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HP Printers
home PrintersSpec-based only

home Printers

Home printers balance quality with affordability. Great for homework, recipes, photos, and occasional documents.

48 Printers No Sponsored Rankings Spec-Based Comparisons

How to use the printer category browser

This page lists every printer in our database, grouped by the way it is most commonly used. Pick a category from the strip below to narrow the list, or stay on All to see everything in one view. Each card shows the headline specifications we believe matter most for that category — print speed, cost per page, resolution, paper handling and connectivity — and links through to a full review with our independent verdict.

Categories are not marketing labels. They reflect how a printer is actually built and where it performs best. A budget home inkjet and a 50,000-page-per-month colour laser are both technically printers, but recommending one for the other's job would be misleading. We sort them up front so the comparison you do later is between like-for-like machines.

The five categories explained

Home printers
Affordable inkjets and small laser printers built for irregular household use. Typical monthly volume sits between 20 and 200 pages. We weight purchase price, ink cost and wireless setup highest. Speed and duty cycle matter less because few homes ever push them.
Office printers
Workgroup inkjets and laser MFPs built for steady multi-user volume in the 1,000 to 30,000 pages-per-month range. We weight reliability, paper capacity, automatic duplex and total cost of ownership most heavily, with print speed close behind. The cheapest unit is rarely the cheapest to run.
Photo printers
Specialist inkjets engineered for borderless prints, accurate skin tones and fade-resistant pigments on glossy media. We focus on resolution, the number of inks (six-ink and pigment systems beat four-ink dye for serious work), and supported paper sizes up to A3+ where relevant.
Desk printers
Compact units that fit on a small desk or shelf without dominating it. Footprint and noise level are the deciding factors here. These are great for a home office, dorm room, or any space where the printer sits a few feet from where you work.
Budget printers
Anything that is genuinely cheap to acquire and cheap to run — the second part is the catch. Several manufacturers sell sub-$80 printers that cost more in ink within a year than a $200 ink-tank model would over three. Our budget filter discounts those traps using our own cost-per-page math.

What our category rankings are based on

Every printer in this list has been scored against the same set of objective specifications: print speed in pages per minute, monthly duty cycle, resolution in DPI, automatic duplex availability, paper-input capacity, connectivity options, and the cost per printed page calculated from the manufacturer's stated cartridge yields and current cartridge prices. We do not factor in user reviews, retailer popularity or affiliate payouts — none of which we accept. The full scoring methodology, including weights per category, is published on our methodology page.

Once you have shortlisted two to four printers, you can send them to our side-by-side comparison tool to see the full spec sheets next to each other, or run them through the total cost of ownership calculator to see what each will cost you over one, two or three years of typical use.

A note on availability and pricing

The prices shown on each card are the manufacturer's recommended retail prices in US dollars at the time the card was last updated. Street prices vary by retailer and region, and most printers in this list can be found discounted at one or more major retailers most of the time. For the cost-per-page figure we use the manufacturer's standard-yield cartridge unless an XL or high-yield option is the only one offered. Where ink subscription programmes such as HP Instant Ink are an option, they are mentioned in the full review but not used to calculate the headline running cost.

All printers in our database are reviewed against publicly available specifications and our own structured testing checklist. We do not currently accept review units, sponsorships, or affiliate commissions from any manufacturer or retailer; full details are on our editorial standards page.

Choosing a printer for home use

By the Top 10 Printer Editorial Team·Last reviewed: April 2026

Buying a printer for a family household is a different problem from buying one for an office. The usage pattern is uneven — a burst of school homework on Sunday evening, a recipe printed on Tuesday, a batch of photos before a birthday, then two weeks of nothing. That irregular rhythm shapes what actually matters in a home printer, and it is not the same list of specifications that matters in a small office.

In our view, the three things that matter most for a home printer are: a low upfront price (because most households do not want to spend more than $200–$300 on something that sits idle most of the week), predictable running costs (because surprise $80 cartridge bills are the single biggest source of regret in this category), and reliable wireless setup from phones and laptops (because the vast majority of home print jobs now originate from a mobile device rather than a desktop computer).

The two main technology choices for home use are cartridge inkjet and ink tank inkjet. Cartridge inkjets are cheapest upfront and fine for households printing less than about 50 pages a month. Ink tank printers — HP Smart Tank, Epson EcoTank, Canon MegaTank — cost more to buy but pay that back within the first year for any family that prints more regularly, particularly if there are school-age children at home. Monochrome laser printers deserve consideration too if the household prints mostly text; they are faster, more reliable, and cheaper per page than any inkjet, but cannot print photos.

One pattern worth watching in the home category is the steady creep of subscription ink programmes. Several manufacturers now tie their cheapest printers to monthly ink plans; these can work out well for high-volume households but lock you into ongoing payments for hardware you already own. If you prefer to buy cartridges as you need them, check that the printer you are considering is not restricted to a subscription-only cartridge SKU before committing.

The home printers listed below are filtered and ranked using the criteria on the right — with purchase price, running cost, and wireless connectivity weighted highest. Speed and monthly duty cycle are deliberately weighted lower because almost no home user ever hits them as a bottleneck.

Sources: manufacturer datasheets and product pages for every printer in this category. See our ranking methodology for how the criteria on the right are weighted, and our editorial standards for sourcing and corrections.

Technology

Price Range

Print Speed

Spec-based only

No sponsored listings. All rankings are based purely on manufacturer specs and pricing.

2 printers found in home

Sorted by relevance
HP ENVY Inspire 7255e
HP

HP ENVY Inspire 7255e

homeInkjet

An inspiring home all-in-one balancing document and photo printing. Fast speeds and wireless connectivity make it ideal for busy households.

$209.99
15 PPM
WiFi
Inkjet
HP Smart Tank 5103
HP

HP Smart Tank 5103

homeInkjet

A compact ink tank all-in-one that dramatically reduces ink costs. Print, scan, and copy with minimal ongoing expense — great for heavy home users.

$259.99
12 PPM
WiFi
Inkjet

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How we judge home printers

What makes a great home printer?

These are the key specs that matter most for home use — ranked by importance.

1
Cost per PageKey

Low ink costs matter most for occasional home printing

2
Connectivity (WiFi/BT)Key

Wireless printing from phones and tablets is essential

3
Print SpeedGood

Moderate speed is fine — home users rarely queue big jobs

4
Resolution (DPI)Good

Higher DPI means better photo and colour output

5
Monthly Duty CycleMinor

Home users don't stress high duty cycles

A buyer's guide to the Top 10 Printer home-printer catalog

Choosing a printer used to be simple — pick a brand, walk into a store, take home the cheapest model that fit on your desk. Today the printer category covers everything from $59 home all-in-ones to $14,000 enterprise colour MFPs, and the difference between the cheapest and the second-cheapest model can be hundreds of dollars in ink over a single year. The point of this catalog is to make those trade-offs visible. Every printer below is described using the same set of objective specifications drawn directly from HP's published manufacturer data — print speed in pages per minute, monthly duty cycle, ISO-rated cost per page, paper input capacity, duplex behaviour, supported paper sizes, connectivity protocols and resolution in dots per inch. There are no editor scores, no star ratings and no sponsored placements anywhere on this page.

Why specifications instead of opinions? Because most printer "reviews" online are written by writers who have never used the printer and are paid a commission every time you click through to a retailer. The model that ranks first is rarely the best printer; it's the one with the highest commission rate that quarter. Top 10 Printer is structured to remove that incentive entirely: we publish no affiliate links, accept no review units, and rank every model using the same automated scoring across every category. Read the full methodology for how the scores are calculated, and our affiliate disclosure for our FTC 16 CFR Part 255 compliance statement.

Browse every printer in our catalog

This is the full Top 10 Printer catalog: every model in our database, organised by category and sortable by price, print speed, monthly duty cycle and connectivity. Use the filters above to narrow the list to your real needs — for example, "Laser printers under $400" or "Inkjet printers with auto-duplex and Ethernet". Every printer card on this page links through to a dedicated review page that lists the full set of specifications pulled directly from HP's manufacturer datasheet, plus pricing, image gallery and links to comparable models.

We organise the catalog into five categories — home printers, office printers, photo printers, desk printers and budget printers — based on a printer's intended monthly volume, paper handling and feature set rather than its marketing label. A "home" printer in our catalog is one with a duty cycle below 1,500 pages per month and a footprint small enough to fit on a side table; an "office" printer has the duty cycle and paper-handling capacity to support a small workgroup; a "budget" printer prioritises low up-front cost over running cost.

How the comparison tool works

Click "Add to compare" on any two to four printer cards and you'll be taken to our side-by-side comparison tool. The tool lays the printers out in columns, highlights the spec differences automatically, and includes editorial commentary on which model is best for which workflow. For deeper cost modelling, plug your real monthly print volume into the printer cost calculator — it will show you the projected three-year ink, toner and paper spend so you can buy on lifetime cost rather than sticker price.

A category-by-category breakdown

Home printers are designed for households that print 50 to 500 pages per month — school assignments, the occasional shipping label, family photos, tax forms in April. Most home printers in our catalog are inkjet all-in-ones with scan, copy and fax, and most fall in the $59 to $299 price band. The trade-off in this category is almost always between a low up-front cost and a high cost per page: a $79 inkjet may have a cost per page above 10 cents, which works out to over $200 a year if you print 200 pages per month. For households that print regularly, the long-term winner is usually a sub-$300 ink-tank model with bottled-ink refills and cost per page under 1 cent. Browse the home category to see the full lineup.

Office printers are built for workgroups of 5 to 50 people producing thousands of pages per month. The category is dominated by colour and monochrome laser MFPs with duty cycles between 50,000 and 200,000 pages per month, 250-sheet input trays (often expandable to 1,000+ sheets via optional drawers), automatic two-sided printing, Ethernet and AirPrint, and full PCL/PostScript language support for compatibility with enterprise print servers. Toner cost per page is the metric to optimise — a $400 office laser with 1.5 cents per page will cost less to operate over three years than a $200 inkjet at 4 cents per page if you're printing 1,500 pages per month. The full office category covers everything from desktop workgroup units to floor-standing departmental printers.

Photo printers are inkjets engineered for borderless photo output on glossy and matte photo paper. The defining features are a six-ink (or larger) ink set with dedicated photo black, photo grey or red/orange channels for richer colour gradients, a rear-feed paper path that accepts thicker photo media without curling, and a high native resolution — typically 4,800 × 1,200 dpi or higher. A general-purpose inkjet will produce acceptable photo prints, but a dedicated photo printer will produce visibly better shadow detail and skin tones. Photographers printing more than 50 photos per month should look at thephoto category.

Desk printers are compact units optimised for a small physical footprint — typically under 16 inches wide and under 10 pounds in weight. They're designed for home offices, dorm rooms, kitchen counters and small retail point-of-sale stations where counter space is at a premium. The trade-off is paper input capacity: most desk printers cap out at 100 to 150 sheets in a single tray. The desk category is sorted by physical dimensions so you can find a model that fits the space you have.

Budget printers are the value-engineered models — basic single-function inkjets and small monochrome lasers under $150 that strip out scanners, ADFs, duplexers and Ethernet to hit a low price point. They're the right answer for someone who needs occasional prints and doesn't want to think about it. The trade-off is almost always cost per page: budget inkjets can run as high as 12 to 18 cents per page on standard cartridges, so they make economic sense only for users printing fewer than 50 pages per month. The budget category shows every sub-$150 model with the real-world cost per page calculated for you.

Tips for narrowing the catalog

Start by setting a realistic monthly print volume. Most household users overestimate by a factor of three to five, which leads them to over-buy. Pull the page count off your current printer's settings menu (every printer tracks lifetime page count) and divide by the number of months you've owned it for a hard number. Next, set a maximum acceptable cost per page based on that volume — if you print 500 pages per month, a 1-cent difference is $5 a month or $180 over three years. Finally, decide what features are non-negotiable: automatic duplex, ADF for the scanner, Ethernet for shared use, A3 / 11×17 paper support, mobile printing protocols like AirPrint and Mopria. Use the filters and sort controls above to narrow the catalog accordingly, then click "Add to compare" on the two or three most promising candidates and use the side-by-side comparison tool to make the final call.

How we keep this catalog independent

All printer data on this page is sourced from HP's official product pages and current manufacturer datasheets, refreshed on each editorial cycle. We accept no payment for placement, no review units, and no commission on sales — read the full methodology for details, or visit our affiliate disclosure page for FTC-compliant disclosure language. If you spot a spec that's gone out of date, please let us know — corrections are published within five business days.