Best 3D printers with remote monitoring

Updated 22 May 2026 · Live prices on every page load from Germany marketplaces

Wi-Fi plus an integrated camera so you can watch the print from the sofa, from the office, or from bed at 2 AM when you hear the part-cooling fan change pitch.

No verified printers match this use case on Germany marketplaces right now.

Matt's take

Remote monitoring sounds like a gimmick until a print fails at hour eight and you were out. A camera plus pause-on-spaghetti detection turns a ruined weekend into a re-sliced Monday. Two caveats: most first-party cameras are 720p and lag by 2-4 seconds, which is fine for status checks and bad for artistic recording; and cloud features on Bambu, Creality and Anycubic require you to own an account with them - consider what that means for your data. Local-only Octoprint-flavoured options exist but take more setup.

Frequently asked

Do I really need a camera on my 3D printer? +

For the first month, no. After your first failed print that you did not catch until hour eight of twelve, yes. A camera plus "stop if the AI spots a failure" turns most spaghetti into a wasted hour, not a wasted weekend.

How good is Bambu Lab's AI failure detection? +

It catches the obvious failures (classic bed detachment spaghetti) reliably. It misses subtle ones like one wall of a thin-walled print delaminating. Worth having; not a replacement for checking in periodically.

Can I self-host printer monitoring without the cloud? +

Yes - Klipper + Mainsail or Octoprint on a Raspberry Pi with a USB webcam is the standard DIY route. About £80 of hardware plus an afternoon of setup. Gives you full control and no vendor account.

Other shortlists

Ranking is spec-driven. It favours printers that objectively have the capabilities this shortlist targets. Firmware, support quality and long-term reliability aren't on the spec sheet - read the full printer page and owner reports before committing.