Dell H825cdw review: The best colour laser MFP for small offices

Dell's H825cdw laser multifunction is a good compromise between speed, quality and cost
Written By
Published on 2 February 2016
Dell H825cdw
Our rating
Reviewed price £274 inc VAT

With inkjets getting ever faster and cheaper to run, it gets harder to find laser printers we’d recommend. Dell’s new H825cdw is in with a shout, though: it’s a colour laser multifunction peripheral (MFP) with a great set of features including all the interfaces you could need, automatic duplex (double-sided) printing and scanning, NFC, and integration with various cloud services. At 28 pages per minute (ppm) it’s fast, and if the need arises you can buy an extra 550-sheet paper tray to supplement its standard 250-sheet cassette and 50-page multipurpose tray.

It won’t be love at first sight. The H825cdw is black and slab-sided enough that it made me want to hit things with bones. It’s livened up by a big colour touchscreen mounted in front of the scanner bed. Below this is a USB port for scans to, or printing from, an inserted USB disk. At the top, there’s a 50-sheet automatic document feeder capable of scanning both sides of a sheet in a single pass – ideal if you need to make fast double-sided copies or faxes.

Front right view, Dell H825cdw, paper trays extended

Dell’s software install is a bit clunky but seems foolproof, and much the same could be said for the printer’s own control panel. Unusually, settings changes such as enabling or disabling the built-in Wi-Fi interface require a reboot before they’ll take effect. It’s not the friendliest interface at first, but after a short period of use it begins to show recently used functions, which I found helpful. Create a Dell Document Hub account, link it with your accounts on cloud services such as Dropbox or Google Drive, and you can access these directly from the printer via a single login.

The H825cdw isn’t too noisy during prints, although it takes 20 seconds or so after a job for its cooling fans to step down. The hush is surprising given its impressive speed: it completed our 25-page text test in exactly a minute from a standing start and needed only 90 seconds for our more complex colour graphics test. Photocopies were impressively fast, with 10 mono pages completing in 29 seconds, and 10 colour pages in 50 seconds. Scans, too, were very quick, with a document scan needing just eight seconds at 150 dots per inch (dpi), or twice that at 300dpi.

Control panel, Dell H825cdw

Aside from very slightly sombre colour output, print quality was uniformly excellent, as were photocopies. Scans were also very good, demonstrating sharp focus and high dynamic range to capture almost the full range of shades in our tests. I wasn’t enamoured with the layout or usability of Dell’s TWAIN scan interface, but it clearly did the job.

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Dell H 825 CDW Multifunctional Printer

It’s been a while since I’ve reviewed a colour laser printer which uses separate toners and drums, but the H825cdw does. Many users won’t need to replace the latter, as each is rated for 50,000 pages, but the supplied toner will be gone within about 1,200 pages. Using Dell’s extra high capacity replacements and factoring in the cost of drums and the 30,000-page waste toner box, ongoing running costs work out at about 10.1p per colour page, which is broadly competitive. I’d still go for a good office inkjet, but if I was choosing a laser, the H825cdw would be near the top of my list.

Written by

Simon Handby is a freelance journalist, writer and editor at Hackbash with over two decades of experience in the technology, automotive, and energy sectors. His work has been featured in IT Pro, PC Pro, and he has collaborated with notable clients such as BMW, Porsche and EDF. Simon’s creative and insightful content has earned him recognition, including the award-winning Toyota iQ launch hypermiling campaign.

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