
USA pricing for the new Hilti ProKit tool box system has finally been revealed.
Not only that, there are introductory deals right now.
As you might have seen, ProKit is Hilti’s new modular tool box system. And no, there are no drawers (yet?).
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Here’s the pricing on the 5 initial offerings, as of the time of this posting:
Organizer (full-size) with 11 bins: $73
Small tool box (medium case): $95
Large tool box: $106
XL tool box: $137
2-wheel cart (trolley): $177
A 5pc combo as shown in the product photos will cost you $588.
Don’t fret, there’s an introductory sale, now thru October 3, 2025.

For a limited time, spend over $5,000 on new Hilti tools, and you get the hand cart and a single tool box for free. Spend at least $7,500, and you get the same plus another tool box and the organizer.
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Spend over $10,000, and it looks like you get one of everything for free – the organizer, small tool case, large tool box, and XL tool box, plus the cart.
Having to spend this kind of money to save on the new Hilti ProKit tool box system tells me all I need to know about the types of customers Hilti values.
I really thought Hilti was moving in a direction where they might be welcoming individual pro users and tradespeople, but I guess I was wrong.
I asked Hilti for more details 5 months ago when their sales reps started posting about ProKit on social media, and again with specific questions earlier this week, but have not yet heard back.
Here’s everything we know so far: Hilti ProKit – a New Modular Tool Box System
The new modular tool box system looks to have some interesting features, but it will likely be a long time until they catch up to Milwaukee Packout, Dewalt ToughSystem, and other competing storage systems.
And given Hilti’s focus, the needs and wants of individual tool users might take a backseat to those of larger customers.
HmmmDusty
Seems like one of those promos where you buy a tool or two and get a $5 beanie, just with more zeroes.
On balance, Hilton definitely couldn’t care less about individual consumers, but their fleet model kind of speaks to that already.
Stuart
Hilti has been buying up a lot of influencer hype. Corporate buyers don’t make purchasing decisions based on oohs and aahs on social media.
I really thought they were working on being more accessible to individual tool users.
It was extremely discouraging when I saw “sale,” clicked through, and saw you have to spend over $5,000 to get the least of the deals, and over $10,000 for the full set.
Fluke has free gift offer tiers that start with a purchase of at least $500 and go up to $20,000, and so this type of offer is not out of the ordinary, only the minimum spend.
HmmmDusty
It does seems strange to market using channels that would primarily be seen by individual buyers, when the main sales model is corporate. Maybe the figured it’s a net positive for little money spent? Hype is hype after all.
They happen to make tools same as other brands, but the target demo and sales model are different, no big loss. Lots of options out there.
taras
“As you might have seen, ProKit is Hilti’s new modular tool box system. And no, there are no drawers (yet?).”
I doubt Hilti will introduce drawers, but I’ve been wrong plenty of times in my life.
As you mentioned, most of Hilti’s customers fleet their tools, mostly because it’s an easy way to service and maintain a large inventory of tools. It’s rare to see the singleton contractor use exclusively Hilti because the buy in is only worth it if you are going to be purchasing/fleeting a large number of tools. The discounts do compound the more you purchase from them, and is worth it at larger bulk/ongoing purchases. A company I worked for did the math and the break even point for similar Milwaukee/Bosch/DeWalt… Was around 30k for tools.
Going g back to the drawers, Hilti doesn’t do small tools, so no incentive for them to really offer that, and consumable like fasteners etc, (which Hilti sells more product as fasteners vs tools) are usually kept in bulk volumes necessitating at least rolling stand up storage units.
This modular system will be geared more towards organizing duplicates or multiples of the same tools per box, or setting up individual tool kits for each tool (think a hammer drill with all the accessory bits that go with it, a grab and go for specific tasks).
I see their smaller boxes being used as containers for a days worth of fasteners and fixings of the same type used to get you through a day’s to, but no one is going to be lugging around a medium box with 2 or 3 drawers with things you don’t need.