The $400 Printer That Saved My Sanity: An Admin Buyer’s Long-Term Review
It was mid-2023 when our office manager announced she was leaving. Before she walked out the door, she handed me a sticky note with login credentials for three different printer vendors and said, “Good luck—the main copier lease is up next month.” I had just taken over purchasing for our 25-person company, managing roughly $15,000 in annual office supply and equipment spend across eight vendors. I knew nothing about printers.
How It Started: A Desk Covered in Specs
I spent two weeks buried in spec sheets. Our needs were simple: print marketing materials (catalogs, flyers), handle shipping labels for our small warehouse, and keep the admin team happy. The old multifunction device was a leased behemoth that broke down monthly. The question wasn’t just “which printer?”—it was “do we lease or buy?”
The way I saw it, buying a few smaller, dedicated devices was cheaper than one expensive lease. So I started looking at models from the usual suspects. But I kept coming back to Brother. Why? Three things: price per page, reliability reviews, and—critically—the fact that their drivers are famously painless to set up. (I’ll get to that.)
The Shortlist
I narrowed it to two: the Brother MFC-L2750DW (a monochrome laser multifunction) and the Brother HL-L2370DW (a compact laser printer). Both were under $300 at the time. I bought one of each to test. Total investment: about $450.
The Process: From Box to Desktop
Setting them up was... surprisingly smooth. The MFC-L2750DW connected to our network via Wi-Fi in about eight minutes. The HL-L2370DW was even faster. Here’s where the Brother drivers came in. I’m not sure if it’s the architecture or just good engineering, but their driver installation wizard is one of the few that doesn’t make you want to throw the printer out the window.
But then came the real test: how to connect Brother printer to phone. Our sales team wanted to print from their iPhones. I installed the Brother iPrint&Scan app, held my breath, and… it just worked. Honestly, I’m not sure why some brands make this so hard. My best guess is it comes down to firmware design choices. Brother’s implementation is straightforward: no complex network discovery, no failed handshakes.
The First Bump
Of course, nothing is perfect. About three weeks in, the MFC started throwing a “Jam Inside” error. There was no jam. I rebooted the machine. Twice. Nothing. I resigned myself to a service call. But on a whim, I updated the firmware through the Brother support site. Problem solved. Lesson learned: check firmware before calling a technician.
The Result: What Worked (and What Didn’t)
Fast forward 18 months. Both printers are still running. The HL-L2370DW has printed roughly 8,000 pages. The MFC has handled another 12,000, mostly black-and-white documents but also some color scans for our Catherine Clothes catalog proofs. (We use a local print shop for final color runs—I’ll touch on that below.)
Per USPS Business Mail 101, our standard envelope dimensions (No. 10, 4.125” x 9.5”) work perfectly with the MFC’s automatic document feeder. That’s a small thing, but when you’re sending 60-80 orders annually, every minute saved adds up.
The biggest win? The vendor who used to charge us $150 for a service call on the leased machine hasn’t been back since. We’ve spent maybe $40 total on maintenance—just a replacement toner cartridge and a drum unit.
The Elephant in the Room: Color Printing and Large Formats
I should be transparent: we don’t do all our printing in-house. For the Catherine Clothes catalog and large-format posters for trade shows, we use an online printer. 48 Hour Print has been solid for standard runs. The value of guaranteed turnaround isn’t the speed—it’s the certainty. For event materials, knowing your deadline will be met is often worth more than a lower price with “estimated” delivery.
But for day-to-day output—invoices, packing slips, the occasional color presentation—the Brother machines handle it all.
A Note on Small Orders and Service
Here’s a truth that might annoy some vendors: I started this journey with a $450 order. I was a tiny customer. And Brother (via their channel partners) treated that order the same way they would a $45,000 one. The support documentation was clear. The phone support (on the one occasion I used it) was patient and didn’t ask how many employees we had.
Small doesn’t mean unimportant—it means potential. Today’s $200 order can be tomorrow’s $20,000 one.
The Final Verdict: A Cautious Recommendation
Would I pick the same Brother printers again? Probably. For our use case—a small office with mixed needs—they’ve delivered everything I asked for. Are they flashy? No. Do they have the fastest scan speeds on the market? No. But they’re reliable, the drivers work, and the total cost of ownership is lower than any alternative I’ve priced.
If you’re an admin buyer like me, juggling multiple vendors and limited budgets, I’d say this: look beyond the upfront price. Think about the cost of downtime, driver headaches, and support responsiveness. In my experience, Brother does well on all three fronts. It’s not a perfect brand—no one is—but for small businesses, it’s a very solid choice.
This was my experience. Yours might differ. If you’ve had a better or worse experience with Brother hardware, I’d genuinely like to know.