Home Printers

Best Laser Printer for Home Use 2026

BW By Ben Walker

Our top picks:

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Brother HL-L2350DW Mono Laser Printer
Top pick

Brother HL-L2350DW Mono Laser Printer

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HP LaserJet M110we Mono Laser Printer
Top pick

HP LaserJet M110we Mono Laser Printer

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Canon i-SENSYS LBP236dw Mono Laser
Top pick

Canon i-SENSYS LBP236dw Mono Laser

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Brother MFC-L2710DW Mono Laser MFP
Top pick

Brother MFC-L2710DW Mono Laser MFP

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HP LaserJet MFP M234dwe
Top pick

HP LaserJet MFP M234dwe

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Brother HL-L3270CDW Colour Laser
Top pick

Brother HL-L3270CDW Colour Laser

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I’ll say it plainly: if you’re still using a cartridge inkjet at home, you’re probably wasting money. Toner never dries out. Laser printers are three to four times faster. Cost per page is dramatically lower. The only real question is which laser printer to buy.

I’ve used, tested, and recommended all of the models below. Every one has Wi-Fi, and all but one have auto-duplex — the two features that genuinely matter for home use.

For the full case for laser over inkjet, see our advantages of laser printers guide. Still deciding between the two? Our laser vs inkjet printer comparison goes through all the trade-offs.

What to Look For

A few things separate a good home laser from one you’ll regret:

  • Mono vs colour: Mono costs half as much to buy and run. Unless you genuinely need colour (most people don’t — be honest with yourself), go mono.
  • Toner yield: Ignore the starter cartridge. Look at the high-yield replacement toner price and page count. That’s your real running cost.
  • Wi-Fi: You want to print from your phone and laptop without cables. Non-negotiable in 2026.
  • Auto-duplex: Double-sided printing. Saves paper, makes multi-page documents look professional.
  • Footprint: Laser printers are bigger than inkjets. Measure your desk before ordering — I’ve seen people send printers back because they assumed it’d be inkjet-sized.

Quick Comparison Table

PrinterTypeSpeedToner Cost (high-yield)Cost/PageWi-FiDuplexPrice
Brother HL-L2350DWMono30 ppm~£45 (3,000 pages)~1.5pYesYes~£120
HP LaserJet M110weMono21 ppm~£60 (1,500 pages)~4pYesNo~£130
Canon i-SENSYS LBP236dwMono33 ppm~£85 (3,100 pages)~2.7pYesYes~£200
Brother MFC-L2710DWMono MFP30 ppm~£45 (3,000 pages)~1.5pYesYes~£180
HP LaserJet MFP M234dweMono MFP30 ppm~£60 (1,500 pages)~4pYesYes~£200
Brother HL-L3270CDWColour24 ppm~£200 (set of 4, 3,000 pages each)~6-8p colourYesYes~£280

1. Brother HL-L2350DW — Best Overall

Price: ~£120 | Type: Mono | Speed: 30 ppm | Cost per page: ~1.5p

The Brother HL-L2350DW is the one I recommend to almost everyone, and I’ve been recommending it for years now. Fast, compact for a laser, and the cheapest running costs on this list.

The TN-2420 high-yield toner cartridge is the star here — 3,000 pages for about £45. That’s 1.5p per page. Compare that to 5-10p on a cartridge inkjet and the savings are massive. Even the standard TN-2410 (1,200 pages, ~£30) comes in at 2.5p. And because Brother doesn’t block third-party toner, you can get compatible cartridges for £12-15 and push the cost per page below 1p. Try doing that with an HP.

Features: Wi-Fi, auto-duplex, 250-sheet tray, USB, manual feed for envelopes. Brother’s iPrint&Scan app for mobile printing.

The honest downsides: No scanner or copier — print only. No colour. The casing feels a bit plasticky if you’re used to office-grade equipment. But for home volumes, it’s perfectly durable. My parents have had one for three years without a single issue.

Verdict: If you don’t need scanning and you don’t need colour — and most home users don’t — this is the one. Full stop.

2. HP LaserJet M110we — Best Compact Laser

Price: ~£130 | Type: Mono | Speed: 21 ppm | Cost per page: ~4p

The HP LaserJet M110we is tiny. Under 5 kg, barely bigger than a shoebox. If you’ve got a small desk or a cramped home office, it’s impressive how little space this takes up.

Print speed is 21 ppm — slower than the Brother, but still twice as fast as most inkjets. Text quality is excellent. Sharp, dark, professional.

The catches: HP pushes their HP+ programme during setup — HP account required, internet connection required. You get a few months of included toner, but then you’re paying HP’s prices. The standard HP 142A cartridge does about 950 pages for ~£55 (5.8p per page). The 142X high-yield manages 1,500 pages for ~£60 (4p per page). Neither touches Brother’s costs. No auto-duplex either — manual flipping only. And the 150-sheet tray is a bit small.

Verdict: Buy this only if desk space is genuinely your main concern. Otherwise, the Brother HL-L2350DW beats it in every other area. Not even close on running costs.

3. Canon i-SENSYS LBP236dw — Best Build Quality

Price: ~£200 | Type: Mono | Speed: 33 ppm | Cost per page: ~2.7p

The Canon i-SENSYS LBP236dw feels like a proper piece of kit. Heavier and more solid than the Brother or HP, with a 250-sheet main tray plus a 100-sheet multi-purpose tray for envelopes and thicker stock.

Fastest on the list at 33 ppm. Handles mixed paper sizes well. The Canon 070H high-yield toner (3,100 pages, ~£85) gives a cost per page of about 2.7p.

Features: Wi-Fi, Ethernet, auto-duplex, USB, 5-line LCD, PCL/PostScript support, secure print with PIN release.

The downside: £200 for a print-only mono laser is hard to justify when a Brother MFP with scanning and copying costs less. Unless you specifically need Ethernet, secure printing, or that extra build quality, it’s overkill for home use.

Verdict: Best for a home office that needs something robust with business-grade features. But for most homes? More than you need.

4. Brother MFC-L2710DW — Best All-in-One

Price: ~£180 | Type: Mono MFP | Speed: 30 ppm | Cost per page: ~1.5p

The Brother MFC-L2710DW takes the same engine as the HL-L2350DW and adds scanning, copying, and faxing. Same TN-2420 toner, same 1.5p per page running costs.

The flatbed scanner handles document digitisation nicely, and the 50-sheet ADF means you can scan multi-page contracts without standing over the thing. Copy quality is sharp.

Features: Wi-Fi, Ethernet, auto-duplex, ADF, fax, 250-sheet tray, USB.

The downsides: It’s big — noticeably bigger than the print-only models. Needs its own shelf or desk space. The button-based control panel feels dated compared to touchscreen models. And the fax function — honestly, who faxes? (Solicitors. Solicitors fax. If you deal with solicitors, you’ll be glad it’s there.)

Verdict: If there’s any chance you’ll need to scan or copy documents — even occasionally — the £60 premium over the HL-L2350DW is easily justified. It’s the best value laser multifunction printer you can buy right now. I set one up for a friend who does freelance accounting, and she says it’s the best £180 she’s spent on her business.

5. HP LaserJet MFP M234dwe — Best HP All-in-One

Price: ~£200 | Type: Mono MFP | Speed: 30 ppm | Cost per page: ~4p

The HP LaserJet MFP M234dwe is HP’s competitor to the Brother MFC-L2710DW. Print, scan, copy in a reasonably compact package. Build quality is solid, the HP Smart app is well-made, and the 40-sheet ADF handles multi-page jobs.

The problem: Running costs. The HP 142X high-yield toner costs ~£60 for 1,500 pages — 4p per page. The Brother MFC-L2710DW does the same job at 1.5p per page. Over 10,000 pages, you’ll spend roughly £250 more on HP toner. That’s not a rounding error — that’s a weekend away.

HP+ lock-in is also a concern. If you opt in, you get some extra features, but you’re locked to HP toner with no third-party options. The scanner tops out at 600 dpi, which is fine but not brilliant.

Verdict: Only buy this if you’re already in the HP ecosystem or specifically want the HP Smart app. Otherwise, the Brother MFC-L2710DW does everything this does, for less money per page. Much less.

6. Brother HL-L3270CDW — Best Colour Laser

Price: ~£280 | Type: Colour | Speed: 24 ppm | Cost per page: ~6-8p colour

The Brother HL-L3270CDW is the one for people who genuinely need colour laser printing. Separate toner cartridges for each colour, high-yield TN-247 set costing around £200 for 2,300-3,000 pages per cartridge.

Colour output is good for charts, presentations, flyers, and school projects. Not photo quality — no colour laser is — but more than adequate for business documents.

Features: Wi-Fi, Ethernet, auto-duplex, 250-sheet tray, NFC tap-to-print, colour touchscreen.

The downsides: Replacing a full set of colour toner costs £200+. The printer is big and heavy — proper desk real estate. And 6-8p per colour page adds up fast if you’re printing a lot.

Verdict: Only buy this if you regularly need colour documents printed at home and you don’t want to deal with inkjet clogging problems. For most people, a mono laser handles 90% of printing needs. The odd colour page? Get it printed at the library, Ryman, or your local print shop. Cheaper and better quality.

Mono vs Colour Laser: Do You Really Need Colour?

Most home users should choose mono. Here’s why:

  • Cost: Mono printers cost 50-60% less. Mono toner is 60-75% cheaper to replace.
  • Reality check: 80-90% of home printing is black and white. Forms, letters, tickets, school worksheets, HMRC correspondence.
  • Colour quality: Colour laser output is functional but uninspiring. If you need genuinely good colour or photo printing, you’re better off with a tank-based inkjet alongside your mono laser.

The exception: if you regularly print colour documents for a home business — invoices, brochures, presentations — then the Brother HL-L3270CDW makes sense.

Third-Party Toner: Worth It?

Short answer: yes, usually. Compatible toner cartridges cut running costs by 50-70%, and the quality has improved enormously. Most produce output you genuinely can’t tell apart from genuine.

Brother printers are particularly third-party friendly. No aggressive chip-blocking, no firmware updates designed to lock out competitors (unlike HP, which has form for this).

A compatible TN-2420 for the Brother HL-L2350DW costs £12-15 vs £45 genuine. That brings cost per page below 1p. About as cheap as printing gets.

The small risk: Occasionally, third-party toner produces slightly lighter prints or leaves more residue in the printer. For important documents — contracts, anything going to a client — I use genuine toner. For internal stuff, school forms, receipts? Compatible every time.

My Recommendations

Best for most people: Brother HL-L2350DW — fast, cheap, reliable, fits on a desk. This is the default answer.

Best all-in-one: Brother MFC-L2710DW — same engine, adds scanning and copying for £60 more. Worth it if you scan even occasionally.

Best if space is tight: HP LaserJet M110we — genuinely tiny for a laser. Running costs are higher, though.

Best colour laser: Brother HL-L3270CDW — but only if you actually need colour. Most people don’t. Be honest with yourself before spending £280.

If you print rarely and want more guidance, see our guide to the best printer for infrequent use.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Is a laser printer worth it for home use?

Yes — if you mainly print documents. A mono laser costs £100-150, prints 30+ pages per minute, and toner never dries out. The higher upfront cost is offset by running costs of 2-4p per page vs 5-10p on cartridge inkjets.

How long does a toner cartridge last?

Standard toner cartridges print 1,000-1,500 pages. High-yield cartridges print 2,600-3,000+ pages. For a household printing 100 pages per month, a high-yield cartridge lasts over two years.

Do I need a colour laser printer at home?

Most households don't. Colour laser toner sets cost £100-200 to replace, and colour laser print quality is only adequate for charts and basic graphics — not photos. A mono laser handles 90% of home printing needs.

Can I use a laser printer for occasional photos?

A colour laser can print basic photos for casual use, but quality is noticeably below even a budget inkjet on photo paper. For anything you'd frame or display, you'll want an inkjet.

What's the cheapest laser printer to run?

The Brother HL-L2350DW using the TN-2420 high-yield toner (3,000 pages, around £45) gives a cost per page of about 1.5p — among the lowest running costs of any printer.