Best 3D printers under £300

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

Ranked off live United Kingdom marketplaces prices and the hardware spec sheet. I reward CoreXY motion, active-heated chambers, modern auto-levelling, genuinely-fast volumetric flow, and real build volume. Higher is better. Cheaper breaks ties. FDM only on this list - resin workflows are a different conversation.

  1. #1
    Creality CFS-C
    Creality
    CFS-C
    £289 CoreXY · 27.0 L · AI LiDAR levelling
  2. #2
    ELEGOO Centauri Carbon
    ELEGOO
    Centauri Carbon
    £255 CoreXY · Closed · 16.8 L · Auto-leveling levelling
  3. #3
    Creality PLA Filament
    Creality
    PLA Filament
    £170 CoreXY · Closed · 42.9 L · Strain gauge levelling
  4. #4
    FLASHFORGE Adventurer 5M
    FLASHFORGE
    Adventurer 5M
    £199 CoreXY · Closed · 10.6 L · Automatic levelling
  5. #5
    QIDI TECH QIDI Box
    QIDI TECH
    QIDI Box
    £199 CoreXY · Closed · 18.9 L · Loadcell Sensor Integrated int levelling
  6. #6
    Creality CR PETG Filament 1.75mm
    Creality
    CR PETG Filament 1.75mm
    £84 CoreXY · open · 17.6 L · Advanced/Auto levelling
  7. #7
    Creality K2 SE
    Creality
    K2 SE
    £220 CoreXY · open · 11.6 L · Smart leveling levelling
  8. #8
    Creality Creality K1 High Speed
    Creality
    Creality K1 High Speed
    £279 CoreXY · Closed · 12.1 L · Self Check | Auto Leveling levelling
  9. #9
    Voxelab FLASHFORGE AD5X Multi-Color
    Voxelab
    FLASHFORGE AD5X Multi-Color
    £299 CoreXY · open · 10.6 L · Strain sensor levelling
  10. #10
    FLASHFORGE AD5X Multi-Material 4-Color Printing
    FLASHFORGE
    AD5X Multi-Material 4-Color Printing
    £299 CoreXY · open · 10.6 L · Strain gauge levelling

Matt's take on this budget

£300 is the sweet spot for a first printer right now. You get modern auto-levelling, a motion system that was premium-tier two years ago, and a community big enough that every problem has a thread. The honest limit: no real enclosure, no 300 °C hot end, no AMS-class multi-material. Fine for PLA, PETG, and TPU on the simpler end - which covers 90 % of what hobbyists actually print.

Frequently asked

What is the best 3D printer under £300? +

The shortlist above is live from Amazon and re-ranked on every page load. The top two shift as prices and stock change, but expect to see current-gen Bambu, Creality and Elegoo budget machines trading places.

Is £300 enough for a good first printer? +

Yes, this is the honest sweet spot. You get modern auto-levelling, a usable print speed, and a filament sensor on most models. The main thing you do not get at £300 is engineering-material support.

Can I print fast at £300? +

Depends what "fast" means. Most machines here advertise 500 mm/s but the realistic volumetric flow limit is 10-15 mm³/s. That is plenty fast for PLA benchies, but you will not be beating a Bambu P1S on a real part.

Bambu A1 Mini or Creality Ender at this budget? +

A1 Mini for anyone who wants it to just work. Ender if you want the cheapest path in and do not mind tuning. Both print well; the split is about ecosystem and your tolerance for fiddling.

Other budgets

Ranking is driven by the hardware spec sheet plus live price. It doesn't capture firmware quality, customer support or long-term reliability - so treat this as a starting shortlist, not a final answer. Every listed printer has its own page with the full spec table, a head-to-head picker, and candid pros/cons.