2026 picks
High-end 3D printers
Above €1,000 you're no longer paying to print PLA better: you pay for reliability to chain prints unattended, heated chambers for engineering materials (nylon, PC, carbon fiber) and production-oriented ecosystems. For hobby use, look at mid-range first — the part-quality gap is much smaller than the price gap.
9 models · data verified against official spec sheets (sources on each page) · updated with every catalog change
Prusa Research
MK4S
250×210×220 mm
€1,099 Details →
Bambu Lab
H2S
340×320×340 mm
€1,149 Details →
Bambu Lab
X1 Carbon
256³ mm
€1,199 Details →
Prusa Research
CORE One
250×220×270 mm
€1,349 Details →
Creality
K2 Plus
350³ mm
€1,499 Details →
P
Phrozen
Phrozen
Sonic Mega 8K
330×185×400 mm
€1,579 Details →
Bambu Lab
H2D
350×320×325 mm
€1,899 Details →
Prusa Research
XL
360³ mm
€1,999 Details →
Bambu Lab
X1E
256³ mm
€2,499 Details →
FAQ
- What do you get for over €1,000?
- Mainly reliability and materials: actively heated chambers, high-flow hotends, better calibration systems and support. For hobby PLA/PETG, the improvement is marginal versus a good mid-range machine.
- Which is best for engineering materials (nylon, PC, carbon fiber)?
- Look for an ACTIVELY heated chamber (not just enclosed), a 300°C+ hotend and a hardened steel nozzle. Check those specs on each printer's page from this list.