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Best Home Printers Under $100 in 2026 (Plus 1 Worth Saving For)

 Affiliate disclosure: Castle Ink is reader-supported. If you buy through links on this page, we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you. We only recommend printers we have personally researched and that have strong owner feedback on Amazon.

If you want a capable home printer without spending much, the good news is that you do not have to. Solid wireless all-in-one printers from HP and Canon now sell for well under $100, and a few of them are genuinely good once you understand what they are designed to do.

This guide pulls together our four most recent hands-on home-printer reviews, ranks them by price, and tells you exactly which one to buy based on how you actually print at home. We have also included one premium pick worth saving up for if your monthly print volume is high, because the cheapest printer is not always the cheapest to own.

Quick comparison: our top picks

Printer Price Rating Best for
HP DeskJet 2855e $49.89 3.8★ (17,663) Cheapest all-in-one for light printing
Canon PIXMA TR4720 $79.00 3.9★ (15,848) Best under-$100 pick with ADF and fax
Canon PIXMA TS6420a $70.00 3.9★ (6,908) Step-up Canon with auto-duplex
Epson EcoTank ET-2803 (splurge pick) $189.99 4.1★ (20,450) Heavy printers who want the lowest cost per page

Prices and ratings checked at time of writing on Amazon. They change frequently — click through to see the current price.

How we picked

We focused on three things home printers actually need to get right: real owner ratings with a meaningful sample size (every printer on this list has 15,000+ reviews), reliable wireless setup with iPhone and Android, and a clear path to affordable ink. We left off printers that look great on a spec sheet but bury new owners in expensive cartridge replacements within the first few weeks.

All three picks below are printers we have already written full hands-on reviews of — we link to those reviews under each pick so you can read the pros and cons in detail before you decide.

1. HP DeskJet 2855e — the cheapest way into a brand-new wireless all-in-one

At under $50, the HP DeskJet 2855e is the lowest entry price on this list, and it has been the #1 Best Seller in its category on Amazon for most of the year. It is a wireless color all-in-one (print, scan, copy) that sets up from the HP Smart app in a few minutes and prints from iPhone, Android, Chromebook, and any Wi-Fi PC.

For a household that prints fewer than 20 pages a week — school forms, shipping labels, the occasional recipe — it is a great fit. It uses HP 67 cartridges, and the 3-month Instant Ink trial that comes in the box is worth taking advantage of if you sign up.

The catches are real and the same ones every cheap inkjet has: it is 2.4 GHz Wi-Fi only (no 5 GHz), the ink cartridges are small, and HP nudges you toward Instant Ink during setup. If you are aware of those limits, the price is hard to argue with.

Read the full review: HP DeskJet 2855e Review (2026)

Check the current price on Amazon →

2. Canon PIXMA TR4720 — the best all-rounder under $100

At $79, the Canon PIXMA TR4720 is our overall pick under $100. For thirty dollars more than the DeskJet you get features that genuinely matter at home: a 20-sheet automatic document feeder for scanning and copying multi-page documents, a built-in fax (still useful for medical and legal paperwork), and a slightly more grown-up paper path.

It uses Canon PG-275 and CL-276 cartridges, and Canon publishes XL versions that bring the cost per page down significantly if you print regularly. Owner ratings are slightly higher than the DeskJet at 3.9 stars across nearly 16,000 reviews, and the comments lean toward people who use it for both household tasks and small-business paperwork.

If you have ever needed to copy a stack of forms or send a fax once a year and given up on the idea of doing it at home, this is the printer that brings it back to being easy.

Read the full review: Canon PIXMA TR4720 Review (2026)

Check the current price on Amazon →

3. Canon PIXMA TS6420a — the step-up Canon with auto-duplex and a touchscreen

Price on Amazon: around $70 · Rating: 3.9★ (6,908 reviews) · Best for: Households that print enough to want automatic two-sided printing and a nicer interface, without jumping to a tank printer.

The Canon PIXMA TS6420a is the natural step up from the TR4720. You get the same easy iPhone setup most Canon buyers like, plus automatic 2-sided printing and a small color display that makes copying and scanning less fiddly. It uses two cartridges (black and tri-color), so ongoing ink costs sit between the cheap HP and the ET-2803.

What owners praise: straightforward setup from an iPhone, clean duplex printing, and decent photo output for a sub-$100 inkjet. The biggest complaint: Wi-Fi can drop and needs to be re-paired — common to most cheap wireless printers, but worth knowing.

Pick this one if you want a Canon, you do enough printing to care about duplex, and $70 is your sweet spot. Full breakdown here: Canon PIXMA TS6420a Review (2026).

Check current price on Amazon →

4. Epson EcoTank ET-2803 — worth saving for if you print a lot

The Epson EcoTank ET-2803 is the only printer on this list that breaks the $100 ceiling — it currently runs about $189.99 — but we included it on purpose. It is the printer to buy if you print enough that ink cost is starting to bother you.

Instead of cartridges, the EcoTank uses refillable ink bottles that ship in the box. Epson says the included ink is good for roughly 4,500 black pages and 7,500 color pages — the equivalent of about 80 traditional cartridge sets. Owner reviews back this up: 4.1 stars across more than 20,000 reviews, with the most common comment being that people simply stopped thinking about ink.

The math is simple. If you print more than about 25-30 pages a week, the ET-2803 pays for itself in saved ink within roughly a year. For households printing less than that, the cheaper picks above make more sense.

Read the full review: Epson EcoTank ET-2803 Review (2026)

Check the current price on Amazon →

Which one should you buy?

Buy the HP DeskJet 2855e if you want the absolute cheapest way to get a working wireless printer on your desk this week and you print only occasionally.

Buy the Canon PIXMA TR4720 if you want one printer that handles both household and light home-office tasks — the ADF and fax alone justify the small price bump.

Buy the Epson EcoTank ET-2803 if you print frequently and you are tired of running out of ink. It costs more up front and earns it back fast.

Frequently asked questions

Are cheap home printers reliable?

Modern $50-$80 inkjets are far better than they were even five years ago. The trade-off is not reliability — all three printers above have over 15,000 reviews and average between 3.8 and 4.1 stars — it is ink cost over time. A $50 printer with cartridges that need replacing every couple of months can easily cost more than a $190 EcoTank within two years.

Do I need an all-in-one or just a printer?

For home use, an all-in-one (print/scan/copy) is almost always the better buy. All three picks here are all-in-ones. Stand-alone printers only make sense if you already have a separate scanner.

Will these work with my iPhone or Chromebook?

Yes. All three support AirPrint (iPhone/iPad/Mac), Mopria (Android), and direct printing from Chromebooks. Setup is done through each manufacturer's app: HP Smart for the DeskJet, Canon PRINT for the PIXMA, and Epson Smart Panel for the EcoTank.

What about ink subscriptions like HP Instant Ink?

HP Instant Ink can be a good deal if your print volume is steady and predictable. If you print in bursts — a lot one month, none the next — you may pay for months you do not use. The EcoTank avoids the question entirely by replacing cartridges with refillable bottles.

What if I need a laser printer instead?

Under $100, laser options are mostly mono (black-only) and meant for text-heavy documents. If that fits your needs, we cover those separately. For mixed printing including photos, school projects, and color forms, the inkjets above are the better fit at this price.

How to make any cheap printer last longer

Three habits will get you more years out of a $50-$80 printer than anything else. First, run a print job at least once every two weeks to keep the print head from drying out — a single page is enough. Second, use the manufacturer's XL or high-yield cartridges when you do replace ink; the per-page cost is dramatically lower than standard cartridges. Third, keep the printer somewhere temperature-stable, not in a garage or by a sunny window, since inkjet heads are sensitive to heat extremes.

One more tip: the cheapest cartridges are not always the worst. Castle Ink stocks compatible HP 67 ink for the DeskJet 2855e and other budget printers at a fraction of the manufacturer price. They are not for everyone (HP Instant Ink users should stick with original cartridges), but for households that just want to print, they cut ongoing cost meaningfully.

Final word

You do not need to spend $300 to get a reliable home printer in 2026. The Canon PIXMA TR4720 is our overall pick under $100 because it does the most for the price. If money is tight, the HP DeskJet 2855e gets you 90% of the way there for $30 less. And if you print enough to care, save up another $110 for the Epson EcoTank ET-2803 — you will earn it back in ink.

This article contains Amazon affiliate links. Castle Ink may earn a small commission on qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you. We only recommend printers we have reviewed in depth and that have a long, public track record of owner feedback.

Written and reviewed by — Founder of Castle Ink, 20+ years in the printer & imaging supplies industry.