Best 3D printers for beginners

Updated 21 May 2026 · Live prices on every page load from United Kingdom marketplaces

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.

  1. #1
    ANYCUBIC Kobra 3 Max
    ANYCUBIC
    Kobra 3 Max
    £449 Bedslinger · 88.2 L · 300°C · LeviQ 3.0
  2. #2
    Creality PLA Filament
    Creality
    PLA Filament
    £170 CoreXY · 42.9 L · 350°C · Strain gauge
  3. #3
    Sovol SH03 Filament Dryer 4-Spool
    Sovol
    SH03 Filament Dryer 4-Spool
    £100 Cartesian · 42.9 L · 260°C · Touch Probe
  4. #4
    Creality CFS-C
    Creality
    CFS-C
    £289 CoreXY · 27.0 L · 300°C · AI LiDAR
  5. #5
    QIDI TECH QIDI Box
    QIDI TECH
    QIDI Box
    £199 CoreXY · 18.9 L · 370°C · Loadcell Sensor Integrated int
  6. #6
    Creality CFS Multi Color Automatically Filament Sys
    Creality
    CFS Multi Color Automatically Filament Sys
    £260 Cartesian · 42.9 L · 350°C · Automatic leveling
  7. #7
    ELEGOO Neptune 4 Plus
    ELEGOO
    Neptune 4 Plus
    £210 Cartesian · 39.4 L · 300°C · Inductive
  8. #8
    ELEGOO Centauri Carbon
    ELEGOO
    Centauri Carbon
    £255 CoreXY · 16.8 L · 320°C · Auto-leveling
  9. #9
    FLASHFORGE Adventurer 5M
    FLASHFORGE
    Adventurer 5M
    £199 CoreXY · 10.6 L · 280°C · Automatic
  10. #10
    Creality K2 SE
    Creality
    K2 SE
    £220 CoreXY · 11.6 L · 300°C · Smart leveling

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.

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.