Epson Expression Premium XP-530 review

Microscopic screen aside, Epson's XP-530 is a good home MFP for creative work
Written By
Published on 17 February 2016
Our rating
Reviewed price £90 inc VAT

The XP-530 is the cheapest model in Epson’s Expression Premium range of inkjet multifunction peripherals (MFPs) for the home. Geared toward creative users, it uses Epson’s five-ink engine, which combines a pigment-based black for text printing, with dye-based black, cyan, magenta and yellow inks for graphics and photos. You can share it via a wired network, print from or scan to an inserted SD memory card, or print automatically on both sides of a sheet of paper (duplex printing), but there’s no fax modem.

On first impressions, ‘Premium’ isn’t a word I’d use for the XP-530. It looks smart enough, with a squat stance and shiny black plastics, but its control panel features one of the smallest colour screens I’ve seen – a 3.7cm panel which looks like it belongs in a camera viewfinder.

It’s paired with four-way navigation and an OK switch, and at the highest, icon-based level it works fine. Dive into sub-menus, however, and there’s only room for it to display one option at a time, meaning you’ll often have to scroll to find what you want. Entering our Wi-Fi password was tortuous, but the MFP does also support the simplified Wi-Fi Protected Setup (WPS) process. I should note that the screen was very quick to preview photos on an SD card.

While it looks like there’s an input tray folded up the rear, in fact you load paper in a 100-sheet tray slung underneath – I found it fiddly to re-stock this without knocking the output tray above it: on more than one occasion the printer naggedme to extend it properly again.

^ Epson’s print driver combines quick shortcuts with more advanced options

Fortunately, things quickly improve when you start using the XP-530. For a start, it’s an incredibly quick colour printer at this price, spitting out 6×4″ colour photos in around a minute each, and despatching our colour graphics test at 6.4 pages per minute (ppm) – more than 50% quicker than we’d expect. Its black text speed of 9.0ppm is less impressive, but switching to draft quality produced faint but acceptable results at 16.3ppm. A single, black A4 photocopy took 16 seconds, while a colour copy took 24 seconds.

The scanner was similarly quick, needing just 10 seconds to preview an A4 page or to capture it at 150 dots per inch (dpi). Capturing a 6×4″ photo at 600dpi took just 25 seconds, but repeating the job at 1,200dpi was slow, at two minutes and 16 seconds.

^ A fully automatic scan mode crops originals and chooses suitable settings

While I’ve seen sharper results, the XP-530 captured colours faithfully, and was able to distinguish the full range of shades in our tests. Print quality was impressive, with crisp black text and vivid colour graphics on plain paper, and natural, detailed photos on coated papers. While not a match for Epson’s more expensive six-ink printers, pictures were comparable to those from five-ink Canon printers.

Epson says that the XP-530 doesn’t use its photo black ink in plain paper printing, so it’s not included in our 8.7p per page running cost calculation. Even so, this is more than 2p higher than we calculated for this MFP’s main rival, Canon’s PIXMA MG5750. There’s not much to pick between the two. For me, the Canon is the better all rounder, and while the Epson is faster to print in colour, its higher running costs and miniscule screen rob it of a fifth star.

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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