Home Printers

Best Printer for Teachers (2026)

BW By Ben Walker

Our top picks:

As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases — at no extra cost to you.

Brother DCP-L2620DW
Top pick

Brother DCP-L2620DW

Check Amazon UK for live price & stock
View on Amazon →
Epson EcoTank ET-2860
Top pick

Epson EcoTank ET-2860

Check Amazon UK for live price & stock
View on Amazon →
HP Color LaserJet Pro MFP M283fdw
Top pick

HP Color LaserJet Pro MFP M283fdw

Check Amazon UK for live price & stock
View on Amazon →
Brother MFC-J5340DW A3 Inkjet
Top pick

Brother MFC-J5340DW A3 Inkjet

Check Amazon UK for live price & stock
View on Amazon →
Canon PIXMA MegaTank G3570
Top pick

Canon PIXMA MegaTank G3570

Check Amazon UK for live price & stock
View on Amazon →

Teaching must be the only profession where you’re expected to buy your own office equipment, use it for your employer’s benefit, and not think twice about it. Every teacher I know has a printer at home. Most of them are printing 200-500 pages a month — worksheets, lesson resources, display materials, reports — and paying for every drop of ink out of their own pocket.

My sister teaches Year 4. Last year she spent over £200 on ink cartridges. Two hundred quid. That’s more than some teachers spend on classroom resources. When she told me, I drove over that weekend with a laser printer and set it up for her. Her printing costs dropped to about £30 for the rest of the year.

If you’re a teacher buying a printer — or replacing one that’s bled you dry — this guide will help you pick the right one.

What Teachers Actually Need From a Printer

I’ve spoken to a lot of teachers about their printing habits (my sister, her colleagues, two friends who teach secondary). The common needs break down like this:

High-volume mono printing. Worksheets, quizzes, reading comprehensions, homework sheets. 80% of what teachers print is black text on white paper. Speed and low cost per page matter more than anything else here.

Occasional colour printing. Display headings, reward certificates, science diagrams, geography maps. Doesn’t need to be photo-quality, but needs to be clear and vibrant enough to look decent on a classroom wall.

Scanning and copying. Copying pages from textbooks, scanning student work to upload to Google Classroom or Seesaw, duplicating resources. A flatbed scanner with an automatic document feeder (ADF) saves serious time.

A3 printing (some teachers). If you make your own displays, A3 printing is a massive time-saver vs tiling A4 sheets. Not essential for everyone, but transformative if you need it.

Reliability during holidays. Teachers print heavily during term time, then barely at all for six weeks over summer. The printer needs to work perfectly after sitting idle for weeks.

That last point rules out cheap inkjet printers. Ink dries out. Nozzles clog. You come back in September, hit print, and get streaky garbage. For more on this, see our best printer for infrequent use guide.

The 6 Best Printers for Teachers

1. Brother HL-L2400DW — Best for Worksheets

If 80% of what you print is mono worksheets and you want the absolute lowest running cost, this is the one. The Brother HL-L2400DW is a mono laser printer that hammers through pages at 30 per minute, does automatic duplex (double-sided) printing, and connects wirelessly.

Price: Currently around £100-130 on Amazon UK.

Key specs:

  • Print speed: 30 pages per minute
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi, USB
  • Duplex: Automatic
  • Toner yield: 700 pages (starter), 3,000 pages (TN-2510XL)

Running cost: A compatible TN-2510XL toner costs about £15-20 and prints roughly 3,000 pages. That’s 0.5-0.7p per page. Print 300 worksheets a month and your annual toner spend is about £18.

Why teachers love it: It’s fast, quiet, and the toner never dries out — perfect for surviving the summer holidays. Duplex printing halves your paper usage, which adds up when you’re printing hundreds of worksheets a month.

Downsides: Mono only. No scanner. No colour. If you need colour for displays, you’ll need a second printer or to use the school printer for those jobs.

Best for: Any teacher who mainly prints text-heavy worksheets and resources.

2. Brother DCP-L2620DW — Best All-Rounder for Teachers

Same excellent Brother laser engine as above, but with a scanner and copier built in. The DCP-L2620DW adds a flatbed scanner with a 50-sheet automatic document feeder — dead useful for scanning stacks of student work or copying pages from textbooks.

Price: Currently around £140-170 on Amazon UK.

Key specs:

  • Print speed: 32 pages per minute
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi, USB, Ethernet
  • Duplex: Automatic
  • Scanner: Flatbed + 50-sheet ADF
  • Toner yield: 700 pages (starter), 3,000 pages (high-yield)

Running cost: Same as the HL-L2400DW — about 0.5-0.7p per page with compatible toner.

My sister uses this exact model. She scans worksheets directly to her Google Drive using the Brother app, then shares them on Google Classroom. The ADF means she can load up 30 pages of student work and walk away while it scans. Before this, she was photographing pages with her phone. The scanner alone justifies the extra £40-50 over the print-only model.

Downsides: Still mono only. The scanner glass attracts dust and needs regular cleaning for sharp scans. A bit bulky for a small home desk.

Best for: Teachers who need scanning, copying, and high-volume mono printing. The best all-round choice for most teachers.

3. Epson EcoTank ET-2860 — Best for Colour on a Budget

If you print colour displays, certificates, and diagrams regularly, the EcoTank system crushes traditional inkjet running costs. The ET-2860 comes with enough ink to print roughly 4,500 mono or 7,500 colour pages. Replacement ink bottles are about £8-10 each.

Price: Currently around £200-230 on Amazon UK.

Key specs:

  • Print speed: 10.5 ppm (mono), 5 ppm (colour)
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi, USB
  • Duplex: Automatic
  • Scanner: Flatbed (no ADF)
  • Ink yield: 4,500 mono / 7,500 colour (included)

Running cost: About 0.2p per mono page, 0.5p per colour page. Colour printing that’s cheaper than most mono laser printers. Unreal.

A teacher friend of mine prints all her classroom displays on her EcoTank. Vibrant colour maps, timeline posters, book cover images — all for fractions of a penny. She’s been using it for two years and hasn’t bought replacement ink yet.

Downsides: Slow. 5 pages per minute in colour is painful when you’re printing 50 colour certificates at 9pm on a Sunday. No ADF on the scanner. Being an inkjet, it can struggle after very long periods of inactivity — though the large tanks fare better than cartridges. See our cheapest printer ink guide for more on ink economics.

Best for: Teachers who print a lot of colour resources and want the lowest possible running costs.

4. HP Color LaserJet Pro MFP M283fdw — Best Colour Laser

If you want colour printing with laser speed and reliability — and you’ve got the budget — the HP Color LaserJet Pro M283fdw is a proper workhorse. 22 pages per minute in both mono and colour, with a scanner, ADF, and fax (which nobody uses, but it’s there).

Price: Currently around £300-360 on Amazon UK. Not cheap, mind.

Key specs:

  • Print speed: 22 ppm (mono and colour)
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi, USB, Ethernet
  • Duplex: Automatic
  • Scanner: Flatbed + 50-sheet ADF
  • Toner yield: ~1,200 pages per cartridge

Running cost: With genuine toner, colour pages cost about 12-15p each. Compatible toner brings that down to 4-6p. Mono pages are about 2-3p with compatibles.

Why it’s good: Fast colour printing. Laser reliability — no drying, no clogging. The ADF handles multi-page scanning quickly. Colour worksheets and displays come out crisp and professional. Feels like having a department printer at home.

Downsides: Expensive upfront. The four toner cartridges mean replacement costs add up, even with compatibles. It’s physically large — needs a proper spot, not a corner of your desk. The HP Smart app can be annoying with its constant sign-in prompts.

Best for: Teachers (or departments) with budget to spend who want fast, reliable colour printing with scanning.

5. Brother MFC-J5340DW — Best for A3 Displays

If you make your own classroom displays and want to print A3 posters, headers, and diagrams without tiling A4 sheets, the Brother MFC-J5340DW is one of the most affordable A3 printers going. It prints up to A3, scans up to A4, and has a 250-sheet paper tray.

Price: Currently around £180-220 on Amazon UK.

Key specs:

  • Print speed: 28 ppm (mono), 21 ppm (colour)
  • Max print size: A3
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi, USB, Ethernet
  • Duplex: Automatic (A4 only)
  • Scanner: Flatbed + 20-sheet ADF

Running cost: Uses LC422XL cartridges — about £12-15 each for compatibles, yielding roughly 1,500 mono or 1,500 colour pages. Works out to about 1-2p per mono page.

I helped a friend’s wife (NQT, Year 6) set this up last September. She prints A3 reading corner headers, science vocabulary displays, and massive timeline posters. The quality is more than good enough for classroom walls, and she can print a full A3 colour poster in about 40 seconds.

Downsides: It’s an inkjet, so the cartridges can dry out over summer. Run a test page before the end of each half-term to keep the heads clear. The A3 paper tray is shared with A4, so you’re swapping paper when you switch sizes. It’s also quite big.

Best for: Teachers who create their own display materials and want to print posters without tiling.

6. Canon PIXMA MegaTank G3570 — Best Budget Colour Alternative

If the Epson EcoTank is out of stock or you fancy Canon’s system instead, the MegaTank G3570 offers similar ink economy. Comes with enough ink for roughly 6,000 mono or 7,700 colour pages. Replacement bottles are £9-12.

Price: Currently around £200-240 on Amazon UK.

Key specs:

  • Print speed: 11 ppm (mono), 6 ppm (colour)
  • Connectivity: Wi-Fi, USB
  • Duplex: No
  • Scanner: Flatbed (no ADF)
  • Ink yield: 6,000 mono / 7,700 colour (included)

Running cost: Similar to the Epson EcoTank — well under 1p per mono page, about 0.5p per colour page.

Downsides: No automatic duplex printing, which is frustrating for worksheet printing — you’ll need to manually flip pages. No ADF on the scanner. Slightly slower than the Epson. Still an inkjet with the usual clogging risks during long breaks.

Best for: Teachers who want ultra-cheap colour printing and don’t mind manual duplex.

Comparison Table

PrinterTypeColourSpeedScannerDuplexPrice
Brother HL-L2400DWLaserMono30 ppmNoAuto£100-130
Brother DCP-L2620DWLaserMono32 ppmYes + ADFAuto£140-170
Epson EcoTank ET-2860InkjetYes10.5 ppmYesAuto£200-230
HP Color LaserJet M283fdwLaserYes22 ppmYes + ADFAuto£300-360
Brother MFC-J5340DWInkjetYes28 ppmYes + ADFAuto (A4)£180-220
Canon MegaTank G3570InkjetYes11 ppmYesNo£200-240

Running Costs Compared (300 Pages/Month)

This is where it really matters for teachers. Printing 300 pages a month (a fairly typical term-time volume):

PrinterMonthly Cost (Mono)Annual Cost (Mono)
Brother laser + compatible toner£1.50-2.10£18-25
Epson EcoTank£0.60-0.90£7-11
Canon MegaTank£0.60-0.90£7-11
HP Colour Laser + compatible£6-9£72-108
Standard inkjet + genuine cartridges£21-30£252-360

The last row is what my sister was spending. Over £250 a year on ink. That’s a proper kick in the teeth when you’re already buying glue sticks and whiteboard markers out of your own pay.

My Recommendation

For most teachers: Brother DCP-L2620DW for everyday worksheets and scanning, plus the school’s colour printer for the occasional display. Total annual cost: about £20 in toner and £15 in paper. Done.

If you print a lot of colour materials at home, add an Epson EcoTank ET-2860 as your colour printer. Two printers sounds excessive, but the combined annual running cost is under £30 — less than three months of genuine inkjet cartridges.

If you can only buy one printer and need colour, the EcoTank is the pick. Accept the slower speed and lack of ADF, and enjoy colour printing that costs almost nothing per page.

FAQ

Frequently Asked Questions

Can teachers claim a printer on tax?

If you buy a printer specifically for work and your school doesn't provide one, you may be able to claim tax relief on the cost. HMRC allows claims for tools and equipment required for your job that your employer doesn't provide. Keep the receipt and check the current guidance on GOV.UK or ask your union.

What is the cheapest way for teachers to print?

A mono laser printer with compatible toner gives you the lowest cost per page for worksheets — about 1-2p per page. If you need colour for displays, an Epson EcoTank or Canon MegaTank brings colour printing down to about 0.5p per page.

Should I buy a laser or inkjet printer for school work?

For worksheets and text documents, laser is better — faster, cheaper per page, and the toner never dries out during school holidays. For colour displays and resources, an ink tank system (EcoTank/MegaTank) gives you cheap colour printing.

What printer is best for printing A3 classroom displays?

The Brother MFC-J5340DW is one of the most affordable A3 printers available. It prints up to A3 size, has a scanner, and costs around £180-220. Running costs are reasonable with compatible cartridges.

How much does it cost a teacher to print at home?

With genuine inkjet cartridges, printing 200 worksheets per month costs roughly £14-20. With a laser printer and compatible toner, the same volume costs about £2-4. With an EcoTank, colour printing 200 pages costs roughly £1-1.50.