Best 3D printers under $250

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

Ranked off live United States 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
    FLASHFORGE Adventurer 5M High Speed Max 600mm/s
    FLASHFORGE
    Adventurer 5M High Speed Max 600mm/s
    $209 CoreXY · Closed · 10.6 L · Automatic levelling
  2. #2
    Voxelab FLASHFORGE Adventurer 5M
    Voxelab
    FLASHFORGE Adventurer 5M
    $239 CoreXY · open · 10.6 L · Auto-leveling levelling
  3. #3
    FLASHFORGE Adventurer 5M
    FLASHFORGE
    Adventurer 5M
    $209 CoreXY · open · 0.0 L · Automatic levelling
  4. #4
    Sovol T300 Max Speed up to 600mm/s
    Sovol
    T300 Max Speed up to 600mm/s
    $199 Cartesian · open · 31.5 L · Inductive sensor levelling
  5. #5
    BAMBULAB Bambu Lab A1 mini + LED Lamp
    BAMBULAB
    Bambu Lab A1 mini + LED Lamp
    $234 Bedslinger · open · 16.8 L · Automatic Calibration System levelling
  6. #6
    Entina TINA2S 3D Printers
    Entina
    TINA2S 3D Printers
    $200
  7. #7
    ELEGOO Neptune 3 Pro
    ELEGOO
    Neptune 3 Pro
    $210 Bedslinger · open · 14.2 L · Auto mesh bed leveling (36 poi levelling
  8. #8
    Creality Sonic Pad Klipper
    Creality
    Sonic Pad Klipper
    $116 Cartesian · open · 12.1 L · CRTouch levelling
  9. #9
    Creality Ender 3
    Creality
    Ender 3
    $180 Bedslinger · open · 12.1 L
  10. #10
    Entina Tina2 Plus Smart 3D Printers
    Entina
    Tina2 Plus Smart 3D Printers
    $218 Bedslinger · open · 12.1 L

Matt's take on this budget

Under $250 is where the hobby actually starts, not where it stops - the market has moved enough in five years that a $250 machine today prints better out of the box than a $650 one in 2020. The compromises at this price are real: older motion systems, thinner frames, manual or basic auto-levelling, PLA and PETG only. If you're testing whether you'll stick with 3D printing, this is the right place to start. If you already know you want to print functional parts in engineering materials, save up.

Frequently asked

Is a 3D printer under $250 actually worth buying? +

For learning the hobby, yes. Modern sub-$250 machines come with auto-levelling and PEI-coated beds - a noticeably better starting experience than a $650 Ender 3 in 2020. Just accept the ceiling: PLA and PETG only, small build volumes, and limited customer support.

What materials can I print at this budget? +

PLA reliably, PETG with some tuning, TPU only if the extruder is direct-drive. ABS, ASA and nylon need an enclosure and 280 °C+ hot end - not happening at $250.

Is auto-levelling included under $250 now? +

On most current models, yes - usually a BLTouch-style probe or a strain-gauge version. Manual-level-only printers at this price are a red flag in 2026; skip them.

Other budgets
Or looking at resin? See: Best resin 3D printers under $250 →

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.