Resin 3D printers have made their way well into the mainstream. Nowadays, home hobbyists, makers, and professionals can pick up a compact, high-resolution machine for less than $200 and rattle off incredibly detailed prints in next to no time.

There are plenty of resin 3D printers for the maker on a budget, but which are best? After countless hours of testing and printing, followed by no small amount of research and debate, we’ve got a list of our top resin 3D printer picks for you.

Here are the best desktop resin 3D printers, from standard-sized and medium-format machines to large-format monsters capable of huge batches of prints.

If you are unsure which is the right one for you, check out our section on how to pick a resin 3D printer to learn what you should look out for in a resin 3D printer. Or, dive right into our picks in the table below.

Overview
Best Resin 3D PrinterMarket Price
(Approx., USD)
Check Price
(Commissions earned)
Small: Elegoo Mars 4 UltraRemarkable value, with bleeding edge resolution and Wi-Fi connectivity $269
Mid-Size: Anycubic Photon Mono M5sResin-saving smarts with convenient Wi-Fi and app experiences$399
Large: Phrozen Sonic Mega 8K SSlick user-friendly design for big-volume prints$1,580
Beginners: Anycubic Photon Mono M5sPlug-and-play with zero leveling required, printer maintenance tracking, and some print diagnostics$399
Under $200: Anycubic Photon Mono 2A budget workhorse that's low on frills, but makes high quality prints$179
Under $300: Elegoo Mars 4 UltraSolid performance with uber high resolution, and the convenience of Wi-Fi to boot$269
Under $500: Anycubic Photon Mono M5sAn excellent, quick-printing plug-and-play experience$399
Under $1,000: UniFormation GKtwoUser-friendliness and a heated resin vat put this one ahead of the pack$850
No matching records found.

Best Resin 3D Printer

Here are our recommendations for the best 3D resin printers in their respective categories.

Small
Best Small Resin 3D Printer

Small: Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra

Image of Best Small Resin 3D Printer: Small: Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra
The Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra (Source: All3DP)

What’s Great

  • Super duper high-resolution prints
  • Wi-Fi connectivity
  • Refined software experience

Bucking the trend of mid-size printers getting better features and resolution these days, the Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra is a bolt from the blue boasting one of, if not the highest resolution LCDs going in desktop resin 3D printing. It’s the best Mars series 3D printer to date, introducing a discerning pixel count that could see your models with voxels as fine as 18 microns in the X and Y axes, resin and conditions dependent, of course.

Backing up the jump to such pixelatious new heights is a jump to a new OS for the printer. Based on Linux and exclusive to Elegoo’s new Ultra designation of printer, this system layers in smarter features such as printer self-checks, richer print diagnostics, and the ability to adjust more print settings mid-print, a feature we’re always appreciative of due to it preventing the need for repetitive reslicing whenever a model doesn’t quite cure right. At the time of testing, it seemed early days for some of the features – despite a Wi-Fi connection and a menu option to check for updates, over-the-air updating (a standard for many printers) did not function.

Minor gripes aside, it’s the typical workhorse performance we expect of Elegoo’s Mars series, but better. Mind that there are no new systems or magic tools to make printing easier. It’s the same old tool, just a little sharper. And for ~$300, we absolutely do not mind. Elegoo has found some secret sauce to make their machines affordable, with older (but still excellent) printers now dirt cheap and the new flagships at uber-competitive price points like this. We do not mind.

Alternatives

In this size class, there’s only really one printer that’ll get an immediate, unconditional recommendation from most folks in the know – the Elegoo Mars 3 is a workhorse of a resin 3D printer. It’s basic, compared to the feature richness offered by some printers on this list, but with a new low price of ~$150 for its high-resolution LCD and simplicity of use, it’s unbeatable value.

In the absence of any clear upgrade picks over the Mars 4 Ultra, we think the Anycubic Photon Mono M5s is a step in the right direction. Its footprint isn’t much larger than the Mars 4 Ultra, but it offers a similar resolution, a bigger build volume, plus a force-feedback sensor that can tell if a print has failed and adjust the machine’s bed level automatically. It’s not perfect, but it is an interesting evolution on the form for not much more money: $479.

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Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra Commissions Earned
Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra
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Mid-Size
Best Mid-Sized Resin 3D Printer

Mid-Size: Anycubic Photon Mono M5s

Image of Best Mid-Sized Resin 3D Printer: Mid-Size: Anycubic Photon Mono M5s
The Anycubic Photon Mono M5s (Source: All3DP)

What’s Great

  • Capable of fast, high-res printing
  • Resin level & print failure smarts
  • Well-implemented Wi-Fi connectivity

The Anycubic Photon Mono M5s felt like a different breed of desktop resin printer when it launched, introducing print-boosting smarts the likes of which we’ve only really seen in filament 3D printing over the last couple of years. Packing a print plate gantry-mounted sensor, the M5s can detect peel force, resin level, and the vat bottom to effectively automate and augment your printing experience.

In testing, we didn’t find it to be flawless, but that this system pulls off even half of what it does makes the M5s our preferred choice over all the other desktop 3D printers we’ve experienced lately. Not to mention, this is all in a compact frame to boot. the Photon Mono M5s is barely any larger than the likes of the Phrozen Sonic Mini 8K S or Photon Mono 2 – both machines we consider to be small 3D printers.

The M5s is ready to run right out of the box, running a short list of self-checks before letting you rattle off prints at its heightened print speeds, made possible by an alternate vat film material that releases prints easily, less viscous resin works better for fast printing, and, we’ll admit, some shenanigans with thick layer heights are needed to achieve the super duper speeds marketed by Anycubic. It’s important to note that you can print quickly with the Photon Mono M5s and “standard” resins, but it’s more that blistering print speeds are achieved with specific “fast” materials and with a compromise in Z-axis quality.

Other highlights include a 12K masking LCD, which translates to extremely small pixels for very fine print resolution. The M5s pairs seamlessly with Anycubic’s updated slicing software and companion app, giving you the ability to start prints remotely, check the printer’s state and stats, and access troubleshooting tips and user guides. It’s a surprisingly pleasant app experience that contrasts strongly against the likes of some other manufacturer’s ad-saturated equivalents.

The M5s is a quick and compact printer with a medium-format build volume – 218 x 123 x 200 mm – and layers of features that other printers lack or fail to satisfyingly pull off.

Alternatives

Dropping lower and lower in price, the Elegoo Saturn 3 is a mid-sized workhorse offering simplicity and build volume above all else. It doesn’t have the feature set of the Photon Mono M5s, but at ~$379 – a few hundred dollars less – is a fabulous tool for 3D printing.

If the M5s offers the best mix of modern features, and the Saturn 2 is cheap simplicity, then the UniFormation GKtwo is the comfort pick. Some may balk at its premium price tag (~$850), but it offers a quick-release resin vat – no awkward thumbscrews – a pressure-fit resin plate, a large, bright UI that’s responsive and easy to follow, plus a heated resin vat, letting you virtually guarantee print success with resin that’s always up to temp. A true upgrade.

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Anycubic Photon Mono M5s Commissions Earned
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Large
Best Large Resin 3D Printer

Large: Phrozen Sonic Mega 8K S

Image of Best Large Resin 3D Printer: Large: Phrozen Sonic Mega 8K S
The Phrozen Sonic Mega 8K S (Source: All3DP)

What’s Great

  • Optimized for quick printing
  • Factory calibrated
  • Thoughtful design touches

Resin 3D printing is messy. With huge print plates and resin vats that need two-handed operation, large-format resin 3D printing has the potential to be even messier. The Phrozen Sonic Mega 8K S mercifully goes a long way to make this mess manageable with a particularly user-friendly design and pre-calibrated build plate, giving a ready-to-run experience right out of the box.

Available for ~$1,580, it presents significant savings over its predecessor, the Phrozen Sonic Mega 8K, while making several quality-of-life improvements, including a flip-hinged lid that easily sweeps on top of the printer. There’s a conveniently placed hook to hang the print plate from, letting resin run back into the vat before you whisk the print away for cleaning.

The Sonic Mega 8K S build plate comes pre-calibrated, meaning once you’ve unboxed its near-30 kg mass and positioned it where you need it (bring a friend – it’s a team lift), you’re more or less ready to fill it with resin and begin printing, provided you’re all set with a slicer and your material profiles.

ACF film comes as standard with the Sonic Mega 8K S, which allows you to print fast at the expense of shortening the film and LCD’s lifespans. What fast means precisely in this context is in the transition speeds between layers, having the printer’s stages of movement happen quickly – the film releases the previously cured layer gently, preventing potentially destructive stress from the process from destroying the print.

After some weeks of printing with it, our chief criticism really comes down to one peculiar quirk that may be specific to the conditions in which we print: the big green plastic lid seems to hold a static charge that attracts drips of resin. This is likely supercharged when you remove the stretch wrap the lid is covered with for shipping. Phrozen recommends users wipe the lid down with IPA and a paper towel before use.

In all, it is an easy-to-handle large-format resin 3D printer that’s highly convenient for large jobs.

Alternatives

A feature-rich budget option is available to you in the form of the Anycubic Photon M3 Max. At ~$800, it has all the ingredients for a comfortable and convenient printing experience. An auto-resin refilling function keeps your VAT topped up for larger print jobs and is useful for full-volume prints. The build volume is a touch smaller than the Mega 8K S, mind, and across this smaller volume, you have marginally less resolution to play with in your prints. It’s still an excellent choice for less than half the money.

The Sonic Mega 8K S is a large machine, no doubt about it. But there are bigger resin 3D printers if you need to print huge, no matter the cost. The Peopoly Phenom XXL V2 is one such behemoth. It costs an eye-watering ~$8,000 but eclipses all others with its 527 × 296 x 550 mm build volume. The resolution on offer is 137 microns, but we doubt fine detail in small areas is your primary concern with a machine this large. A big upgrade with a big price tag.

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Phrozen Sonic Mega 8K S Commissions Earned
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Beginners
Best Beginner Resin 3D Printer

Beginners: Anycubic Photon Mono M5s

Image of Best Beginner Resin 3D Printer: Beginners: Anycubic Photon Mono M5s
The Anycubic Photon Mono M5s (Source: All3DP)

What’s Great

  • Capable of fast, high-res printing
  • Resin level & print failure smarts
  • Well-implemented Wi-Fi connectivity

Another showing in our list for the Anycubic Photon Mono M5s. There are a few ways we think a decent 3D printer for a beginner can go: as a kit that’s as much an education as it is a purchased product; as a rich, plug-and-play experience that gets on with the job better than the alternatives; or a popular super-duper budget option that’s reliable, if unexciting.

Currently, the Anycubic Photon Mono M5s is very much top of the plug-and-play pot, with its compact footprint offering a generous mid-size build volume, smooth, hiccup-free Wi-Fi connectivity that weaves across the provided slicer to a companion smartphone app that usefully expands the printer’s functionality, and offers convenient access to resources about the printer.

You don’t need to faff around leveling the print plate when it arrives –just plug it in, load some resin, and start printing. While you don’t get one of the varied forms of resin pumps and auto-feeders we’ve seen that are supposed to help keep you printing (but invariably cause more mess than they prevent), the M5s does feature a multi-purpose sensor in its print plate gantry, which pulls triple duty of Z-axis endstop, resin level sensor, and print failure detector. It’s not perfect – we didn’t see 100% success with the print failure detection – but even some failed prints caught (and subsequently paused by the printer) equal time and, potentially, resin saved. It makes for a pretty forgiving printer.

Not to mention fast – thanks to its special resin vat release film. While you could buy that separately and add it to any other printer, the M5s comes with it as standard and is optimized around it.

Alternatives

A mid-sized printer with oodles of design touches to make using it tidy, the UniFormation GKtwo commands a hefty price tag (~$850) compared to most on this list, but does the basic elements of using a resin 3D printer better. Its resin vat snaps into place without screws, and the print plate secures using a single lever friction lock. Not to mention, it has a hinged lid for single-handed opening, and, best of all, the resin vat can be heated, improving your chances of print success.

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Under $200
Best Resin 3D Printer Under $200

Under $200: Anycubic Photon Mono 2

Image of Best Resin 3D Printer Under $200: Under $200: Anycubic Photon Mono 2
The Anycubic Photon Mono 2 (Source: All3DP)

What’s Great

  • High-resolution prints
  • Deceptively large build volume
  • Easy to use

ultra-budget resin 3D printer from Anycubic is a no-frills workhorse that’s simple to operate and reliably returns high-quality prints for your efforts. Easily found for ~$170, the bang you get for your buck is terrifically high; with a 6-6-inch LCD crammed inside the printer’s teeny footprint, you get a deceptively large 165 x 89 x 143 mm build volume to work with.

Inside the Photon Mono 2 is a 4K mono LCD, which equates to a pixel size of 43 microns – plenty small enough to render stunningly crisp detail on any model you throw at it.

Interacting with the machine can be a bit fiddly, with the printer’s spartan exterior interrupted only by the 2.8-inch touchscreen front and center and a full-size USB port on the side. The printer is noticeably light, meaning any knocks and bumps resulting from interacting with it can tip the printer – not a desirable trait for a machine with a large, shallow pool of toxic resin inside.

Daintiness aside, we can’t begrudge it anything else. It’s a low-frills, high-resolution resin 3D printer. It’s compatible with third-party slicers (the slicer Anycubic provides isn’t half bad these days, too), and there are thoughtful extras in the box, like an LCD protection kit to help keep the fragile LCD mask safe from resin spills and scratches.

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Anycubic Photon Mono 2 Commissions Earned
Anycubic Photon Mono 2
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Under $300
Best Resin 3D Printer Under $300

Under $300: Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra

Image of Best Resin 3D Printer Under $300: Under $300: Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra
The Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra (Source: All3DP)

What’s Great

  • Bleeding-edge resolution
  • Useful Wi-Fi connectivity
  • Top all-round performance

Taking the Elegoo Mars design to its functional zenith, the Mars 4 Ultra is the budget printer to go for if you want high-resolution printing at speed.

Cramming more pixels into roughly the same build area shrinks the pixel size to 18 microns. If you value the bleeding edge of resolution possibilities in LCD-based 3D printing, then this is it. While this should translate to the crispest of detail and undetectable voxels (provided you print with a suitably fine layer height), some users report the ACF film used as an interface layer in the vat for higher print speeds muddies the detail, taking that resolution advantage over other systems off the table. At casual observation, we can’t tell the difference. Haven’t been able to for years. Your success in achieving pixel-perfect prints will come from suitable preparation, dialing in your print, and resin settings for your particular environment. Beyond that, you’re dancing with the professionals, chasing a diminishing return.

So, the Mars 4 Ultra brings the resolution and puts it to use inside a 153.36 x 77.76 x 165 mm build volume. Upgrades to the light engine focus on light uniformity across the build area. At the same time, distinct features include Wi-Fi connectivity and speedier printing using ACF film and the release of Elegoo’s Rapid Standard resin. Both are modern conveniences that we’re generally happy to see. The connection speed is decent, which is particularly helpful for slinging the large files you typically get with large, detailed resin 3D prints.

A perpetual license for TangoSlicer is included in the box, which we greatly appreciate. It’s a competent slicer with a wealth of control and automation tools for preparing your prints. If you’re familiar with the likes of Chitubo Basic or Lychee Slicer, the Mars 4 Ultra is compatible there, too. No need to learn the quirks of a new slicer. Phew.

Hot tip for Tango users on Windows with high DPI displays – disable the application-specific scaling in the program’s properties. It attempts to reframe the program to suit your lovely monitor or screen but bumps essential buttons off the edges. You can’t resize Tango’s popup dialogues, rendering the slicer more or less impossible to use. With it disabled, everything jumps back into view.

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Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra Commissions Earned
Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra
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Under $500
Best Resin 3D Printer Under $500

Under $500: Anycubic Photon Mono M5s

Image of Best Resin 3D Printer Under $500: Under $500: Anycubic Photon Mono M5s
The Anycubic Photon Mono M5s (Source: All3DP)

What’s Great

  • Capable of fast, high-res printing
  • Resin level & print failure smarts
  • Well-implemented Wi-Fi connectivity

The Anycubic Photon Mono M5s appears elsewhere on this list as our resin 3D printer under $500 and beginner’s picks. If that doesn’t say enough, then let’s recap. It is a mid-size build volume 3D printer, with an admittedly below average build height – 200 mm compared to the Saturn 3’s 250 mm – but nevertheless within our definition of being between 8-12 inches on the diagonal across the build volume.

You get a 12K masking LCD, giving it one of the finest resolutions available today, and, paired with a fast resin, the ability to print exceedingly fast. You can print a full-volume print at full clip in just a few hours.

The standout element of the M5s is its print plate sensor, which serves multiple purposes. For starters, it replaces the Z-axis endstop and gives ersatz plate leveling (you don’t need to do it, ever). Then there’s resin level measurement, to the degree that the printer will tell you if it doesn’t think you have enough in the tank for your print. Finally, peel separation detection alerts you to the absence of the expected snapback jolt of the print separating from the resin vat release film. Without this, it’s safe to assume the print has failed, and the printer will pause for you to confirm and then cancel the print.

We’ll admit the system wasn’t 100% perfect in our time testing, but for the hit rate it does offer, it’s a welcome development on the desktop resin 3D printer.

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Anycubic Photon Mono M5s Commissions Earned
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Under $1,000
Best Resin 3D Printer Under $1,000

Under $1,000: UniFormation GKtwo

Image of Best Resin 3D Printer Under $1,000: Under $1,000: UniFormation GKtwo
The UniFormation GKtwo resin 3D printer (Source: All3DP)

What’s Great

  • Smart design – tidy operation
  • Heated vat improves success rate
  • Hinged lid for easy access

Little-known company UniFormation makes possibly the most user-friendly desktop resin 3D printer going. From the print plate’s friction lock that you can operate with one hand to the resin vat sliding securely into place as opposed to fiddly thumbscrews found on every other budget resin 3D printer – the experience of using the Uniformation GKtwo is frictionless. It shouldn’t be understated how valuable this is given photopolymer resin’s utter nastiness and that you should minimize your contact with it.

The GKtwo’s feature set is led by the knock-out punch of an actively heated resin vat. Programmable to heat to one of three toasty temperatures, this feature alone virtually guarantees print success, provided you did an adequate job leveling the print plate. Too cold a temperature contributes hugely to print failure, so such a system that helps you to save money and time is wild to see at this price point.

Following this, a suite of features is available here that most printers lack (certainly not all in one machine), including a hinged lid, which is tidier than the bucket lids prolific in budget resin 3D printing. You also get a large, responsive touchscreen UI that feels nicer than most. You’ve got quick USB access from the printer’s front-facing port, too, plus the power button is front and center for easy power cycling.

Further ergonomic innovations include a print plate that lets resin run off effectively. There’s also a chunky air filter embedded in the case of the machine to help deodorize the air inside the print chamber. We wouldn’t rely on this alone for safety – always print in a ventilated space.

Underpinning print performance is a 10.3-inch 8K LCD, giving resolution not entirely up to par with the Photon Mono M5s or Mars 4 Ultra. A 12K LCD upgrade kit is coming soon for the GKtwo, which will close this gap.

For how great the GKtwo is, there are a couple of quick gripes to mention. For one, the print plate is too heavy, making wielding it a little tricky. (That said, an ultrasonic cleaning station is available that accepts the plate perfectly and makes cleanup ultra-efficient – sold separately.) Secondly, you can’t alter print parameters after a print has started – a feature we see increasingly that lets you fine-tune a print without repeatedly slicing your model.

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UniFormation GKtwo Commissions Earned
UniFormation GKtwo
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What's Changed?

Here’s everything that’s changed over the last 12 months:

Update – February 19, 2024: We’ve gone hands-on with the Phrozen Sonic Mega 8K S, and it’s rather good. It replaces our previous large-format resin recommendation, the Sonic Mega 8K. Also, the Elegoo Mars 3 is out of stock everywhere and seemingly discontinued. We’ve replaced it with the Anycubic Photon Mono 2, a similar, low-cost, high-resolution 3D printer.

Update – November 09, 2023: Price changes see a few budget bracket changes in effect, plus the discontinuation of the Creality Halot One Plus left us with a small resin 3D printer-shaped hole in our recommendations. Suitably, we think the Elegoo Mars 4 Ultra is just the solution.

Update – September 13, 2023: Minor update to correct prices, and note that the Creality Halot One Plus is phasing out – it’s cheaper than ever, but stocks will dwindle from here on out. We’ll return with a fresh recommendation in its place soon.

Update — August 02, 2023: It’s easier to say what hasn’t changed with this update – the Phrozen Sonic Mega 8K remains as our large-format pick. New picks everywhere else. Noteworthy changes include a focus on clarifying what exactly we mean by mid- and large format (referencing LCD size across its diagonal) and the introduction of a new “small” category, covering what most would consider to be the “standard” or “normal” size of resin 3D printer. The “Best Resin 3D Printer” category is gone, consigned to the dustbin for being too ambiguous. All our other recommendations should, together, help you narrow down which printers should be of interest to you.

Update — May 03, 2023: A minor update to prices. No big changes.

Update — April 07, 2023: We’ve updated prices and made minor adjustments for flow. It’s worth noting that the prices of a handful of our top picks have tumbled, making them the best value we’ve seen yet. If you’re on the fence about a purchase (and don’t fancy waiting to see what the next few months of printer releases bring) – now is the time.

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How to Pick the Best Resin 3D Printer

High on your list of criteria when choosing a resin 3D printer should be ease of use — the features that make printing cleaner and more convenient. Does the printer’s resin vat have pegs to raise it above a dirty benchtop? How easy is it to remove the print plate? How is the resin vat fixed in place? All are questions you should ask yourself because these are the things that make working with the printer a better experience.

Beyond this, when shopping for an LCD-based resin 3D printer, the size of the LCD screen and its pixel count and, consequently, the printer’s resolution will be decisive factors in helping you pick one machine over another. Don’t be fooled by manufacturers using high-resolution standards (such as 4K, 8K) to indicate higher resolution prints; it’s the size of the LCD that masks the UV light inside in combination with the pixel count that dictates resolution.

While small and large resin 3D printers look and function alike, printing large presents its own set of challenges. In general, the larger the print, the more physical force it is exposed to during the printing process, which requires extra care when preparing the print to sufficiently support the model. Not to mention the additional weight of components, the print itself, the larger reserve of resin in your vat, and the potential for larger messes to clean up should the print fail or you have an accident in the cleanup. Bigger isn’t always better.

Material costs of running a resin 3D printer extend beyond just the printable materials. In addition to the transparent release film lining the resin vat, LCD-based resin 3D printers also contain consumable hardware in the form of the masking LCD. A monochrome LCD’s (commonplace in 2023) finite lifespan will take you to around 2000 hours of printing before degradation kicks in and starts to impact the quality of your prints.

Finally, pay particular attention to your software options with a resin 3D printer. Some inexpensive printers (not many, mind) lock you into proprietary software lacking features and support. Open compatibility with the top current and free software such as Lychee and ChiTuBox Basic can give you flexibility in your printing.

Professionals and businesses may find more use in our guide to the best industrial and professional resin 3D printers, which details the characteristics and considerations of resin 3D printing in commercial and design applications.

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How We Test

If there’s one thing that testing a lot of 3D printers has taught us, it’s that maintaining a broad benchmarking scheme for 3D printers is impractical for getting a sense of what a 3D printer is like to use and live with. Holding a sub-$200 self-assembled printer for hobbyists to the standard of a $6,000 production machine designed to handle engineering-grade materials won’t tell you that the former is a breeze to set up and the latter a tangled web of firmware updates, buggy systems, and unreliable performance.

We want our reviews and buyer’s guides to cut straight to the chase. What is it like to use a printer? What are the defining features like? What didn’t we like? And, more importantly, is it worth the money? We don’t want to get bogged down benchmarking numbers out of context or hung up on issues affected by more variables than we can control.

Who Are We Testing For?

Our buyer’s guides and reviews take the intended end user of a 3D printer into consideration. We imagine what they’re likely to do with it and focus the testing on challenging this. If we have a large-volume printer, for example, we’ll be printing – surprise, surprise – large prints, making use of the entire bed, and checking the performance at the limits of Z-height.

Other points of consideration for what makes the best 3D printer include ease of use, supporting software, and repair options. If something goes wrong, how easy is it to fix the machine? Does the documentation or customer service provide adequate information?

We strive to answer all these questions and more in our quest to find the best 3D printer for you.

Why Should You Trust Us?

Trust is important to All3DP, so our product testing policy is strict. When sourcing test units from a manufacturer, we do so under a zero guarantees policy. We make no guarantee of coverage in exchange for the printer, and the first time a manufacturer sees what we think is when we publish the content.

If a manufacturer doesn’t reclaim the unit after testing is complete, it is donated to a local cause or goes into deep storage for responsible disposal later. We occasionally buy machines for testing, too. In such cases, machines purchased by All3DP either remain in the office for team usage or are donated or disposed of in the manner described above.

Manufacturers or benefactors donating units for review do not influence the outcome or content of the reviews we produce. To the best of our ability, we will investigate abnormal issues with the manufacturer to glean better context or get insight into their awareness of the problem. But we make no excuses for poor design or bad QA.

How We Monetize Our Content

One method we monetize our content at no additional cost to the reader is through affiliate product links. If you click on a shopping link featured in our buyer’s guides and reviews, we may receive a small commission from the store if you make a purchase. This is at no additional cost to you. For more meaty content policy details, we cover it all in the advertising and commercial activities section of our terms of use.

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Which 3D Printer is Best for Me?

For most readers, our top recommended 3D printers are your best bet in a given category.

But, facing the fact that there is no one-size-fits-all solution to home 3D printing, we’re here to help. Here are some pointers to orient you in this terminologically dense but wonderful world. (A word on terminology, we have a handy glossary of terms to know at to bottom of this article.)

Beginner’s printers

Many 3D printers pitched for “beginners” or children go to such lengths to baby the user that they quickly become claustrophobic experiences. You will encounter more limitations than possibilities as your experience grows. If you aren’t satisfied with a “beginner” 3D printer’s features, we’d recommend a budget pick instead. You’ll save a little money, and the opportunity to learn by doing is far greater. And if something goes wrong, there are giant tribes online for each printer that have already asked and answered every question under the sun.

Follow the crowd

While the general quality of budget 3D printers has dramatically improved in recent years, quality control is often lacking. While manufacturers with large user bases are adapting to meet the demands of their newfound fans, including better customer support, there are usually better wells of knowledge to be found in the owners themselves, who contribute to the vast forum knowledge bases for some 3D printers.

Reviews matter

We have zero obligation to manufacturers to sugarcoat what we find, and the first time they read it is when you do, too. That’s why you can trust our reviews. We don’t pander to anyone, and our experience with the printer is what you read on the page.

If you can’t find any information about a printer you’d like to know more about, let us know at editors@all3dp.com.

Understand the costs

A 3D printer for the home is rarely ever a one-and-done investment. Besides the continual purchase of materials, maintenance costs on perishable printer parts can stack up – think nozzles on an FDM printer or FEP film on an LCD-based resin 3D printer machine. Of course, parts can wear down or break, too, meaning sourcing replacement parts is a sensible consideration if you plan to print long-term. Printers with roots in the RepRap movement and open-source designs will be easiest to source parts for, with off-the-shelf components part and parcel of the design ethos behind them. Enclosed-design printers aimed at beginners may offer the gentlest introduction to printing, but your options to source spare parts will often be limited to the manufacturer. That’s if you can even get to and diagnose the problem.

Know why you want to 3D print

The thrill of a new hobby will only sustain you so far. Being the desktopification of an otherwise complicated manufacturing process, expect to encounter, sooner or later, problems with a home 3D printer – even the occasional show-stopping issue. Having an end goal in mind for your printing gives you purpose and a reason to learn the solutions to the problems. Printing simply because it looks cool will result in a small mountain of useless doodads and, eventually, disinterest at the hands of cost, frustration, and the buildup of useless plastic trash.

When you do know, pick a printer that will make it easier

Most home 3D printers are single extrusion fused deposition modeling machines, meaning a single printable material extruded through a single nozzle. Versatile enough for many applications through material compatibility, they’re safe machines to start with. But if you know you need to print objects with challenging geometries or semi-enclosed volumes, a dual extrusion printer would make your printing far easier. Likewise, single objects that need to have different material properties will only be achievable with dual extrusion. A resin printer will be the way to go for high-detail miniatures. Understand the technologies to find a printer that best suits your needs.

Pick a printer appropriate for your space

While the size of FDM 3D printers can vary greatly, the spillover is small. You’ll get some emissions from the filament melting, cloying the air, making it inadvisable to spend prolonged periods nearby. Generally speaking, the cleanup is minor and relatively easy to contain, depending on the models you print.

Resin 3D printing, however, is dramatically different and has unique demands that should make you think twice before investing. To varying degrees, the resin is smelly and toxic to you and the environment. It requires dedicated cleanup stations and personal protective equipment. You typically need 95 %+ isopropanol to clean prints and dissolve uncured resin from surfaces.

All printers should be operated in well-ventilated spaces, but this applies doubly to resin 3D printers.

Kickstarter – It’s complicated

While many excellent 3D printers have gotten their big break on Kickstarter, there’s the unavoidable issue that the platform is not a store. You are not buying a printer when you commit money to a campaign on Kickstarter; you are backing a vision. It’s putting money into the pot to help a company or person trying to achieve something.

You get nothing in return if a project is grossly mishandled and the money disappears. Often what you do get is the beta version of the product. You are paying for early access and all the wrinkles across all stages of the product that come with it.

We’re seeing more big-name companies turning to Kickstarter than ever to launch their products – it’s a safe way for them to gauge demand and drum up some interest against the pressure of a ticking countdown. Despite many companies being capable of outright launching products, they go cap-in-hand to enthusiasts with the promise of shiny new tech. Don’t be that user unless you absolutely must be the first to use a product and have money you can afford to lose.

We don’t think it’s worth the risk, but in the interest of cool new tech, report on new campaigns with our news coverage. You will never see a Kickstarter 3D printer in our buyer’s guides unless it has completed its campaign and the printer is widely available at retail, with all the protections that come with buying from a store.

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Best Professional 3D Printers

But where’s the UltiMaker? Or Formlabs? What about Raise3D? Desktop Metal?

In the past, we’d list the best professional 3D printers alongside what we consider consumer or hobby-oriented machines (the printers we mainly focus on). An apples and oranges comparison, we know.

With this in mind, we created All3DP Pro, a wing of our content exclusively covering the professional applications of 3D printing and additive manufacturing solutions. Here’s a selection of articles covering the best 3D printers for professional use to get you started.

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Glossary of Terms

Choosing the best 3D printer is tricky, not least because the terminology surrounding 3D printing is dense. Here are some need-to-know terms, their explanations, and useful links to help you on your way to 3D printing mastery.

FDM: Fused deposition modeling, otherwise known as FDM, is a 3D printing process that extrudes heated thermoplastic material through a moving nozzle to build an object layer by layer. FDM is a trademarked term, which led to the RepRap open-source movement to coin the alternative phrase “fused filament fabrication” (FFF), but the two are interchangeable.

Filament: Filament is the base material used to 3D print objects via FDM. The filament is typically a solid thermoplastic fed to a print head, heated to its melting point, and extruded through a small nozzle. Filament is commonly available in spools of either 1.75 mm, 2.85 mm, or 3 mm diameter widths – dimensions that dictate the printers that can use them.

G-Code: G-code is the machine language used to instruct computerized tools such as 3D printers. Giving coordinates and instructions for tool heads and other non-movement functions, it is almost exclusively generated by slicing software. It comprises a library of commands to control specific actions like motion, speed, rotation, depth, and other related switches and sensors used in a machine’s operation. You can get to grips with G-code in no time with our guide to G-code commands.

Heated bed: This is a build plate that is heated so that the few layers of extruded plastic are prevented from cooling too quickly and then warping. A heated bed is essential for working with ABS or PETG materials but not so much with PLA.

Hot end: This is the cluster of components that heat and melt the plastic for deposition through the nozzle.

Extruder: Used by some to describe the entire system of parts that pushes and melts filament, extruder can also refer specifically to the motor and accompanying gears that grip the filament, feeding it to the hot end. How the extruder is arranged can affect the printer and its capabilities. There are two common arrangements: Bowden and direct. It’s a messy subject with overlapping terms and technical explanations; our guide to 3D printer extruders gives you all the knowledge to make sense of it.

Bowden: A style of extruder that sees the extruder motor positioned away from the hot end – typically the structural frame of the printer or on one end of the X-axis gantry. So-called for the Bowden cable and its action of allowing a wire to move freely within tightly constraining tubing, the Bowden extruder feeds filament through a PTFE tube directly into the hot end.

Direct Extruder: The other commonly seen extruder type, a direct extruder sees the extruder motor and associated feeding mechanism mounted directly to the hot end, with barely any distance between the feed and the melt zone of the hot end.

Dual Extrusion: Some 3D printers carry two extruders/hot ends, allowing them to incorporate multiple colors or materials into the same print job. While the obvious appeal comes from the possibility for decorative two-tone prints, the real benefit of dual extrusion systems is combining different materials, such as dissolvable support material, to enable the printing of otherwise impossible geometries. It’s a deep topic worth exploring more in our guide to all you need to know about dual extrusion.

PLA: Polylactic Acid, otherwise known as PLA, is a thermoplastic commonly used as a material for printing with FDM 3D printers. It’s easy to work with and is available in many colors and finishes. PLA is somewhat brittle – don’t expect to print strong items with it – but it remains popular for decorative printing thanks to its low cost. You can learn more about PLA in our guide dedicated to the topic.

SLA: Stereolithography is a 3D printing technology that falls under the broader process of vat photopolymerization. The term is often (incorrectly) used to describe all methods of vat polymerization – really, it’s a particular technology that uses a directed laser beam to trace layers into a vat of liquid photopolymer resin. Alongside SLA, other technologies are considered vat polymerization.

Resin: The material used in desktop SLA, DLP, and LCD (MSLA) 3D printers. A blend of chemicals that includes a photoinitiator, resin solidifies under ultraviolet light. Highly toxic and difficult to clean up after a spill, care, attention, and personal protective equipment are musts when working with resin. It is an unpleasant material, and wastage must be disposed of in accordance with local laws. Despite all the warnings, it’s the only way to go for intricate detail.

LCD 3D Printer: A common term for resin 3D printers that use an LCD as a layer mask over UV light. The de facto standard in inexpensive resin 3D printers, the technology is cheap and widely used. The LCD panels are consumable, though, with monochrome LCDs typically having lifespans in the low 1,000s of hours.

MSLA: Mask stereolithography (MSLA) is a term coined by Structo but popularized by Prusa Research. It refers to, basically, the LCD 3D printer as described above.

Micron: One-thousandth of a millimeter. This unit of measurement is commonly used in 3D printing as a value to indicate accuracy, resolution, or surface finish.

Slicer: 3D printing works by building an object layer by layer. A slicer is a program that divides a 3D model into flat layers and generates the machine code for the printer to trace out said layers. The output of a slicer for FDM 3D printers is typically G-code, which gives instructions and coordinates for the printer to execute. Our deep dive explaining what exactly a slicer is gives good foundational knowledge. Many popular slicers are free and open source. Others are proprietary and machine-specific. It’s an essential tool for successful 3D printing.

STL: STL is the most popular file format for 3D printing. Developed by 3D Systems in the ’80s, the STL file type only contains the surface geometry of a 3D object. Despite industry efforts to move onto more efficient and data-rich formats such as 3mf, STL endures and is the most commonly found 3D model file type on popular 3D model file repositories. We explain in more detail in our guide to what exactly STL is.

Open Source: The term given to a product, typically software, but also applicable to hardware that is freely open for others to modify and redistribute according to their needs. In 3D printing, this is often in the spirit that individuals are free to modify, improve, and share changes to the source material for others to test, iterate, and reciprocate. Open source licenses govern the fair and correct usage of open source works, giving terms and conditions that ensure the freedom of access to the creation and any derivatives.

RepRap: A project started in 2005 by Dr. Adrian Bowyer, a mechanical engineering lecturer at the University of Bath. Created to develop a replicating rapid prototype, a low-cost machine capable of printing replacement parts for itself or other new machines. The vast majority of desktop 3D printers stem from the work laid down by the RepRap project. We have a fascinating alternative RepRap Wiki page on the topic if you want to dig deeper.

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License: The text of "The Best Resin 3D Printers in 2024 – Buyer’s Guide" by All3DP is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

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