Best 3D printers for beginners
Updated 21 May 2026 · Live prices on every page load from Amazon.fr
Cheap enough that a first-year hobbyist can afford it, with auto-levelling so you are not squaring the bed with a scrap of paper in week one. Nothing here assumes you want to tinker.
No verified printers match this use case on Amazon.fr right now.
No listings match your current marketplace selection - tick more sources above.
Matt's take
A first printer isn't a forever printer, and that's fine. The fastest way to decide whether you'll stick with the hobby is a machine that works out of the box with PLA and PETG - you don't need a heated chamber, carbon-fibre hot end, multi-material unit, or 32 mm³/s flow on day one. Don't let a YouTube comparison to the best Bambu talk you out of a sensible £250 entry. What actually matters on a first printer: auto-levelling that works, a bed that heats in under 5 minutes, a filament sensor that catches runouts, and a community big enough that every failure mode has a thread. Speed, build volume, hot-end temperature - upgrade those when you hit their ceiling, not before.
Frequently asked
How much should I spend on my first 3D printer? +
Between £200 and £350 is the honest sweet spot in 2026. Below £200 the quality falls off a cliff; above £350 you are paying for capabilities (heated chamber, CoreXY, multi-material) that a beginner will not use in the first six months.
Resin or filament for a first printer? +
Filament (FDM) unless you specifically want tabletop miniatures and have a well-ventilated space. Resin workflow involves nitrile gloves, IPA washing, a UV cure station and responsible disposal - it is not the casual hobby FDM is.
Is auto-levelling really necessary? +
Yes. Manual bed levelling is the single biggest cause of first-week frustration and abandoned printers. Every printer on this list has automatic mesh levelling. Load-cell or LiDAR is a nice upgrade but bog-standard BLTouch-style probes are fine too.
What can my first printer actually print? +
PLA for almost anything visual, PETG for anything that needs to survive a car interior or outdoor use, and TPU for flexible parts if the extruder is direct-drive. ABS, ASA and nylon all want a heated chamber - save those for printer number two.
Related reading
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.