Your membership has expired

The payment for your account couldn't be processed or you've canceled your account with us.

Re-activate

    Best Epson Tank Printers of 2024

    Tank printers can save you tons of money on ink. These models perform well in our labs, too.

    When you shop through retailer links on our site, we may earn affiliate commissions. 100% of the fees we collect are used to support our nonprofit mission. Learn more.

    Epson printers: EcoTank ET-15000, EcoTank ET-3843, EcoTank ET-2400
    Tank printers like these Epson EcoTank models can save you serious money on ink.
    Photos: Consumer Reports, Getty Images

    Let’s get this out of the way: At Consumer Reports, we are finding it hard to recommend many inkjet printers. Yes, they’re often really cheap. But many of them don’t print text very well, they aren’t particularly reliable, and most of them use expensive ink cartridges that can cost up to $100 a year, or even more. CR’s surveys show that owner satisfaction with inkjet printers is generally low.

    Happily, there’s a loophole. if you do need an inkjet printer—say, you frequently print in color and often have jobs that include graphics—a tank-style inkjet printer can save you money. Instead of expensive ink cartridges, tank models have reservoirs that can be refilled easily and very inexpensively with bottles of ink, often for under $10 a year.

    Those differences in ink prices add up. For example, the Canon Pixma TR4720 cartridge inkjet printer currently costs $80. But according to the formula we use for estimating annual ink costs, the printer would go through $189 worth of ink in a year, which puts its five-year cost of ownership at a whopping $1,025. By comparison, the Epson Eco Tank 2400, $180, uses an estimated $5 worth of ink a year. Which means its five-year cost of ownership is only $205.

    In this article Arrow link
    More on Printers

    The performance of tank printers has improved in recent years. The early tank printers we tested fell short of cartridge-fed inkjets when it came to producing sharp text and images, but that’s no longer true. Today’s tanks are also much easier to refill than their predecessors.

    “Replacing the ink on the first few generations of tank models was a messy affair, because the filler nozzles were just simple openings,” says Rich Sulin, who leads CR’s printer testing program. “Better design that locks the bottle in place during refills has solved the problem.”

    Our printer ratings include dozens of tank models from three brands: Canon, EcoTank, Epson, HP, and MegaTank. Currently, only a handful of tank printers, all made by Epson, earn CR recommendations. Some of these are listed below. Like a majority of the printers in CR’s printer ratings, available to members, these models include WiFi networking for wireless printing.

    Become a member to read the full article and get access to digital ratings.

    We investigate, research, and test so you can choose with confidence.