5 Mpts memory at this price β Siglent and Rigol both undercut it hard on specs.
Verdict: pay the Tek tax if you need a scope that just works for 10 years.
4. Rigol DHO814
Price: $569 | Best for: Sub-$600 buyers who want 12-bit resolution on 4 channels.
The DHO814 is the little brother of the DHO924S β 100 MHz, 4 channels, 1.25 GSa/s, 12-bit vertical, 25 Mpts memory, and the same 7" capacitive touchscreen UI as its bigger sibling. Protocol decode for I2C, SPI, UART, CAN, LIN is included, and the DHO800-series can be bandwidth-unlocked to 70 or 100 MHz depending on model via community methods.
No built-in AWG at this trim, but you get USB + LAN and a slick HDMI output for projecting to an external monitor during teaching.
- Pros: True 12-bit ADC at $569, modern touch UI, HDMI out, 4 channels, 3-year warranty.
- Con: Slim memory below the 924S, and the fan whine is audible in a quiet office.
Verdict: the cheapest 12-bit, 4-channel bench scope worth buying.
5. Keysight EDUX1052G
Price: $779 | Best for: Students and lab classrooms that want Keysight pedigree with a built-in AWG.
The EDUX1052G brings Keysight's InfiniiVision DNA to the education market. 50 MHz, 2 channels, 1 GSa/s, 1 Mpts memory, 8-bit, plus the headline feature: a built-in 20 MHz waveform generator that lets students close the loop on filter and amp experiments without a second instrument.
Serial decode for I2C, SPI, UART is included free, math FFT is solid, and you get the 7" WVGA display, USB Host + Device, and the famous Keysight zone-trigger touch interface.
- Pros: Built-in 20 MHz AWG, Keysight build, 5 GSa/s peak, included decode, perfect for benches with limited budget per student.
- Con: Only 50 MHz bandwidth and 1 Mpts memory β outgrown fast by a serious hobbyist.
Verdict: the best teaching scope under $800, but enthusiasts should look at the Rigols.
6. Rigol DS1054Z π BEST VALUE
Price: $349 | Best for: Every first-time hobbyist on Earth.
The DS1054Z is the most-recommended hobby scope of the last decade, and 2027 has not unseated it. Out of the box it's 50 MHz, 4 channels, 1 GSa/s, 24 Mpts memory, 8-bit β and the famous community-shared option key unlocks 100 MHz bandwidth, deep memory mode, all serial decode (I2C, SPI, UART, RS-232), advanced triggers, and the recorder for free.
That makes it effectively a $900 scope at $349. The 7" 800x480 display is bright, USB Host + Device + LAN are standard, and the 3-year warranty still holds.
- Pros: Hackable to 100 MHz + all options, 4 channels, deep memory, massive EEVblog forum knowledge base, parts cheap on AliExpress if you brick it.
- Con: 8-bit only and the UI feels dated next to the new DHO touchscreens.
Verdict: still the unbeatable Best Value scope in 2027 β buy with zero regrets.
7. Owon SDS1102
Price: $259 | Best for: The absolute beginner who needs a working scope today.
The SDS1102 is Owon's volume seller β 100 MHz, 2 channels, 1 GSa/s, 10 Mpts memory, 8-bit, and a 7" 800x480 TFT at a price that's almost an impulse buy. FFT math is included, USB Host + Device are standard (no LAN), and you get two included 100 MHz passive probes in the box.
No serial decode at this trim, no AWG, but for simple Arduino + audio + power-supply debugging it absolutely earns its keep.
- Pros: $259 with two probes, 100 MHz real, decent display, 3-year warranty.
- Con: No decode, no LAN, noisy fan, and the trigger circuit is the weakest in this roundup.
Verdict: the cheapest scope on this list that doesn't lie about its bandwidth.
8. Hantek DSO5102P
Price: $319 | Best for: The tinkerer who wants 1 GSa/s + 100 MHz for car-stereo, RC, and basic embedded work.
The DSO5102P is Hantek's enduring entry bench scope β 100 MHz, 2 channels, 1 GSa/s, 40K memory standard (24 Mpts optional), 8-bit, with a 7" 800x480 color LCD and USB Host + Device. FFT, math, and 32 automatic measurements are built in. Protocol decode and an AWG are not included β Hantek sells separate AWG boxes β but at $319 with two passive probes, build is solid metal and the trigger holds.
- Pros: All-metal build at $319, 2 mV/div sensitivity, big bright display, USB scripting via SCPI.
- Con: Shallow standard memory and clunky firmware β Hantek's UX is the worst of the major brands.
Verdict: a fine third-bench backup scope, but Owon and Rigol DS1054Z are better first scopes.
9. PicoScope 2208B
Price: $519 | Best for: The laptop-first engineer who lives in CI test rigs and field service.
The PicoScope 2208B is a USB scope β no display, no knobs, just a sleek aluminum brick that plugs into your laptop and turns PicoScope 7 software into a full 100 MHz, 2-channel, 1 GSa/s, 128 Mpts memory instrument. 14-bit resolution in resolution-enhance mode, built-in 1 MHz AWG, and decode for I2C, SPI, UART, CAN, LIN, FlexRay, and USB all included free.
SDK in C, C#, Python, MATLAB, LabVIEW makes this the automation favorite. Weighs 200 g β drop it in a laptop bag.
- Pros: 128 Mpts memory (deepest on this list), free lifetime software updates, 5-year warranty, portable, scriptable SDK.
- Con: No standalone display β your laptop is the scope; not great if you forget the USB cable.
Verdict: the right scope for field techs and automated test benches.
10. Siglent SDS814X HD
Price: $999 | Best for: Hobbyists who want 12-bit Siglent reliability with the SDS800X HD UI.
The SDS814X HD is Siglent's answer to the Rigol DHO814 β 100 MHz, 4 channels, 12-bit vertical, 2 GSa/s, 50 Mpts memory, with the gorgeous 10.1" capacitive touchscreen that defines the SDS800X HD line. Free serial decode for I2C, SPI, UART, CAN, LIN, FlexRay, history mode, sequence acquisition, and an optional AWG via the SAG1021I add-on.
USB Host/Device + LAN + optional WiFi for remote control, plus Siglent's reliable HDMI out for projection.
- Pros: 12-bit + 10.1" touchscreen at $999, deep memory, free decode, 3-year warranty, super clean front-end noise floor.
- Con: AWG is an external add-on, and bandwidth is capped at 100 MHz at this trim β the 200 MHz SDS824X HD is the bigger sibling if you need headroom.
Verdict: the Rigol DHO814's closest 12-bit rival β pick on UI preference.
Buyer Decision Tree
What to Look For When Buying a Hobby Oscilloscope
Don't buy on bandwidth alone β the real specs that matter are deeper than the marketing number on the front panel.
- Bandwidth rule: pick a scope at least 5x your highest signal frequency. A 100 MHz scope honestly measures clean signals up to about 20 MHz β past that, amplitude rolls off. If you're chasing 40 MHz square-wave harmonics, you actually want a 200-250 MHz scope.
- Sample rate must clear Nyquist with headroom. 1 GSa/s per channel is the modern floor; if you share sample rate across 4 channels (Siglent SDS1104X-E does), you drop to 250 MSa/s per channel with all four active β still enough for most embedded work, but know your spec sheet.
- Memory depth wins long captures. 24 Mpts to 50 Mpts lets you capture full CAN bus sessions, I2C transactions, or boot logs at high sample rate without truncating. Shallow 1 Mpts scopes (like the Keysight EDUX) force you to choose between time window and resolution.
- 12-bit ADCs are the 2027 hobby revolution. The Rigol DHO and Siglent SDS800X HD lines deliver real 12-bit vertical resolution β meaning 16x finer voltage steps than the old 8-bit norm. For audio, power-supply ripple, and low-level analog, the difference is night-and-day.
- Bundled decode + AWG = hundreds saved. A standalone AWG runs $300-500; built-in saves bench space and money. Decode for I2C/SPI/UART/CAN can cost $200-600 as add-ons on Tek and Keysight, but is free on Rigol and Siglent (sometimes via community keys).
- Hacking community is real value. Rigol DS1000Z, DHO800/900, Siglent SDS1000X-E and SDS800X HD all have well-documented community option-key methods. Tek and Keysight lock options hard but earn loyalty through 10-year reliability. Decide which culture fits you.
- Probe compensation matters more than you think. The 300 MHz passive probes Rigol ships with the DHO924S are genuinely good. The stock Hantek and Owon probes are usable but worth replacing with Sapphire or Yokogawa passives if you do serious analog work.
Common traps: scopes advertising "1 GSa/s" that mean interleaved across 2 channels (so 500 MSa/s per channel); "FFT" that runs on 1 kpts of memory and looks like garbage; and "WiFi" that is actually a USB dongle you have to source separately.
FAQ
What's the minimum bandwidth I need for Arduino and basic embedded work? 50-100 MHz is plenty. The DS1054Z (50 MHz stock, 100 MHz hacked) or Siglent SDS1104X-E (100 MHz) handles every common I2C, SPI, UART, PWM, and SPI flash signal a maker will encounter.
Are 12-bit scopes really worth the upgrade over 8-bit? For audio, power electronics, low-level analog, and precision measurements β yes, dramatically. For digital logic, embedded buses, and general bring-up β 8-bit is fine. The Rigol DHO814 at $569 is the cheapest way to get real 12-bit on the bench.
Is the Rigol DS1054Z hack still legal and still works in 2027? It's a gray-area community modification that Rigol has tacitly tolerated for a decade. Plenty of working option keys still circulate on EEVblog forum. We're not legal counsel β but the DS1054Z remains the most-recommended hobby scope on the planet.
USB scope or bench scope β which should I buy first? Bench scope first if you have a permanent workbench. USB scope (PicoScope 2208B) first if you're a field-service tech, automotive diagnostician, or CI-test-rig builder who lives out of a laptop bag.
Do I need 4 channels or are 2 enough? 2 channels covers maybe 70% of hobby tasks. 4 channels is essential for 3-phase power, CAN bus + trigger source, SPI MISO+MOSI+CLK+CS, or any automotive work. The cost gap between 2-ch and 4-ch is small on Rigol and Siglent β buy 4 if you can.
How much should I budget for probes and accessories? Stock probes ship with most scopes and are adequate. Plan $100-200 extra for a decent BNC cable kit, a current probe (Hantek CC-65 or Pico TA189), a SMD probe tip set, and a probe-comp adjustment trimmer. Skip the cheap eBay "100 MHz" probes β they roll off at 40 MHz.
What about used Tek or Agilent on eBay? Tempting, but be careful. A 20-year-old Tek TDS3034 for $400 sounds great until you need a $600 fan or display. Modern Rigol/Siglent warranty + new firmware + community support usually beats used pro-grade for hobby work.
Bottom Line
For most hobbyists and engineers in 2027, the Rigol DHO924S at $1,599 is the π Best Overall β pro-grade 250 MHz, 12-bit, 4-channel performance for one-third of the Tektronix price. If you're on a tight budget, the Rigol DS1054Z at $349 is still the π Best Value and the most-recommended first scope on Earth, hackable to 100 MHz with every option unlocked.
Tight 4-channel budget under $500? Grab the Siglent SDS1104X-E. Field tech with a laptop?
PicoScope 2208B. Use the Buyer Decision Tree above to match your bench to your wallet.
Sources
- EEVblog (Dave Jones) β DS1054Z definitive review, DHO900 series teardown, Siglent SDS1104X-E hands-on
- EEVblog Forum β
Test Equipmentboard: DHO800/900 hacking threads, Siglent SDS800X HD option key discussion, DS1054Z 100 MHz unlock megathread - Hackaday β "The Rigol DHO900 Review: A True Bargain", "PicoScope and the rise of USB instrumentation"
- r/AskElectronics and r/ECE β 2027 buyer threads, "First scope" megathread, "Rigol vs Siglent vs Hantek" community comparisons
- Mike's Electric Stuff (YouTube) β Mike Harrison teardowns of DHO924S front-end, Siglent SDS800X HD ADC analysis
- w2aew (YouTube) β Alan Wolke's tutorials on probe compensation, FFT use, and bandwidth derating in modern hobby scopes
- PicoScope Technical Library β PicoScope 7 software white papers, 2208B SDK documentation, 14-bit resolution-enhance methodology
- Rigol Technologies β DHO924S, DHO814, DS1054Z datasheets and user manuals (rigol.com)
- Siglent Technologies β SDS1104X-E and SDS814X HD datasheets and firmware release notes (siglent.com)
- Tektronix β TBS2000B Series datasheet and TekScope PC software documentation (tek.com)
- Keysight β EDUX1052G product page and InfiniiVision teaching-lab guides (keysight.com)
- Owon and Hantek manufacturer pages β SDS1102 and DSO5102P spec sheets and firmware downloads