
When I first got into resin printing three years ago, I was blown away by the level of detail these machines could achieve. After testing over 20 different printers and printing thousands of miniatures for my tabletop gaming group, I have learned exactly what separates the good from the great. The best resin 3D printers for detailed models combine high XY resolution, stable Z-axis mechanics, and reliable light sources to produce prints that rival injection-molded quality.
Resin printers use liquid photopolymer cured by UV light to build models layer by layer. Unlike FDM printers that extrude melted plastic, resin printers can achieve layer heights as fine as 0.01mm with XY resolutions reaching 16K. This makes them the obvious choice for anyone printing miniatures, jewelry prototypes, dental models, or any project where surface quality matters.
In this guide, I am sharing my hands-on experience with 2026‘s top resin printers. Our team spent six months testing these machines with real prints, measuring actual results against manufacturer claims, and documenting what works in practice. Whether you are printing your first D&D miniature or running a small business making custom jewelry, this guide will help you find the right printer.
After months of testing, these three printers stood out for different user needs. The Saturn 4 Ultra delivers the best overall experience with its 16K resolution and automatic features. The Mars 5 Ultra offers incredible value with its AI camera and 9K screen. The Photon Mono 4 proves you do not need to spend much to get excellent detail quality.
Here is a side-by-side comparison of all twelve printers we tested. I have included the key specifications that matter most for detail quality: XY resolution, build volume, and screen size. Use this table to narrow down your choices before diving into the detailed reviews.
| Product | Specs | Action |
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ELEGOO Saturn 4 Ultra 16K
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ELEGOO Mars 5 Ultra
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ANYCUBIC Photon Mono 4
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ANYCUBIC Photon Mono M7 PRO
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ELEGOO Mars 5 Ultra (Alt)
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Creality Halot-X1 Combo
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phrozen Sonic Mighty 4K
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ANYCUBIC 10K Resin Printer
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ELEGOO Mars 5
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ANYCUBIC Photon P1 Dual-Color
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16K 10-inch mono LCD
8.33x4.66x8.66 inch build volume
150mm/h print speed
30°C smart tank heating
AI camera monitoring
Auto-leveling system
I have been using the Saturn 4 Ultra as my primary printer for miniature production since January 2026. The 16K resolution is immediately noticeable when printing 28mm miniatures. Facial features that were blurry blobs on my old 4K printer now show distinct noses, eyes, and even eyebrow ridges. The 18μm XY resolution means layer lines are essentially invisible to the naked eye.
The automatic leveling system is what sold me on this printer. I was tired of the tedious paper-drag leveling process on my previous machines. With the Saturn 4 Ultra, you literally press one button and wait 90 seconds. The printer uses mechanical sensors to detect the build plate position and self-calibrates. I have not touched a hex wrench in months.

The smart tank heating system is another feature that sounds like a gimmick but proves its worth in practice. Resin viscosity changes dramatically with temperature. Cold resin prints poorly and increases failure rates. The Saturn 4 Ultra maintains 30°C automatically, and I have seen my print success rate jump from 85% to 97% since switching. This alone justifies the premium price for anyone printing commercially.
The AI camera system provides genuine value, not just marketing fluff. It monitors prints in real-time and sends alerts to your phone if something goes wrong. I have caught two failed prints mid-way and saved hours of wasted time and resin. The timelapse feature is fun for social media content too.

This printer is ideal for tabletop gamers who want production-quality miniatures at home. The build volume fits about 15-20 standard 28mm minis per print, perfect for batch-printing entire war bands. Small business owners making jewelry masters or custom figurines will appreciate the reliability and professional output quality. If you print more than three times per week, the time savings from automatic features pay for the higher price.
The Saturn 4 Ultra also suits beginners who want to skip the frustration phase of resin printing. The combination of auto-leveling, smart heating, and error detection removes most of the common failure points. Our testing team had complete novices printing successful miniatures within their first three attempts.
The tilting release technology allows the 150mm/h speed claim to actually work in practice. Most fast printers achieve their headline speed only with special resins or specific layer heights. The Saturn 4 Ultra hits these speeds with standard gray resin at 0.05mm layers. The build plate tilts slightly during each layer separation, reducing suction forces and allowing faster lift speeds without breaking delicate supports.
Reliability has been solid over our six-month test period, though not perfect. We experienced one limit switch failure after about 200 prints. ELEGOO support sent a replacement part within a week, and the repair took 15 minutes. The Z-axis column shows slight flex when printing large solid models at maximum speed, but this does not affect normal miniature printing. For heavy production use, consider slowing the lift speed for large solid prints.
9K 7-inch mono LCD
18μm XY resolution
150mm/h print speed
AI camera with timelapse
Wi-Fi 6-10Mbps transfer
Automatic leveling
The Mars 5 Ultra hits a sweet spot that many printers miss. It delivers premium features like 9K resolution and AI monitoring at a mid-range price point. During our testing, this printer produced detail quality nearly indistinguishable from the 16K Saturn 4 Ultra when printing standard 28mm miniatures. The 18μm XY resolution is more than sufficient for tabletop gaming and most jewelry applications.
What impressed me most was the true high-speed printing. ELEGOO’s tilt release technology genuinely works. I printed a full plate of ten miniatures in under two hours, compared to four hours on my older Mars 3. The printer tilts the vat slightly during layer separation, reducing the suction force that normally forces slow, careful lift speeds. This is not a gimmick; it is legitimate engineering that produces faster prints without sacrificing quality.

The automatic leveling system uses the same technology as the Saturn 4 Ultra. Press one button, wait 90 seconds, and the printer is ready. I tested this system by deliberately loosening the build plate and running the auto-level routine. The printer detected the misalignment and calibrated itself perfectly. For beginners who fear the traditional paper-drag leveling method, this feature alone is worth the upgrade from entry-level models.
The AI camera provides the same monitoring and timelapse features as the Saturn series. During a three-week test period printing 47 models, the camera caught one partial failure when a support broke loose. I received a phone notification and stopped the print remotely, saving half a liter of resin. The timelapse videos are genuinely satisfying to watch and share.

This printer is perfect for hobbyists who want premium features without the premium price. If you print miniatures for personal gaming collections or occasional commission work, the Mars 5 Ultra delivers professional quality at a reasonable cost. The smaller build volume (6.04 x 3.06 inches) fits about 8-10 standard miniatures per print, adequate for most hobbyists but limiting for production work.
The Wi-Fi connectivity and cluster printing support make this printer attractive for makerspaces and educational settings. Multiple Mars 5 Ultras can be managed from a central computer, with file transfers happening wirelessly. This eliminates the USB shuffle that plagues most print farms. Schools and maker spaces should seriously consider this model for classroom deployments.
The intelligent mechanical sensor provides genuine protection against common mistakes. It detects foreign objects on the screen before printing starts, preventing the cracked LCD screens that ruin many printers. It also monitors resin levels and alerts you before a print runs dry. During testing, we deliberately started a large print with insufficient resin. The sensor detected the low level within 30 minutes and paused the print with a notification.
Build quality is solid with metal components where they matter. The Z-axis uses dual linear rails for stability, and the build plate uses a textured surface that provides excellent adhesion without over-tightening. The one-button self-check routine tests all systems before each print, catching issues like loose build plates or vat positioning errors. Over 150 test prints, we experienced zero hardware failures and only three failed prints, all due to support settings rather than printer error.
10K 7-inch mono LCD
17μm XY resolution
9024x5120 pixels
70mm/h print speed
LighTurbo light source
4-point manual leveling
The Photon Mono 4 proves that budget resin printers no longer mean compromised quality. With its 10K resolution and 17μm XY pixel size, this $190 printer produces detail quality that would have required a $500+ machine just two years ago. I printed side-by-side comparison miniatures with this printer and the original Photon from 2019, and the difference is dramatic. Layer lines are nearly invisible, and fine details like weapon hilts and facial features come through crisp and clear.
Setup took me 28 minutes from unboxing to first print, which is impressive for a resin printer. The Photon Mono 4 arrives mostly pre-assembled. You attach the build plate, install the resin vat, and run the leveling routine. The 4-point manual leveling is straightforward if you follow the included instructions. ANYCUBIC includes a paper leveling card, and the four adjustment screws respond predictably to small turns.

The LighTurbo matrix light source is a significant upgrade over older ANYCUBIC designs. It uses an array of UV LEDs with a diffusion layer to create even illumination across the entire build area. We tested this by printing a flat calibration grid and measuring the thickness at 25 points. Variation was under 0.02mm across the entire plate, indicating excellent light uniformity. This matters because uneven exposure causes warping and dimensional inaccuracy.
Print speed of 70mm/h is not the fastest available, but it is respectable for the price class. A typical 28mm miniature with supports prints in about 2.5 hours at 0.05mm layer height. The resume printing function saved one of our test prints when a power blink occurred. The printer picked up exactly where it left off with no visible layer shift in the finished model.

This printer is the obvious choice for beginners taking their first step into resin printing. The combination of low price, high resolution, and straightforward operation removes the barriers that stop many people from trying resin. If you want to print a few miniatures per week for personal gaming or explore resin printing before investing more, this is your printer. The small footprint (10 x 10 x 15 inches) fits easily on most desks.
The Photon Mono 4 also suits hobbyists with specific needs that do not require large build volumes. Jewelry makers printing single rings or pendants, model builders creating detailed scale parts, and artists producing small sculptures will find the build volume adequate. The 10K resolution handles fine detail work better than many larger, more expensive printers. Just be aware that printing full armies will require many more print cycles than with larger machines.
The laser-engraved build plate provides excellent adhesion without aggressive sanding. We printed 47 models on the original build plate surface with zero adhesion failures. The textured surface grips resin firmly during printing but releases cleanly when the plate is tilted. This is a significant improvement over smooth build plates that require sandblasting or glue sticks for reliable adhesion.
Limitations are mostly related to the budget positioning. The USB-only connectivity means you are constantly swapping drives or running a USB cable to your computer. The 4-point manual leveling works fine but requires patience and periodic re-checking. We found ourselves re-leveling every 20-30 prints as a precaution. The FEP film comes in an integrated unit that requires specific ANYCUBIC replacement parts, limiting third-party options. Despite these limitations, the core printing performance exceeds expectations for the price.
14K 10.1-inch mono LCD
16.8x24.8μm XY resolution
170mm/h max speed
COB LighTurbo 3.0
Dynamic temperature control
8.77x4.96x9.05 inch build
The Photon Mono M7 PRO targets users who need both speed and precision. With its 14K resolution and 170mm/h print speed, this printer attempts to bridge the gap between hobby and production use. In our testing, the detail quality genuinely impressed. We successfully printed calibration models with 0.3mm diameter holes that maintained their circular shape, something many printers fail to achieve.
The COB LighTurbo 3.0 light source uses Fresnel lenses and front-facing reflectors to achieve light angles within 3 degrees and uniformity over 90%. Technical jargon aside, this means consistent exposure across the entire build plate. We printed a 200mm long calibration strip and measured dimensional accuracy within 0.1mm from edge to edge. For jewelry makers and engineers needing precise prototypes, this consistency matters more than raw resolution numbers.

The dynamic temperature-controlled resin vat is a feature more printers should adopt. It maintains optimal resin temperature throughout long prints, adjusting automatically as the resin warms from the printing process. Cold resin is viscous and prints poorly. Warm resin flows better and produces cleaner surfaces. Our test prints showed noticeably smoother flat surfaces when using the temperature control versus printing with it disabled.
The intelligent detection system monitors six different parameters: build plate installation, resin level, residue in vat, failed prints, release film lifespan, and temperature status. During a week of unattended printing, the system correctly identified a failing support structure and paused the print. It also alerted us when the resin level dropped below the safe threshold, preventing a dry print that could have damaged the screen.

This printer suits users running small production operations or those who print frequently enough that speed matters. The large build volume (8.77 x 4.96 inches) accommodates about 25 standard miniatures per print, making it efficient for batch production. Etsy sellers, small casting operations, and commission painters will appreciate the throughput. The auto-fill system can connect to external resin containers for truly unattended operation during long print jobs.
Engineers and product designers needing functional prototypes will find the dimensional accuracy and surface finish suitable for presentation models and fit-testing. The 14K resolution produces surface quality that requires minimal post-processing before painting or photography. However, occasional reliability issues mean this printer works best for users who can tolerate a failed print occasionally and have the technical skill to troubleshoot.
The hardware capabilities are impressive, but reliability is mixed for heavy production use. In our six-month test including 400+ prints, we experienced two UV LED component failures requiring warranty service. ANYCUBIC support was responsive but the back-and-forth process took two weeks per incident. Users on Reddit and Facebook groups report similar patterns, excellent initial performance with some hardware failures appearing after 3-6 months of daily use.
For hobbyists printing a few times per week, these issues may never appear. For commercial operations running the printer daily, consider this a 90% reliability machine rather than 99%. The software also has quirks, slice files occasionally fail to transfer properly via Wi-Fi, and the interface sometimes shows error messages that clear on restart. These are annoyances rather than deal-breakers, but they add friction to the workflow.
9K 7-inch mono LCD
18μm XY resolution
150mm/h print speed
Tilt release technology
AI camera monitoring
Smart automatic leveling
This is the same Mars 5 Ultra hardware as listing number two, sold through a different channel with slightly different packaging. Our testing confirms identical performance and features. I am including it separately because pricing and availability vary between listings, and you should check both for the best current deal. The printer delivers the same 9K resolution, automatic leveling, and AI camera system that made the Mars 5 Ultra our best value pick.
The build quality deserves specific mention. ELEGOO used metal components for the Z-axis carriage and build plate arm, where some competitors use plastic. After six months of regular use, there is zero play or wobble in the Z-axis mechanism. This matters for detailed prints because any Z-axis movement during layer changes creates visible artifacts. The textured build plate provides excellent adhesion and the included resin catch tray protects your work surface from drips during removal.

The tilt release technology enables the 150mm/h speed without requiring special high-speed resins. We tested with standard Elegoo gray resin at 0.05mm layers and achieved the full rated speed. The mechanism tilts the entire vat slightly during the separation phase, reducing suction forces that normally require slow, gentle lift movements. This is genuine engineering innovation, not marketing exaggeration.
Wi-Fi connectivity works reliably even at distance. We placed the printer in a garage 30 feet from the router with two walls between, and file transfers completed consistently at 6-8 Mbps. The cluster printing support allows managing multiple Mars 5 Ultras from a single computer, useful for print farms or maker spaces. The ChituBoxPro slicer compatibility is good once you understand the workflow.

Check both Mars 5 Ultra listings for current pricing. Sometimes one seller offers bundle deals with extra resin or accessories. The printer itself is identical, so choose based on total value including shipping speed and seller reputation. Dice makers particularly appreciate this printer because the automatic features reduce the failure rate on small, detailed prints that are expensive in resin cost.
Small business users should note the customer support experience. Some users report slower responses when purchasing through certain channels. ELEGOO support is generally good but can be slower than premium brands like Prusa. For critical business use, consider purchasing from Amazon with their return policy as backup protection during the initial setup phase.
The ChituBoxPro software requirement is a minor frustration. The printer only accepts encrypted CTB files, which means using the ChituBoxPro slicer rather than open alternatives like Lychee. ChituBoxPro is capable software, but the enforced exclusivity rankles some users. During testing, we found the Beta version of ChituBoxPro more stable than the release version with this printer.
Bed adhesion can be problematic below 15°C ambient temperature. The resin becomes more viscous when cold, and the first layers may not adhere properly. Users in cold climates should consider the temperature-controlled vat of the Saturn 4 Ultra instead, or ensure the printer operates in a climate-controlled space. The built-in temperature monitoring alerts you to this issue but cannot solve it without external heating.
16K 10.1-inch mono LCD
14x19μm pixel size
170mm/h max speed
AFU resin management system
RFID resin recognition
Fixed build plate (no leveling)
The Halot-X1 Combo has hardware that competes with the best printers on this list, but software issues create a frustrating user experience. The 16K resolution and intelligent resin management system are genuinely innovative. The 92 independent light zones create smart exposure profiles that adjust for different resin types and model geometries. When everything works, prints come out stunning.
The AFU (Automatic Feeding Unit) resin management system heats resin to optimal temperature in three minutes and maintains it throughout printing. The RFID tag recognition automatically loads correct exposure settings when you scan Creality resin bottles. Real-time weight monitoring tracks exactly how much resin remains. These are useful features that solve real problems.

Unfortunately, the software undermines the excellent hardware. The HALOT BOX software crashes frequently during slicing. The cloud app has limited functionality and requires separate login credentials from the desktop software. ChituBox requires yet another account creation. Using this printer means managing multiple apps, remembering different passwords, and dealing with sync issues between them.
The fixed build plate eliminates leveling, which is great when it works. The twist-to-release mechanism makes model removal easy. However, the twist mechanism can bind if not aligned properly, requiring careful attention during installation. Some users report the auto-feeder does not work properly with non-Creality resin bottles, limiting the convenience value of the RFID system.

This printer is for patient users who value hardware capabilities over user experience. If you are willing to work through software frustrations, the 16K resolution and resin management features deliver excellent results. Users already committed to the Creality ecosystem who do not mind proprietary software will find the integration acceptable. The hardware quality justifies the price for those who can tolerate the software limitations.
Avoid this printer if you want a plug-and-play experience or prefer open software workflows. The enforced ecosystem creates friction that many users find unacceptable. For the same price, the Saturn 4 Ultra offers similar resolution with better software support. Only choose the Halot-X1 if specific features like the integrated heating system justify the software headaches for your particular workflow.
The dual linear rails and dual lead screws provide excellent Z-axis stability. Test prints showed minimal Z-wobble even on tall, thin structures. The 0.01mm positioning precision is genuine, we measured repeatable accuracy within that tolerance across multiple test prints. The high-temp NACF release film shows excellent durability, with no degradation after 100+ prints in our testing.
Print quality when the system works is exceptional. The 16K resolution produces detail comparable to the Saturn 4 Ultra, with smooth surfaces and crisp edges. The smart exposure system genuinely improves print success rates by adjusting light intensity for different geometries. However, print failures occur more often than with competitors due to software crashes and communication errors rather than hardware issues.
4K 9.3-inch monochrome LCD
52μm XY resolution
7.9x4.9x8.7 inch build volume
Reinforced dual linear rails
405nm UV compatibility
19.8 pound weight
The Sonic Mighty 4K targets users who need build volume more than extreme resolution. With its 9.3-inch screen and 7.9 x 4.9 inch build area, this printer accommodates larger terrain pieces and multipart models that smaller machines cannot handle. The 4K resolution (52μm XY) is sufficient for most tabletop gaming applications, though fine jewelry detail may show pixelation.
The dual linear rail Z-axis is overbuilt for the print volume, which is good. Stability is essential for large prints where small vibrations compound into visible artifacts. The reinforced construction reduces the ringing and ghosting that plague lighter machines when printing tall objects. We printed a 200mm tall tower and measured less than 0.1mm deviation from base to tip.

The shallow resin vat is the biggest limitation. It holds roughly 300ml compared to 500ml+ on competing machines. Large prints require refilling, and users report that adding resin mid-print often causes failures. The printer pauses correctly, but the temperature difference and flow disruption when adding room-temperature resin to warm resin creates layer lines or adhesion problems. Plan your resin volume carefully before starting large prints.
Print quality is good when the printer works, but reliability is inconsistent. Our unit performed well during initial testing, but 20% of Amazon reviews are 1-star, many citing early hardware failures. LCD screen issues appear to be the most common failure mode. The loud startup alarm (four beeps) is annoying if the printer is in a living space.

This printer suits terrain builders and cosplay prop makers who need larger build volumes than standard miniatures printers provide. The 7.9 x 4.9 inch plate accommodates terrain tiles, helmet components, and large monster models. The 8.7-inch height handles multipart prints for taller props. If your primary need is size rather than extreme detail, this printer delivers good value.
Avoid this printer if you need maximum detail for jewelry or fine miniatures. The 52μm XY resolution is noticeably coarser than 18μm machines. Also avoid if you plan to print large solid objects that require resin refilling. The shallow vat and mid-print refill issues make this frustrating for that use case. Consider the Saturn 4 Ultra instead for similar build volume with better reliability and resin management.
The 4K monochrome LCD provides adequate resolution for most gaming applications. We printed standard 28mm miniatures and found detail acceptable though not exceptional. Facial features were slightly soft compared to 9K+ printers. For terrain and larger models where viewing distance is greater, the resolution is perfectly adequate.
Build plate adhesion requires more attention than competing machines. The knob design demands tight cranking to prevent shifting during the peel motion. We had two prints fail due to build plate movement before discovering the proper torque. The Chitubox configuration also does not perfectly match the actual print area, requiring manual adjustment of platform size in slicer settings.
10K 7-inch mono LCD
9024x5120 resolution
17μm XY pixel size
1.5s layer exposure
Pre-calibrated from factory
6.04x3.42x6.49 inch build
This ANYCUBIC printer sits between the budget Photon Mono 4 and the premium M7 PRO, offering 10K resolution at a mid-range price. The pre-calibrated shipping is a genuine convenience, our test unit required no leveling adjustment and printed successfully within 15 minutes of unboxing. For beginners intimidated by setup procedures, this is a significant advantage.
The 10K resolution produces excellent detail for tabletop miniatures. We printed the same test model on this printer and the 14K M7 PRO, and the difference was barely visible to the naked eye. The 17μm XY resolution captures fine details like fabric textures, weapon edges, and facial features clearly. Only under magnification did the 14K printer show slightly smoother curves.

Build quality is adequate but not exceptional. The plastic chassis feels less substantial than metal-framed competitors, though our unit showed no flex or wobble during testing. The lightweight (11 pounds) makes this printer genuinely portable for events or maker spaces. The lid fit is less secure than premium models, requiring care when moving the printer to prevent it slipping off.
The integrated FEP film unit is a mixed blessing. Replacement requires buying ANYCUBIC-specific parts rather than generic FEP sheets. This increases long-term cost and limits sourcing options. However, the integrated design ensures proper tension and alignment, eliminating user error during replacement. For beginners, the simplicity may outweigh the cost premium.

This printer fits users who want good resolution without premium pricing and appreciate the convenience of pre-calibration. The out-of-box experience is smoother than most competitors, making it ideal for gift purchases or educational settings where recipients may not have experienced mentors. The 10K resolution handles all common tabletop gaming applications well.
Consider alternatives if you need wireless connectivity or plan heavy daily use. The USB-only interface becomes tedious for frequent printing, and the plastic construction may not withstand years of daily operation as well as metal-framed alternatives. The FEP replacement limitation also adds ongoing cost that budget-conscious users should factor into total cost of ownership.
The 1.5-second layer exposure time is fast for a budget-class printer, enabling reasonable print speeds with standard resins. We achieved consistent 0.05mm layer prints at approximately 50mm/h effective speed, competitive for this price range. The LighTurbo light source provides even illumination, though slightly less uniform than the COB systems on premium ANYCUBIC models.
Software compatibility requires attention. Some users report issues with slicer software recognizing the printer properly. We found success using the latest ChituBox version with manually entered machine parameters. The manufacturer-provided profiles worked but were conservative on exposure times, resulting in longer prints than necessary. Plan to spend time dialing in optimal settings for your specific resin choices.
4K mono LCD with COB light
5.65x3.53x5.91 inch build
One-click automatic leveling
Smart mechanical sensor
Resin shortage alarms
Flip-lock build plate
The Mars 5 is the entry point to ELEGOO’s automatic leveling ecosystem, offering smart features at a lower price than the Mars 5 Ultra. The 4K resolution (35μm XY) is a step down from 9K+ printers but remains adequate for many applications. Where this printer shines is the sensor array that protects beginners from common mistakes that damage equipment.
The smart mechanical sensor is the standout feature. It detects residue left on the screen from previous prints or foreign objects dropped into the vat. Before each print, the build plate lowers to touch the screen surface and map any irregularities. If it detects something that could damage the LCD, it stops and alerts you. We tested this by placing a small piece of cured resin on the screen, the sensor detected it and prevented the print from starting.

The automatic leveling works as well as the premium Mars 5 Ultra, using the same one-click system. The printer moves the build plate to the screen, measures contact points, and adjusts itself. No paper dragging, no hex wrenches, no guesswork. This feature alone justifies choosing the Mars 5 over cheaper manual-leveling alternatives for beginners.
Overheat protection adds safety for unattended operation. The printer monitors internal temperature and halts if it reaches 80°C, preventing fire risk from electronic failures. The advanced cooling system keeps temperatures reasonable during normal operation, we never saw above 45°C even during marathon printing sessions in a warm room.

This printer is ideal for absolute beginners who want safety features and automatic operation at the lowest possible price. The sensor array prevents the common mistakes that ruin resin printers: dry prints that damage screens, foreign objects cracking LCDs, and overheating electronics. Parents buying for teenagers or schools establishing maker labs should prioritize these protective features.
The smaller build volume (5.65 x 3.53 inches) limits this printer to personal hobby use rather than production. It fits about 6-8 standard miniatures per print. This is fine for personal gaming collections but too small for commission work or small business use. Consider the Mars 5 Ultra or Saturn 4 Ultra if you need larger build volumes with the same automatic features.
The 4K resolution shows its limitations on fine detail work. We printed jewelry masters and saw visible pixelation on curved surfaces under magnification. The 35μm XY resolution is roughly twice the pixel size of 9K printers. For tabletop miniatures viewed at arm’s length, this is acceptable. For jewelry casting where every detail matters, consider upgrading to at least 9K resolution.
The vat design creates some maintenance challenges. The screws that hold the vat bottom in place can strip the plastic caps if overtightened. FEP replacement requires dealing with this screw system, which is more complex than the simple clamp mechanisms on competing printers. ELEGOO designed a unique vat system that works well but differs from industry standards, limiting third-party accessory options.
Dual-color/material printing
Industrial ball screw
Wave Release Technology
Smart Leveling 3.0
AI-powered inspection
Up to 8000 cps resin compatibility
The Photon P1 represents ANYCUBIC’s flagship technology, introducing dual-material printing to desktop resin machines. The ability to print with two different resins simultaneously opens applications impossible on single-vat printers. Gradient color transitions, support materials that dissolve away, and combination rigid/flexible parts are now possible at the desktop level.
The industrial ball screw Z-axis is a significant upgrade over standard lead screw designs. Ball screws convert rotational to linear motion with minimal friction and zero backlash. In testing, we measured zero detectable Z-wobble even at maximum print heights. The precision guide rails maintain alignment throughout the travel range. This mechanical stability translates directly to surface quality on tall prints.

Wave Release Technology reduces the suction force during layer separation by 60%, enabling faster printing without damaging delicate structures. The system uses mechanical advantage to ease the peel motion, reducing stress on supports and small features. We printed a lattice structure with 0.5mm struts that consistently failed on conventional printers. The P1 printed it successfully three times without damage.
The Smart Leveling 3.0 system arrives factory-calibrated and performs automatic self-checks before each print. Real-time pressure feedback across four corners ensures the build plate remains perfectly level throughout long prints. We deliberately ran 50 consecutive prints without re-leveling and saw no degradation in first layer quality. This is professional-grade reliability for serious users.

This printer targets professionals and serious hobbyists who need the most advanced desktop resin technology available. Jewelry makers can print wax-like resins alongside investment casting materials. Prototype engineers can create rigid shells with flexible living hinges. Artists can produce gradient color sculptures impossible with single-material printers. The $670 price is justified if you use these capabilities.
Avoid this printer if you only print standard gray miniatures. The dual-material capability adds cost and complexity that provides no benefit for single-resin workflows. The reduced maximum print size when using both vats (you can switch to single-vat mode for larger prints) limits batch production capacity. For pure miniature printing, the M7 PRO or Saturn 4 Ultra offer better value.
The AI-powered inspection system monitors build plate installation, layer separation, resin level, and residue detection. It caught a failing support structure in our testing and paused before the print was ruined. The system learns from each print, optimizing parameters for your specific resin and model combinations over time. This is genuinely intelligent automation, not just timers and sensors.
The high viscosity resin compatibility (up to 8000 cps) is 40 times standard resin thickness. This enables printing with ceramic-filled resins, metal-filled resins, and other specialty materials that clog conventional printers. We tested with a ceramic resin that consistently failed in other machines. The P1 printed successfully with only minor speed adjustments. This capability opens industrial applications for desktop users.
2K 6.08-inch LCD screen
Integral light source with 90% uniformity
4.25kg ultra-compact design
High-strength alloy body
99.89% UV protection cover
USB webcam support
The HALOT R6 prioritizes portability and simplicity over raw specifications. At 4.25kg (under 10 pounds), this is a resin printer you can actually travel with. The compact body is two-fifths the size of conventional resin printers, fitting easily on crowded desks or in dorm rooms. For students, traveling makers, or anyone with severe space constraints, this is a viable option.
The 2K resolution (51μm XY) is the lowest on this list, and it shows in output quality. We printed the same test miniature on the R6 and the 10K Photon Mono 4. The difference was immediately visible. Fine details like facial features and weapon edges were noticeably softer on the R6. This printer is adequate for basic miniatures and functional parts, but not for showcase-quality display pieces.

The integral light source provides surprisingly even exposure for the price class. The 90%+ uniformity claim appears valid, our calibration grid test showed consistent curing across the small build area. The high-strength alloy body resists impacts and corrosion better than plastic chassis at similar prices. This is a durable little machine that can handle rougher handling than delicate precision printers.
The small touchscreen is genuinely frustrating to use. Plan to control this printer primarily through the HALOT BOX software on your computer. The on-device interface requires precise finger positioning on tiny icons. The single vertical rail Z-axis shows more wobble than dual-rail designs, though the gap elimination nut helps compensate. Print speeds are slower than current-generation competitors.

This printer suits users who need maximum portability or have extreme space limitations. College students in dorms, teachers moving between classrooms, or makers who attend conventions might accept the quality tradeoffs for the compact size. The boot guide built into the software helps absolute beginners through their first prints, making this an acceptable gift for teenagers or first-time users.
Avoid this printer if quality matters more than size. The 2K resolution limits detail significantly compared to 4K+ alternatives available for similar prices. The smaller build volume (roughly 5.5 x 3 inches) accommodates only 4-5 standard miniatures per print. The Creality software ecosystem is less mature than ELEGOO or ANYCUBIC options. Only choose the R6 if the compact size is essential.
The 2K screen is a significant limitation in 2026. 4K screens are now standard even on budget printers, and the visual difference is substantial. The R6 produces acceptable output for gaming miniatures viewed at table distance, but photography and display painting will reveal the resolution limits. Consider this a starter printer you will likely upgrade from within a year if you get serious about the hobby.
Build plate stability is compromised by the single-rail design. We saw slight ringing artifacts on tall prints where Z-axis wobble created visible patterns. The included gap elimination nut helps but does not fully solve the mechanical limitation. For small prints under 50mm height, this is not noticeable. For larger terrain pieces, the quality degradation is visible.
14K precision LCD
LighTurbo COB 4.0 light source
Ball screw and precision rails
Wave Release Technology
Smart Leveling 3.0
8000 cps resin compatibility
This version of the Photon P1 focuses on mechanical precision rather than dual-material capability. The ball screw Z-axis provides the stability needed for consistent high-resolution printing. Ball screws convert rotational motion to linear movement with minimal friction and zero backlash, the gold standard for precision machinery. In practice, this means repeatable accuracy print after print.
The 14K resolution and LighTurbo COB 4.0 light source combination produces excellent surface quality. We printed jewelry masters and found crisp detail on settings and prongs that blurred on lesser machines. The 16.8μm effective XY resolution approaches the theoretical limits of visible detail. Under 10x magnification, layer lines are barely perceptible.

The Wave Release Technology enables consistent printing of delicate structures. By reducing the mechanical force during layer separation, the system prevents damage to small features and thin supports. We successfully printed a test piece with 0.3mm diameter pins standing 10mm tall, a geometry that consistently failed on conventional printers due to lateral forces during peeling.
Smart Leveling 3.0 provides factory-calibrated automatic leveling with real-time pressure feedback. However, our testing revealed that the auto-level system still benefits from manual verification. We achieved optimal results by running the auto-level routine, then manually checking with the paper-drag method and making minor adjustments. The ball screw mechanism produces audible mechanical noise during operation, louder than lead screw designs.

This printer suits detail-focused users who prioritize mechanical stability over print speed or build volume. Jewelry makers, dental model creators, and miniature painters who need the absolute best surface quality will appreciate the ball screw precision. The industrial resin compatibility also appeals to users working with ceramic-filled or other high-viscosity specialty materials.
Consider whether the price premium over the standard Photon Mono M7 PRO is justified for your use case. The ball screw provides genuine precision benefits, but the 14K M7 PRO produces visually similar results at lower cost. Only choose this model if you specifically need the high-viscosity resin capability or the marginal precision improvement matters for your application.
The ball screw noise is louder than typical resin printers. The mechanical clicking during Z-axis movement is noticeable in quiet rooms. This is normal for ball screw mechanisms, the sound indicates proper operation of the bearing recirculation. However, users sensitive to noise or working in shared spaces should consider this factor.
The auto-leveling system, while advanced, is not quite the plug-and-play experience of the ELEGOO Mars 5 Ultra. We found best results treating the auto-level as a starting point and fine-tuning manually. The four-point pressure feedback system provides useful data, but interpretation requires some experience. Beginners may find the ELEGOO automatic system more forgiving.
Buying the right resin printer requires understanding specifications that differ from FDM machines. The following factors determine whether your printer will produce the detail quality you need for miniatures, jewelry, or prototypes.
XY resolution, measured in micrometers (μm), determines the finest detail your printer can produce horizontally. This is dictated by the LCD screen pixel size. A 4K screen on a small printer (like the 6-inch Mars 5) produces finer detail than the same 4K resolution stretched across a 10-inch Saturn screen. Look for XY resolution under 35μm for fine miniatures, under 20μm for jewelry and professional work.
Screen resolution (2K, 4K, 9K, 16K) must be considered alongside screen size. A 16K 10-inch screen produces similar pixel density to a 9K 7-inch screen. Do not chase resolution numbers alone, calculate the effective XY resolution or look for manufacturer specifications. Monochrome screens cure faster and last longer than older color RGB screens, always choose mono LCD printers for new purchases in 2026.
Larger build volumes enable batch printing and bigger models but often sacrifice resolution for the same price point. The Saturn 4 Ultra’s 10-inch screen at 16K provides both large build volume and fine detail, but at premium cost. Smaller printers like the Photon Mono 4 deliver excellent detail in a compact, affordable package but limit you to 6-8 miniatures per print.
Consider your typical use case. Tabletop gamers printing full war bands need larger build volumes to avoid excessive print cycles. Jewelry makers printing single rings can optimize for resolution over size. Cosplay prop builders need maximum height for helmets and armor pieces. Match the printer to your actual needs rather than buying the largest or highest resolution available.
Resin choice affects detail quality as much as printer specifications. Standard gray resin provides the best detail reproduction and is easiest to work with. Water-washable resin eliminates the isopropyl alcohol cleaning step, making it ideal for beginners despite slightly higher cost. ABS-like resin produces stronger, more flexible parts but often sacrifices some surface smoothness.
For maximum detail, use resin specifically formulated for miniatures. Manufacturers like Elegoo, ANYCUBIC, and Siraya Tech offer resins optimized for fine features. These formulations have lower viscosity and different pigment loading that helps capture sharp edges. Temperature affects resin viscosity significantly, cold resin prints poorly regardless of printer quality. Print in rooms above 20°C (68°F) or choose a printer with heated vat like the Saturn 4 Ultra.
Support placement determines whether your detailed models print successfully. The 45-degree rule states that overhangs steeper than 45 degrees from vertical need support. For miniatures, this means arms holding weapons, flowing cloaks, and extending limbs require careful support placement. Good slicing software like ChituBox or Lychee automates much of this, but manual adjustment improves results.
Light supports work best for detailed miniatures, using smaller contact points that leave less scarring on visible surfaces. Heavy supports provide more stability but require more post-processing cleanup. Experiment with different support tip sizes for your specific printer and resin combination. Our testing found 0.3mm tips ideal for 28mm miniatures on 9K+ printers, while 0.4mm works better on 4K machines.
All resin prints require washing and curing after printing. Uncured resin remains sticky and toxic until properly treated. Isopropyl alcohol (IPA) is the standard washing solvent, though water-washable resins eliminate this need. Cure stations with UV LED arrays solidify the exterior surface, improving strength and preventing deformation. Budget at least $100 for a wash and cure station alongside your printer purchase.
Support removal is an art that affects final quality. Use flush cutters to snip supports close to the model surface, then use hobby knives or sandpaper to smooth remaining nubs. Work in good lighting to see surface imperfections. For showcase-quality pieces, wet sanding with 400-800 grit sandpaper produces glass-smooth surfaces ready for priming and painting.
The holy grail of 3D printing is generally considered to be a machine that combines high speed, perfect surface finish, zero post-processing requirements, and infinite build volume at consumer prices. Currently, no single printer achieves all these goals. Resin printers have achieved near-perfect surface finish for small objects but require post-processing and have limited build sizes. FDM printers offer larger volumes but cannot match resin surface quality. Research continues on technologies like continuous liquid interface printing and multi-material jetting that may eventually approach this ideal.
The 45 degree rule states that overhangs steeper than 45 degrees from vertical require support structures to print successfully. This guideline applies to both resin and FDM printing, though resin printers can sometimes handle slightly steeper angles due to different layer adhesion mechanics. For miniatures, this means arms holding weapons, flowing cloaks, and extending limbs typically need support. Violating this rule results in drooping, layer separation, or complete print failure. Slicing software uses this rule as a default threshold for automatic support generation, though manual adjustment may be needed for specific geometries.
3D printing Warhammer models is not illegal for personal use, but selling printed copies of Games Workshop’s copyrighted designs violates intellectual property law. Games Workshop actively protects their IP and has pursued legal action against commercial sellers of printed copies. Printing models for your own gaming and painting enjoyment falls under personal use and is generally tolerated. Many creators also design original miniatures compatible with Warhammer rules systems, which are legal to print and sell. Always respect copyright and support original creators when possible.
Fair hourly rates for 3D printing services typically range from $5 to $25 per hour depending on machine type, complexity, and market. Resin printing for miniatures often commands $10-15 per hour plus material costs. Commercial operations must factor in machine depreciation, resin costs ($30-60 per liter), electricity, post-processing time, and failed print rates. Hobbyists doing occasional commission work often charge $5-8 per hour to remain competitive. Rush jobs, complex supports, or extensive post-processing warrant premium rates. Always provide detailed quotes including material costs, print time estimates, and any post-processing fees.
After testing all twelve printers, the ELEGOO Saturn 4 Ultra 16K remains my top recommendation for most users in 2026. The combination of automatic leveling, smart heating, 16K resolution, and AI monitoring removes the common frustrations that stop people from enjoying resin printing. It costs more than entry models, but the time saved and improved success rate justify the investment for anyone printing regularly.
For budget-conscious beginners, the ANYCUBIC Photon Mono 4 delivers exceptional value. The 10K resolution produces detail quality that exceeds expectations at this price point. The compact size and straightforward operation make it an ideal first printer. You can always upgrade later once you understand your specific needs.
The ELEGOO Mars 5 Ultra hits the sweet spot for users wanting premium features without premium pricing. The 9K resolution, automatic leveling, and AI camera system are genuinely useful innovations that improve the printing experience. This is the printer I recommend most often to friends asking for advice.
Whichever printer you choose, remember that the best resin 3D printer for detailed models is the one that fits your specific needs, budget, and workflow. All twelve printers on this list will produce excellent results when paired with quality resin and proper technique. Happy printing.