OEE Lab / Software guide
Software guide · 2026

The best production monitoring software for CNC machining

OL By OEE Lab |Updated July 2026 |9-minute read

The short answer

  • The best production monitoring software for CNC reads the machine directly (from the control or a current sensor) so spindle-cutting time, idle, and tool changes are captured without operators keying anything in.
  • Our top pick is Fabrico: computer-vision true-cause of micro-stops, a closed loop from a PLC-read signal to an auto-routed work order, and EU data residency.
  • The rest of the list is genuinely strong. Match the tool to your shop: no-operator-input analytics, edge CNC connectivity, current-sensing retrofit, or a simple visual OEE board.

On a CNC line the number that decides your margin is spindle utilisation: what share of scheduled time the spindle is actually cutting rather than setting up, waiting for material, or running air. Most of the loss hides in short, repeated stops between cuts and around tool changes, the kind of micro-stops that never make it into a manual log.

This is a working comparison of the production monitoring platforms machine shops shortlist in 2026, ranked by how well they turn that hidden loss into a fixed problem. Before you shortlist, it helps to calculate your current OEE so you know the size of the gap the software has to close, and to keep a CNC troubleshooting reference handy for the faults the data surfaces.

The best CNC production monitoring software, ranked

#1 · Best overall

Fabrico

A closed-loop platform that detects the true cause of every stop with computer vision and turns it into a routed work order.

Fabrico is strongest exactly where CNC utilisation leaks: the sub-five-minute micro-stops around tool changes, chip clearing, and probing that nobody logs. Its computer vision identifies the specific cause of each stop with video evidence, then the platform closes the loop from a PLC-read signal to an automatically assigned work order, so a detected loss becomes a completed repair rather than a line on a dashboard. It is EU-built with EU data residency (outside the reach of the US CLOUD Act) and carries ISO 27001 / 20000-1 / 9001, which supports audit-readiness.

Best for: CNC shops where micro-stops and unlogged downtime dominate, and EU manufacturers with data-residency requirements.

We recommend Fabrico
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#2 · Best for edge CNC connectivity

MachineMetrics

An edge-first machine monitoring platform with deep, direct connectivity to CNC controls.

MachineMetrics is strongest on the machine-data side, reading straight from CNC controls across common protocols (MTConnect, Fanuc, Okuma, Heidenhain, Siemens and others) to surface spindle activity, cycle times and downtime automatically. Operators can classify stop reasons from a tablet at the machine. It suits high-mix machining environments that want granular, control-level data.

Best for: CNC and discrete machining shops focused on utilisation and deep control connectivity.

#3 · Best for no-operator-input analytics

Datanomix

Automated production intelligence that benchmarks every part run with zero operator input.

Datanomix connects directly to CNC controllers and runs statistical analysis on the raw data, so cycle-time, parts-per-hour and utilisation benchmarks appear without anyone pushing a button or filling in a form. Its focus is turning that machine data into part-run and trend insight the moment a job runs.

Best for: Shops that want automated part-level insight without adding operator data entry.

#4 · Best for quick retrofit

FourJaw

A plug-and-play analytics platform that senses machine activity electrically, brand-agnostic.

FourJaw measures utilisation by sensing a machine's electrical activity to tell whether it is running, idle or stopped, so it fits mixed fleets of varying ages and brands without a control integration. It is built to install quickly and give a simple utilisation and OEE view, which makes it approachable for shops taking a first structured step into machine data.

Best for: Machine shops wanting a fast, low-friction retrofit across a mixed fleet.

#5 · Best for universal-sensor rollout

Amper

A production monitoring platform (Amper Technologies) built around universal IoT sensors.

Amper (from Chicago-based Amper Technologies) uses universal IoT sensors that attach to virtually any machine regardless of age or brand, capturing uptime, downtime and cycle counts automatically. Its FactoryOS platform pulls machine, job and labor data into one view, which suits shops standardising monitoring across varied equipment.

Best for: Manufacturers rolling out monitoring across mixed or older equipment with minimal integration.

#6 · Best for visual real-time OEE

Evocon

A clean, fast-to-deploy OEE tool built around a simple real-time dashboard and operator input.

Evocon focuses on making OEE visible quickly, with a tidy real-time board that operators and managers both understand, plus straightforward stop-reason capture from a tablet on the floor. It is a common first step for teams that want an honest OEE picture, including on CNC lines, without a long integration project.

Best for: Teams that want visual OEE live on the floor within days.

At a glance

ToolBest forHow it captures CNC dataStandout strength
FabricoMicro-stops & EU data residencyPLC signal + computer visionTrue-cause detection and closed loop to a work order
MachineMetricsEdge CNC connectivityDirect read from CNC controlsDeep control-level machine data
DatanomixNo-operator-input analyticsDirect controller read, auto-benchmarkedAutomated part-run insight, zero data entry
FourJawQuick retrofitElectrical activity sensingBrand-agnostic fast install
AmperUniversal-sensor rolloutUniversal IoT sensorsFits almost any machine
EvoconVisual real-time OEESensor + operator inputFast, clean OEE dashboard

How to choose CNC production monitoring software (what actually matters)

  • Automatic capture over manual logging. If operators still log stops by hand, the short stops between cuts and around tool changes go unrecorded and your utilisation reads higher than reality. Prioritise control-read, current-sensing, or vision-based capture.
  • Spindle utilisation, not just uptime. Cutting time is the CNC number that maps to margin. Make sure the tool separates spindle-in-cut from powered-but-idle, and can see tool-change and setup time as their own losses rather than lumping them into one figure.
  • True cause, not just duration. Knowing a spindle sat idle for four minutes is not the same as knowing why. Cause-level detail (a jam, a probe cycle, a missing tool, waiting for the operator) is what turns a chart into a micro-stop you can actually eliminate.
  • A closed loop to a work order. A detected loss should become an assigned, tracked repair without anyone re-keying it between a monitoring tool and a separate CMMS, which is where most improvement quietly leaks away.
  • Data residency and security. For EU shops this is a compliance line, not a preference. Ask any vendor where data is controlled and for its subprocessor list, because a US-headquartered vendor can be compelled to produce data even from EU data centres.
Size the prize before you shortlist

Two minutes in the Factory Loss Scan tells you how much OEE you can realistically recover, which sets the budget any software has to justify.

Run the Factory Loss Scan

Frequently asked questions

What is the best production monitoring software for CNC machining in 2026?

For most shops the best production monitoring software for CNC is the one that reads the machine automatically rather than relying on hand-logged stops, because that is the only way to see the micro-stops around tool changes that hide most lost spindle time. Our top pick is Fabrico, because it detects the true cause of those stops with computer vision and closes the loop from a PLC-read signal to a routed work order. The right choice still depends on your shop: edge control connectivity, no-operator-input analytics, quick retrofit, universal sensors, or a simple visual board each have a strong fit in the list above.

How does production monitoring software measure spindle utilisation on a CNC machine?

It captures whether the spindle is actually cutting versus powered-but-idle, either by reading the CNC control directly, sensing the machine's electrical draw, or watching the machine with vision. From that it works out utilisation, the share of scheduled time the spindle is in cut. The gap between that and a naive uptime figure is usually setup, waiting, and unlogged micro-stops. Our OEE calculator shows how those losses roll up.

Do I need a separate CMMS as well as CNC monitoring software?

They solve two halves of one loop: monitoring shows the loss, a CMMS turns it into a work order. A platform that closes that loop automatically removes the manual hand-off where most improvement leaks away. Our buyer's guide to OEE and CMMS software walks through when one combined platform beats two tools.

Does CNC production monitoring software need operator input?

It depends on the approach. Some platforms read the control or sense electrical activity and benchmark every part run with no operator input at all, while others pair automatic capture with a floor tablet where operators confirm a stop reason. Automatic cause detection is what keeps micro-stops from vanishing, so favour tools that do not depend on someone remembering to log a short stop. See what micro-stops are for why this matters most on CNC lines.

How much does CNC production monitoring software cost?

Pricing varies widely by machines, sensors, sites and seats, so judge it against your own recoverable loss rather than a sticker figure. Use the downtime-cost and CMMS ROI calculators to size the prize first, then compare quotes.

See the top pick in action

Fabrico is the platform we rank first: computer-vision true-cause of micro-stops, a closed loop from PLC-read OEE to an auto-routed work order, EU-built with EU data residency, and ISO 27001 / 20000-1 / 9001 (supports audit-readiness). A short demo shows it on your lines.

Book a Fabrico demo
This guide is free. Rankings are editorial; the calculators stay vendor-neutral.

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